The Dalian Wanda Group - the new owner of Hoyts, Australia's second-largest cinema chain - aims to improve the viewing experiences of movie fans in Oz. Xu Fan reports.
On a big screen at a downtown Beijing mall, the world's first and most-powerful mutant wakes up after a long slumber.
Feng Xiaogang's film Mr Six was recently declared the top winner of this year's "dirty astray award" by the Chinese Association on Tobacco Control.
Guru of cinematic writing Robert McKee says trying to be popular leads to bad work, Wang Kaihao reports.
Alice Through the Looking Glass, like its predecessor, owes very little to Lewis Carroll.
Following in the footsteps of Palace Museum's successful sale of souvenirs, other museums get into the business with the help of new guidelines. Wang Kaihao reports.
Legend has it that about centuries ago, Namkhagyan, a master of Tibetan thangka art, suddenly learned how to paint with a pen given by a Buddha in a dream.
Victoria's Yarra Valley offers visitors a bucolic getaway in the nation's agricultural heartland, and the urban delights of Melbourne are just an hour away, Yang Feiyue discovers.
Wu Min, 62, is dazzled by the shining billboards around her and soon gathers a stack of colorful brochures. They showcase tourism packages to popular destinations, ranging from the United States and France and South Africa.
Ying spotlights mother-daughter relations yet again in her latest novel, Mimidola: The River Child, Mei Jia reports.
In his book The Singularity Is Near, American computer scientist Ray Kurzweil had predicted a decade ago that by 2045 non-biological intelligence will have exceeded biological intelligence on Earth due to exponential changes in infotech, biotech and nanotech. Basically, man and machine will become one.
They are commonly referred to as the "academy awards of Chinese archaeology". The annual list of the top 10 archaeological discoveries in China for 2015 was released in Beijing on May 16.
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