Mưa Trên Cánh Bướm (Don’t Cry, Butterfly), directed by young Vietnamese filmmaker Dương Diệu Linh, marked the opening of the Vietnamese Film Days at the Motion Picture Association (MPA) headquarters in Washington DC, US.
The Việt Nam Film Development Association (VFDA) has organised a series of events in Los Angeles, United States to promote the production collaboration between Việt Nam and Hollywood.
As 2025 begins, Vietnamese cinema is showing positive signs in terms of revenue. In just the first two months, four Vietnamese films have exceeded VNĐ100 billion in ticket sales, with some achieving this milestone in less than a week.
Excepting the horror film Đèn Âm Hồn (The Soul Lantern) set to premiere on February 7, all of the other Tết movies Bộ Tứ Báo Thủ, Yêu Nhầm Bạn Thân and Nụ Hôn Bạc Tỷ are a delightful mix of romance and...
The YDA Club, a cinema club dedicated to Vietnamese movies in Paris’ District 5, will present three short movies by Vietnamese independent filmmakers on April 16.
While most teenagers follow Hollywood films, games,
rock music and fashion, 17-year-old Hoang Nguyen Khanh Linh prefers
drawing in her quiet corner at home.
A Vietnamese movie about childhood will be distributed abroad under
deal signed between HCM City-based Galaxy Studio and Fortissimo Films,
an Amsterdam- and Hong Kong-based organisation involved in film,
television and videos sales and distribution.
Documentary films will be screened at the French Cultural Centre in Ha
Noi on Wednesday, with the aim of raising public awareness about climate
change impact and policies.