City planning isn't easy. It usually takes years.
After a flood of exaggerated dramas about fighting Japanese aggression, Chinese TV is presenting the conflict through a more thoughtful lens, Xu Fan reports.
The Assassin has become the most controversial blockbuster of the past weekend, showered with praise and laments by a polarized audience.
Four years after his death, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs still fascinates the public, with two major new films this fall analyzing his life and career.
Arnold Schwarzenegger is back as promised, and fans in the Middle Kingdom appear more excited than those in his home country, Xu Fan reports.
When Chinese moviegoers find the 3-D screen suddenly losing color, or hear the sounds from a different movie playing in an adjacent hall, they obviously think they haven't got their money's worth. In relative terms, audiences in North America are mostly spared such experiences.
The lure of the wild has recently attracted an interesting batch of solitude seekers: Reese Witherspoon (Wild), Mia Wasikowska (Tracks) and Robert Redford, twice.
When museum staff members in the Hall of Martial Valor slowly unveil the national treasures sitting in front of us, you can sense everyone in the room collectively holding their breath.
Since the outbreak of the global financial crisis in 2008, one question that has been frequently asked: "Is the dominant position of the dollar being threatened?"
France's moves toward offering Chinese a passe-partout is paying off.
From a distance, New England's beloved Mount Monadnock looks distinctly unthreatening.
Beijing's book fair ended on Sunday, with a bigger turnout than last year. Yang Yang reports.
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