Unique train taps into national trend toward celebrating vibrant rural customs during major festivals
For China, the first millennium BC, characterized as much by artistic and cultural brilliance as by political volatility, represents a long road toward a unified country — a road embellished with artful pieces carved out of the stone, Zhao Xu reports.
In a workshop at the Yangjiabu Folk Art Grand View Garden in Weifang, Shandong province, workers are busy making kites. From design to frame making, 61 steps are required to finish making a kite.
After decades promoting Chinese movies, 70-year-old Italian producer and festival director takes up new roles in the country, Li Yingxue reports.
The 2024 China Online Audiovisual Annual Gala is scheduled to debut on the country's major streaming platforms including Mango TV, Tencent Video, Bilibili and Kuaishou at 7:30 pm on Saturday.
The TV series Shh, the King Is Hibernating, which is going to be filmed in Northeast China's Jilin city, is expected to showcase the region's natural wonders and contribute to the development of tourism.
The weeks following the Spring Festival holiday are usually a lackluster period with a shortage of appealing blockbusters, but Chinese fans of foreign blockbusters might be delighted to see the gap being filled this year.
As one of the country's most popular animated franchises, Boonie Bears will release its latest feature-length film, Boonie Bears: Time Twist, on the first day of the Year of the Dragon, falling on Feb 10.
The Shanghai Museum is celebrating the upcoming Lunar New Year with new exhibition, Longing for Spring: A Celebration of the Year of the Dragon.
Little New Year (Chinese: Xiaonian), usually a week before the lunar New Year, falls on Feb 2 this year. It is also known as the Festival of the Kitchen God, the deity who oversees the moral character of each household.
Little New Year (Chinese: Xiaonian), usually a week before the lunar New Year, falls on Feb 2 this year. It is also known as the Festival of the Kitchen God, the deity who oversees the moral character of each household.
In late January, scriptwriter Qin Wen visited Beijing to attend a meeting about her popular TV series, Blossoms Shanghai. Staying at a hotel located near the East Third Ring Road, she experienced a funny moment during dinner at the hotel restaurant.