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kamreadsandrecs · 24 days
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kammartinez · 1 month
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filmes-online-facil · 2 years
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Assistir Filme Ip Man: Nasce uma Lenda Online fácil
Assistir Filme Ip Man: Nasce uma Lenda Online Fácil é só aqui: https://filmesonlinefacil.com/filme/ip-man-nasce-uma-lenda/
Ip Man: Nasce uma Lenda - Filmes Online Fácil
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Em sua infância, Yip Man foi iniciado em Wing Chun sob a tutela do Mestre Chang Wah Shun (Sammo Hung Kam-Bo). Após a morte de Chan, Ip Man segue seu colega sênior Ng Chung So (Biao Yuen) como seu novo mentor ao lado de seu irmão Tin Ip Chi (Siu-Wong Fan) e sua amiga Lee Wai Mei (Rose Chan). Mais tarde, o adolescente Yip Man (Yu Hang) opta por deixar Foshan para prosseguir a educação em Hong Kong, onde ele encontra o seu terceiro professor Leung Bik (Yip Chun), um mestre de uma escola heterodoxa de Wing Chun que aprimora seus fundamentos e ensina novas técnicas para aumentar suas habilidades.
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phoenixlionme · 2 years
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Asian Martial Arts
I will be doing a set of posts of all of the martial arts from each of the country they all originated from. I can’t be entirely sure how many martial arts there, so I had to google and went to a site called, wayofthemartialarts.com as well as using Wikipedia on the “List of martial arts” page. If I missed any from this country, please add it but BE polite. I don’t tolerate rudeness. Also, some of these martial arts may include a weapon (s).
1. Bangladesh -> Butthan, Lathi Khela, Boli Khela
2. Cambodia -> Bokator, Pradal Serey
3. China -> Ba Fa; Ba Ji Quan Kung Fu; Ba Gua Zhang; Ba Ji; Bak Mei Kung Fu; Bai Mei; Bao Quan Kung Fu; Bei Tui; Chang Quan; Cha Quan; Chin Na; Choy Gar; Choy Li Fut; Chuo Jiao; DiSom; Di Tang Quan; Drunken Money; Drunken Fist; Duan Quan; Eagle Claw; Emei Quan; Fanzi; Feng Shou; Five Ancestors; Five Animals aka Ng Ying; Fujian White Crane; Guzhuangquan; Fu Jow Pai (Tiger Claw Style); Fut Gar (Buddhist Family); Hei Hu Quan (Black Tiger Fist); Hou Quan Kung Fu; Hua Quan; Hung Fut; Hung Ga; Hung Gar; Jow-Ga Kung Fu; Kunlun Quan; Kuntao; Lai Tung Pai; Lama Pai; Lau Gar; Leopard Style; Liu He Ba Fa; Li Gar Quan (Li Family Fist); Long Quan; Luohan Quan (Arhat Fist); Mei Hua Quan (Plum-blossom Fist); Mian Quan (Cotton Fist); Mi Zong; Mizongyi; Mok Gar; Monkey Style; Nan Quan; Northern Praying Mantis Style; Northern Shaolin; Pao Chui; Pi Gua Quan (Chop-Hanging Fist); Pushing hands; San Da (Chinese Kick-boxing); San Soo; Sanshou; Shaolin Kung Fu; Shuai Jiao (Chinese Wrestling); Shui Quan (Water Fist); Snake Style; Southern Dragon Style; Southern Praying Mantis Style; Tai chi; Tan Tui; Tien Shan Pai; Tong Bei Quan; Wing Chun; Wu Dang Quan; Wushu; Xing Yi Quan; Yau Kung Moon; Yi Quan; Yue Jia Quan; Zi Ran Men; Zui Quan
4. India -> Adimurai; Andhra Pradesh; Bal Vidya; Bihar; Dhanurvidya; Gadayuddha; Gatka; Huyen Langlon; Malla Yuddha; Mushtiyuddha; Kalaripayattu; Karnataka; Kashmir; Kerala; Kick-fighting; Maharashtra; Manipur; Nagaland; Niyuddha; Odisha; Pehlwani; Pugilism; Silambam; Vajra-mushti
5. Indonesia -> Caci; Cakalele; Debus; Fitimaen; Kabasaran; Kuntao; Mekare-kare; Pasola; Payuq; Pencak Silat; Silat; Sisemba; Sitobo Lalang Lipa; Tarung Derajat; Tinju
6. Israel -> Kapap; Krav Maga
7. Iran -> Kung Fu To’a
8. Japan ->  Aikidio; Aikijujitsu; Araki Ryu; Bajutsu; Battojutsu; Bojutsu; Bujutsu; Byakuren Kaikan; Daido Juku Kudo; Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu; Enshin Kaikan; Goju-Ryu Karate; Hanbojutsu; Hojojutsu; Iaido; Iaijutsu; Isshin-Ryu; Itto-Ryu; Jojutsu; Judo; Jujutsu; Jukendo; Juttejutsu; Karate; Keijojutsu; Kendo; Kenjutsu; Kickboxing; Kobudo; Koryu; Kyokushin Karate; Kyudo; Kyujutsu; Kyusho Jitsu; Naginatajutsu; Ninjutsu; Nippon Kempo; Niten Ichi-Ryu; Nunchaku Jutsu; Shindo Jinen-Ryu; Shintaido; Shito-Ryu Karate; Shootfighing; Shooto; Shorinji Kempo; Shorin-Ryu Karate; Shotokan Karate; Sojutsu; Spochan; Sumo; Taido; Taiho Jutsu;  Tanto Jutsu; Tessenjutsu; Wado-Ryu Karate; Yabusame; Yamanni-Ryu; Yoseikan Budo
9. Korea -> Gongkwon Yusul; Gungdo; Gungsol; Haidong Gumdo; Han Mu Do; Hapkido; Hwa Rang Do; Korean swordsmanhsip; Korean spears; Kuk Sool Won; Kumdo; Kyuk Too Ki; Sibpalki; Soo Bahk Do;  Ssireum; Taekkyeon/Taekkyon; Taekwondo; Tang Soo Do aka Soo Bahk Do; Subak; Teukgong Moosool; Wong Hwa Do; Yongmudo
10. Laos -> Muay Lao
11. Malaysia -> Silat
12. Mongolia -> Bokh aka Mongolian wrestling
13. Myanmar (Burmese) -> Aka; Bando; Banshay; Lethwei; Naban; Pongyi thaing
14. Philippines -> Dumog; Eskrima; Kino Mutai; Panantukan; Sikaran; Yaw Yan
15. Sri Lanka -> Angampora
16. Thailand -> Krabi–krabong; Lerdrit; Muay boran; Muay Thai; Silat Pattani
17. Turkey -> Matrak; Oil Wrestling; Sayokan
18. Vietnam -> Cuong Nhu; Nam Hong Son; Qwan Ki Do; Tam Qui Khi-Kong; Võ thuật Bình Định/Bình Định Gia; Nhất Nam; Võ Việt Nam aka Võ Đạo of Phạm Văn Tan; Vovinam
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complexhaystack · 3 years
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Thoughts after watching Shang-Chi:
- Marvel does not disappoint! A very fun and enjoyable show :)
- Loved that it's a primarily Asian cast, the beautiful costumes and sets, and that they used the Mandarin language so frequently
- I'm a bit chagrined that Asian (particularly East Asian) centric movies always involve some mystical legends, kungfu and a dragon though. But my friend rightly pointed out that the Shang Chi comics have existed in an era where probably more stereotypes were rampant.
- The action scenes were great! Can see some taichi and wing chun moves in there. Very well choreographed! Simu Liu's and Meng'er Zhang's (and their stunt doubles) fighting were fantastic!
- TONY FRIGGING LEUNG!!! Nuff said
- Some really delightful cameos!! Yuen Wah was such a wonderful surprise! And is his character a... a tsundere?! Ronny Chieng LOL! And Wong! Hehehe. From the very secular disciple of the Ancient One to now a dude wise of the world ways eh HAHA. Loved the after credits scene too!
- Awkwafina was hilarious and I'm so glad we get two goofballs (Shang-Chi and Katie) joining the MCU main cast - don't leave other goofballs like Antman hanging hehehe
- OK more on Tony Leung - how has he managed to retain such charisma over all these years is beyond me
- My only grouse I think is that Shang Chi is not the first Asian superhero in the MCU (but has been marketed as such) - imho Nico Minoru is - she was a kickass Asian female superhero at that.
- I would also love to see diversity movies from MCU who put up females as the lead as a first move rather than always starting off with males (and look how late Black Widow got hers)
- Very exciting link to the Avengers at the end. And what happened to Bruce?! Didn't we see him some other way the last time we saw him...
- Just watched an interview and it's the sad truth that Simu Liu also had to only dream of becoming 'a stuntman being beaten by white characters' due to the ceiling at the time. Very glad that he and the rest of the cast have come this far! You go guys!!
- Very excited to see what comes next for Shang Chi, Katie, their friends and family. And of course The Ten Rings *wiggles brows*
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dramaclover · 4 years
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Ending & Thoughts: Legal Mavericks 2020
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Initial Thoughts
When the first drama came out, I was one of the few people that wasn’t obsessed with it. I mean it was good and I like the message but I wasn’t as into it as everyone else. The bromance between Vincent & Owen wasn’t that great of a watch. And the cases weren’t as interesting. So when I went into watching the sequel, I didn’t have much expectations. Also cause sequels tend to not be as good, example Line Walker 3 wasn’t the best sequel. But this sequel proved me wrong. It was waaay more enjoyable then the first one.
Plot & Characters
Hope Man (Vincent Wong) is a blind barrister that works together with Gogo Kuk (Owen Cheung) a former police turned private detective & Deen Jie (Sisley Choi) who is Hopes legal executive. Together they solve various cases and uncover the justice behind it. New cast members included Eva Shaw (Kelly Cheung) a rival barrister, Kan Siu Wang (Pail Chun) Hopes former Master that mentored him. Kwok Lam (Jessica Kan) Hopes new apprentice & Kong Bo Chai (Lesley Chiang) an inspector police were both fun new additions to the cast.
For most direct sequels there are very rare instances where I would like the new cast additions. For example The Exorcists Meter 2.0 I hated all the new additions to the cast. But for this sequel, I like all of them - well most. For some people they believe Bo Chai & Kwok Lam were unnecessary but I find that they were a nice comic relief (with the bickering) and Bo Chai was needed since she was a police they were able to solve more cases with her help. Kwok Lam though she was born rich, she has a strong sense of justice & she would even go against her Father to pursue it. Kan Siu Wang shocked me with how he’s not as evil as you’d think. You would think he would be the ultimate boss that Hope needs to defeat but that’s not it. He likes power and money but he also knows there’s fine line between black & white.
Now, here comes my least favourite character which is Eva Shaw. And I’m sure anyone can guess why. Cause she is a Never Wong (Ali Lee) replacement. When I say replacement, I don’t mean she just takes over the empty spot & becomes the mandatory new love interest. No I mean. She is the new Never Wong. She dresses sexily, basically the same attitude & personality, strong sense of justice, falls deeply in love with Hope only to end up with Gogo. Like really? She’s literally a carbon copy. And I’m so disappointed that they decided to go down this route. They even had her dance in the rain with Hope too. Like can’t you be anymore original? Only difference is she doesn’t die. She’s also more annoying cause she’s always changing her mind. One moment she’s on her masters side but then the next moment she’s on Hopes side. Like can you just give a stable standing and stay loyal? Cause I’m exhausted with you going back & forth. She becomes more likeable as the series goes on but it was hard for me to warm up as she was just too similar to Never.
The Cases
The cases were very fun & interesting to watch. The director also has said that these cases are based on real circumstances and brings in the human side. Which rings true. The case of the “Heart Stealer” & “Fast Food Restaurant Refugee Murder” were both cases that brought a tear to my eye. For the former, it was touching to see how a mother would give up her heart just to ensure her son could live the rest of his life with no worries. The helplessness she felt and also knowing how in real life, cases like that could happen. At times like this the rich would win as they have the time & money. A lot of people think that those that always hang around 24 hours food places are gross & homeless. This case shows to not judge someone by their cover. Everyone has a backstory. The bond these group of people had for each other was eye opening. I was so sad when it showed the flashback of them singing & just enjoying each other’s company. You just feel so bad for them. I don’t want to say too much cause I don’t want to spoil to much of this case. The case of the “Silent Witness” & “Beyond Man and Woman” had good plot twists that I did not see coming. On the cover it sounded like boring cases but the background story to it ended up being surprising to watch.
The Romance
A lot of people didn’t like how in the sequel Hope & Yanice Tai (Tracy Chu) relationship became a central storyline despite Yanice passing away in the first. I personally actually liked it & didn’t find it draggy. It could be because I love Tracy as an actress. It could be because I find Hope & Yanice to be an amazing couple with a tragic love story. In this case I just find their story unfinished. As in, I never truly understood why Hope would give up Yanice. He could’ve went with Yanice instead of staying behind in Hong Kong. They’ve been through so much only for him to give it up, it always left a sour taste in my mouth. In this sequel we see him deal with the guilt & anguish to finally letting go and moving on. It also intercepted with another case so it was not random. I thought it was a nice touch for the writers to write in about her developing a tumour in her brain. Because from that she decided to pre- record a message to Hope. So we get to hear her last words & get a final wrap up in the story.
Hope & Deen Jie is odd to me. Like I’m aware that Deen Jie has a crush on him. But in this sequel she was possessive that it was uncomfortable in some parts. Hope has shown over & over again that he has no interest. Yet she’s still stuck on him. Towards the end they have a fall out because she thought Hope had heartlessly kicked her out of his firm & withheld her Fathers illness from her. She finds out later on it was cause of her Fathers order that he did that but she was still bitter. In the end she admits she was angry not cause of her Father but because she had believed he had fallen for Eva. So she was bitter out of jealousy. This part bothered me to no end. They are not dating. She knows he doesn’t like her. He never led her on, from day one he has said he only has Yanice & that he couldn’t move on. So I guess the idea that he has fallen in love again but not with her triggered her pettiness. It got to the point where she battled him in court with her helping a scumbag rapist just to spite him. Like girl, what happened to helping the helpless & doing what’s right? You threw that away for a guy? Like in the end she does the right thing but that was annoying. I would’ve enjoyed the development of Hope & Deen Jie’s love story if they hadn’t made her so petty and possessive. So for me, no I don’t like them together as a couple but enjoyed them more as friends. If anything I thought if Hope couldn’t end up with Yanice, Eva would’ve been nice. But they did a bait & switch. In the beginning they heavily made it seem that Hope would end up with Eva while Deen Jie would end up with Gogo. That was a weird but interesting twist though. I haven’t seen another drama where they would change up the love interest like that.
Gogo has always been a very casual guy so for him to end up with Eva was also odd to me. Eva has a glamorous, mature feel so I don’t find them a matching couple. But opposites attract in this case. I also thought they had no chemistry whatsoever. Eva was never interested in Gogo dispite him always flirting. She only liked Hope, it just looks like she settled for him out of the blue. I actually prefer Gogo with Bo Chai instead. They had better chemistry and he abruptly ended the relationship with Bo Chai that made her never get over him. I hated how he used her love for him to do things as a cop she shouldn’t be doing. They were engaged and he dumped her over the phone while she was trying on wedding dresses. He never ever sincerely apologized for that & he got over her so quickly. So I guess it’s good they didn’t end up together, he doesn’t deserve a good person like her. Bo Chai also never got real closure from it & her character sorta disappears towards the last episode. Gogo was also in a relationship with Never until it ended with her dying. So for him to end up with Eva whose a replica of Never just irks me.
The Good
I throughly loved Paul’s betrayal. And I also liked how instead of making him a full out villain they made him a man that knows a line that should not be crossed. He has helped bad people but in the end he was able to see the difference between good & bad. He sent one of the innocent accused to jail but he was also the one that ultimately set him free. He stole Deen Jie away from Hope but only cause he saw potential in her & knew she had way it takes to be a good barrister. He set up Deen Jie to battle with Hope not to spite him but because he knew doing this would help Deen Jie. So it’s like ultimately he’s not as bad as they portrayed him. In the end Hope even calls him Master again. I thought in the end there would be a huge showdown between Hope and him with the latter ending up in jail or something. So it was great spin to have him coming out as a semi- hero (for helping them patch things up between Hope & Deen Jie). It was unpredictable and enjoyable to see this instead.
The sequel is more case driven and I’m glad cause that’s what it made it more interesting. The first one focused more on Hopes journey to finding himself & rebuilding his relationship with his Father that left him when he turned blind (which I understand). Also talked more about friendship and focused solely on one evil villain. So the first one fell flat for me.
The Bad
I didn’t like how Hope was always in court battling the same people it’s either Eva, his Master and then Walter Wah (Hugo Wong) who is the same character from the first drama. I guess that’s TVBs way of staying in a budget instead of hiring new people to play different barristers.
It was disappointing to see Deen Jie fix her buck tooth & change her appearance so drastically. What I liked about her is how she didn’t care about the way she looked and that the heart is what matters. In the first drama Never had asked her why she doesn’t fix her teeth since she has the money. And she said she didn’t find it necessary & the inside is more important than her appearance. So for her to change the way she looked for Hope was just sighhh. But I guess the writers want the main couple to “look good”. I wonder if they always had Deen Jie become the main love interest in mind when they wrote the first one.
I also did not like how they had a cliffhanger ending. It ends with Deen Jie getting stabbed in the neck & in a coma. And of course Hope slowly coming into terms that he has fallen for Deen Jie. They did it cause they are potentially writing another sequel in collaboration with China. But with Vincent leaving TVB & the lacklustre ratings, I don’t know if it’s gonna happen anymore. But seeing how things turn out Deen Jie will probably end up with amnesia or something cause their love line will not run so smoothly. But if a sequel doesn’t happen, I can just pretend that ending did not happen and that Deen Jie is back working at his firm together solving crimes.
Final Thoughts
Everyone was great but I didn’t find any standouts. Vincent reprisal as a blind barrister is still amazing but I don’t see TVB awarding him Best Actor for the same role twice. Also he didn’t show up to the TVB Anniversary Gala which sorta shows his standing with TVB. Sisley improved for sure but I wouldn’t say she’s Best Actress material yet, it was nice to see her become the antagonist though. Kelly was nice & stable as usual. And Owen Cheung just stayed the same, nothing new was brought to the table at all. And weird enough the bromance between Hope & Gogo wasn’t as fun to watch compared to Al Cappucinos Cheung Sai Lung & Ko Ban. Here they just seemed like good friends instead of “brothers”.
I see a lot of comments about Sisley being a huge standout. And I agree with how much she has improved but I still think she still has a lot to learn. I admit her turn as the antagonist was interesting to watch but it wasn’t as great as they say. She isn’t loud acting anymore that’s for sure. But at the same time TVB is running out of actresses so I wouldn’t mind her winning so quickly.
It was lovely to see Tracy come back in a voice role. The directors had invited her back to film but she rejected the role. I wished she had accepted as it could’ve been her goodbye role since it seems she has no interest in continuing acting. She’s only doing ads & photo shoots as she slowly transitions to becoming a full time lawyer. I wouldn’t say a pity as though she’s a talented actress, becoming a lawyer is more stable. And she got married with her childhood sweetheart. I’m so happy for her but also sad as I will miss her acting. But I can always re-watch Over Run Over.
This was a better sequel then I have seen in years. Line Walker 3: Bull Fight just wasn’t as great compared to this. The Exorcists Meter 2.0 was also a downer. The plot twists in the cases and heartfelt stories made the drama all the more memorable. It’s turning out to be a great year for TVB drama watchers like me. Death by Zero, Brutally Young, Al Cappucino were standouts this year. While this drama, Line Walker 3 & The Witness do not fall far behind.
Side note: but what’s with the characters name? They’re all so strange. Man San Hap full English name Hope Man. I know it’s a play on for justice hero but dang it’s cringy. Then theres Santiago Kuk nicknamed Gogo. Like for real whyyyy. I hate that so much. “Hey Gogo hows it going”. “Gogo, I love you” blergh. Then Never Wong. Are you kidding me? She’s a court judge who chose Never as her nickname? Cherry was fine!! I guess it’s play on for “never wrong” well in this case you were wrong for thinking Never was a good name choice! And they don’t even pronounce the “r” in Never. They say it like “Neva” and it bothers me for no reason. TVB English names tend to always be questionable and I don’t care if they try to play it off as a nickname (Flashbacks to Laughing Gor, Muse, Bingo, Saving, Cash, Fever that’s only to name a few) but this is the first drama where it has this many.
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the-real-entity · 4 years
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m-more legion hcs? more likely than you think
Frank is actually afraid of spiders and mantis’ and anything else that looks like a big ass scary bug, he thinks they’re gross but only ever said it once to susie who immediately punched him in the shoulder hard when he said they were disgusting. He learned to keep his mouth shut about it later and has at least once gave her some money to buy her “pets” treats as an apology, he still refuses to go into her place back when they were in ormond.
Susie has three older sisters and three little sisters making them the neglected middle child, the lack of parental love and need for attention of any kind lead them down the more dangerous side of what they’re into now.
Joey has a younger brother and sister and whenever he wasn’t hanging with his friends he was taking care of them and trying to hold down any job to help pay for things, for a few hours a day he’s just another teen among his friends instead of the “responsible older brother who has to feed and look after his sibs”
Julie is an only child but when growing up before befriending susie and joey she hung out with an older cousin she looked up to, she was influenced by her into being more than just a good lil girl who listens to her parents, she didn’t find out till later that her cousin ran away from home when she got pregnant in her late teens by some jerk. If she had stayed in ormond she would have paid them a visit and if she didn’t like the creep will she already killed once.
Frank has half siblings he doesn’t know about, older or younger either way he’s not aware and doesn’t want to know them. They got lucky not being raised by...her.
Susie is actually nonbinary but doesn’t mind the she/her pronouns but really prefers they/them if possible, slip ups happen and that’s ok! 
Joey is gay but still in the closet, he’s not sure if he’ll ever come out of it. He’s afraid but his friends understand that when he’s ready to get anything off his chest he’ll say it [changed from bisexual, still demi]
Joey would be interested in drag, being someone other than himself sounds like something he’d be into, putting on a new persona and showing off how amazing he is? he first had the inkling when he watched Priscilla, queen of the desert but it really hit him hard when he saw wesley snipes in To Wong Foo, Thanks For Everything Julie Newmar. Blurring the lines of masculinity and femininity into one and feeling powerful and elegant all in one is something he wants to be and try.
Julie is the better gamer followed by joey, susie, then frank
Julie is actually the reigning street fighter II champ back in ormond, Ryu was her go to and knows all the super complicated moves but she wished vega was unlockable. Susie likes chun li, joey rocked zangief, and frank preferred to watch but usually picked via random selection.
Susie’s sweet self is the real deal but that just hides their more dangerous side. Boys learned that later on that just cause their nice doesn’t mean they should ignore when they says no, has stabbed a guy for touching their chest when they said to knock it the fuck off, his thumb was barely hanging on by the time they were finished with him.
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goalhofer · 3 years
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2020 Olympics Hong Kong Roster
Cycling
Fung Choy
Jessica Hoi-Yan
Sarah Wai-Sze
Yao Pang
Leung Yee
Equestrian
Thomas Ho
Gymnastics
Hung Shek
Karate
Grace Mo-Sheung
Swimming
Ian Ho
William Thorley
Stephanie Hoi-Shun
Siobhán Haughey
Camille Lily-Mei
Tinky Wai
Tam Lam
Toto Kwang-To
Jamie Zhen-Mei
Athletics
Chan Wang
Jessica Nga
Badminton
Angus Ng
Jordan Tang
Yi Cheung
Suet Tse
Fencing
Edgar Ka-Long
Cheung Lun
Ryan Chun-Yin
Lawrence Lok-Wang
Kaylin Sin-Yan
Vivian Wai
Coco Yik-Hei
Chu Mong
Golf
Tiffany Chan
Rowing
Winne Wing-Yan
Sailing
Michael Chun-Leung
Hayley Hei-Man
Stephanie Norton
Shooting
Chen Haohui
Table Tennis
Siu-Hang Lam
Chun-Ting Wong
Kwan-Kit Ho
Kem Doo
Minnie Yam
Lee Ching
Triathlon
Oscar Coggins
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28yuenlong · 3 years
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元朗診所列表一覽2021 https://www.28yuenlong.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/woman-visiting-cosmetology-clinic-ZKW2UX2-scaled.jpg
元朗診所列表一覽2021
元朗區發展迅速,交通網絡完善,私人物業林立,生活配套成熟,成為新興中産人士的熱門選擇。 以下先整理出元朗區專科診所,並列出最鄰近屋苑,讓各位準業主及租客可以對屋苑周邊配套有更全面的了解。
普通科
中醫
牙科
脊醫(脊骨神經科)
急症科
兒科
骨科
眼科
內科
外科
婦產科
泌尿外科
腸胃肝臟科
呼吸系統科
物理治療科
言語治療科
  普通科
  廖黎曙醫生 Dr. Liu Lai Chu, Thomas 廖黎曙醫生診所 新界元朗青山公路209號建成樓地下D舖 Tel: 24420133 星期一、三、五:0830-1600 星期二、四:1600-2200 星期日:0930-1300,1500-1900 附近屋苑: 世宙   劉汝亭醫生 Dr. Lau Yue Ting 劉汝亭醫生醫務所 壽富街55號元朗中心3A地下 Tel: 24769777 星期一、二、四: 0800-1300,1500-1900 星期三、五: 0800-1200 星期六、日及公眾���期: 0830-1200 附近屋苑: 世宙   徐丞尉醫生 Dr. Chui Shing Wai 徐丞尉醫生醫務所 新界元朗壽富街11號地下B舖 Tel: 24703822 星期一至三:0830-1330,1430-2000 星期四:0830-1330 星期五:0830-1330,1430-2000 星期六:0830-1330,1430-1830 星期日:1030-1830 附近屋苑: 世宙   文浩然醫生 Dr. Mam Ho Yin, Jimmy 文浩然醫生醫務所 新界元朗炮仗坊保定樓地下23A Tel: 24768128 星期一至五: 0900-1330,1600-2000 星期六、日: 0900-1330 附近屋苑: 世宙   李錦霞醫生 Dr. Lee Kam Ha 新界元朗元朗賽馬會健康院 元朗青山公路269 號 Tel: 24760221 星期一至星期五:0845-1230,1345-1630,1745-2130 星期六、日:0845-1230 公眾假期:0845-1230,1345-1630 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   勞鐸聲醫生 Dr. Lo Dgok Sing, Charles 勞鐸聲醫生診所 新界元朗朗屏邨石屏樓平台M13號 Tel: 24757323 星期一至五:0830-1300,1600-2000 星期六:0830-1300 星期日:0930-1300 附近屋苑: 朗屏8號   陳慶秀醫生 Dr. Chan Ching Sou 陳慶秀醫務所 新界元朗泰祥街9-15號金輪樓地下E舖 Tel: 24778454 星期一至五: 0800-1900 星期六: 0800-1700 星期日: 0800-1300 (請預約) 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨   楊敏醫生 Dr. Yeung Man 楊敏醫生醫務所 Tel: 24794303 星期一、二、四至六:0830-1330,1530-2000 星期三 ︰ 0830 - 1330 附近屋苑: 世宙   林國生醫生 Dr. Lam Kwok Sang  林國生西醫診所 元朗安寧路59號同昌樓地下 Tel: 24757482 星期一至五:0830-1900 星期六:0830-1300 附近屋苑: 世宙   朱基良醫生 Dr. Chu Kee Leong 朱基良診所 元朗裕景坊8號同益大廈1樓7室 Tel: 24779393 星期一至五︰0800-1230,1300-1730 星期六 、日、公眾假期︰0800-1230 附近屋苑: 世宙   李效良醫生 Dr. Lee Hau Leung, Calvin 基健醫療中心 新界元朗牡丹街合益廣場A62號地舖 Tel: 24782000 星期一至五、日:0830-1400,1500-2000 星期六、公眾假期:0830-1400 附近屋苑: 康德閣   李君醫生 Dr. Li Kwan 女西醫李君 新界元朗教育路27號地舖 Tel: 24424388 星期一至五五:0900-1900 星期六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 明雲閣   王裕民醫生 Dr. Wong Yu Man, James 王裕民醫生醫務所 新界元朗裕景坊11號興發樓地下2A Tel: 24752212 / 24470606 星期一至六:1000-1330,1430-1730,1900-2030 星期日、公眾假期:1000-1330,1430-1900 附近屋苑: 康德閣   文龍光醫生 Dr. Man Lung Kwong 文龍光醫生醫務所 新界元朗安寧路112A號好景樓地下18室(信義中學對面) Tel: 24431886 星期四、公眾假期:0830-1300 星期一至三、五:0830-1300,1530-2000 星期六:0830-1300,1530-1800 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   張錦昇醫生 Dr. Cheung Kam Sing, Nelson 立訊醫務中心 新界元朗鳳翔路69號建輝大廈地下2號舖 Tel: 24422270 星期一至五 ︰0830-1330,1500-1930 星期六:0830-1330 附近屋苑: 雍翠豪園   譚俊浩醫生 Dr. Tam Chun Ho 新都醫務中心  新界元朗教育路2-6號捷榮樓地下D舖(千色店對面) Tel: 24709778 星期一、五、六:0900-1400,1500-0000 星期二、三:0900-1400,1500-2100 星期四、日:0900-1400,1500-2000 附近屋苑: 康德閣   梁逢申醫生 Dr. Leung Fung Sun, Peter 梁逢申醫生醫務所 新界元朗安寧路82號地下 Tel: 24788399 星期一至五:0800-1130,1630-2030 星期六:0800-1130,1630-1830 星期日、公眾假期:0800-1130 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   沈建華醫生 Dr. Sum Kin Wa, Hikaru 首健醫務中心 沈建華醫生診所 新界元朗大棠路48號地下A室 Tel: 24778098 星期一、二、四至六:0900-1300,1500-2100 星期三、日:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   方卓明醫生 Dr. Fong Cheuk Ming 方卓明醫生診所 新界元朗同樂街22B地鋪 Tel: 26953789 星期一、四、日:1400-2130 星期二:1000-1900 星期三、五:1000-2130 星期六:1000-1530 附近屋苑: 世宙   葉凌寒醫生 Dr. Yip Ling Hon, Kaisa 葉凌寒醫生醫務所 新界元朗青山公路47號地下 Tel: 24739989 星期一至五:0930-1300,1500-1830 星期六:0930-1430 附近屋苑: 世宙   黃思華醫生 Dr. Wong Si Wah, Paul   建樂醫療中心 元朗又新街35號怡豐大廈4號地鋪 Tel: 26482522 星期一至六:0900-2100 公眾假期:1200-1800 附近屋苑: 富祐閣   張光輝醫生 Dr. Cheung Kwong Fai, Stephen 博康醫務中心 新界元朗大棠道23號合益廣場地下A17舖 Tel: 24757235 星期一、二、四、六:0900-2100 公眾假期:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 康德閣   陳嘉龍醫生 Dr. Chan Ka Lung 陳嘉龍醫生醫務中心 新界元朗青山公路22-26號金源大廈地下4室 Tel: 24423377 星期一、二、四、五:0830-1330,1530-2000 星期三:0830-1330 星期六:0900-1500 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨   麥詠儀醫生 Dr. Mak Wing Yee 聯合醫務中心(元朗)  青山公路65號豪景商業大廈地下 Tel: 24783966 星期一至五:0900-2000 星期六:0900-1800 星期日、公眾假期:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 聯發洋樓   林溥仁醫生 Dr. Lam Po Yan, Richard  林溥仁醫生 醫務所 新界元朗阜財街34-46號光華中心地下 Tel: 24754466 星期一、三至五:1000-2000 星期六:1000-1900 附近屋苑: 康德閣   張慧賢醫生 Dr. Cheung Wai Yin 匯心醫務中心  元朗牡丹街37號大棠樓地下B-2舖 Tel: 24781134 / 24781135 星期二、四至日:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 康德閣   吳德茂醫生 Dr. Ng Tak Mau 仁愛堂田家炳綜合醫療中心  元朗壽富街3號地下 Tel: 24432319 星期一至六:0900-1300,1400-2000 星期日:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 世宙   翟賜華醫生 Dr. Chak Chi Wah, Warren 翟賜華醫生醫務所 新界元朗朗屏村石屏樓M14室 Tel: 24758988 星期一至五:0830-1300,1500-1930 星期六、日、公眾假期:0830-1300 附近屋苑: 映御   張子明醫生 Dr. Cheung Chi Ming  張子明醫生醫務所 新界元朗牡丹街23號康德閣商場22B地鋪 Tel: 26712959 星期一至四︰0900-2030 星期五︰0900-1800 星期六、日︰0900-1300 附近屋苑: 朗晴居   符名澤醫生 Dr. Fu Ming Chak  符名澤醫生醫務所 元朗鳳琴街18號玉龍樓10號地下 Tel: 24742856 星期一至三、五、六:0900-1300,1600-2000 附近屋苑: 永富閣   曾式恆醫生 Dr. Tsang Sik Hang, Shirley 曾式恆醫生醫務所 新界元朗屏輝徑2-44號良材樓19號地舖 Tel: 24432368 星期一至三、五:0900-1300,1600-2000 星期四:0900-1300 星期六:0900-1300,1500-1800 附近屋苑: 朗庭園   李堅峰醫生 Dr. Lie Kin Fung  李堅峯醫生醫務所 新界元朗大馬路209號建成樓地下D舖 Tel: 24420133 星期一、三、五:1600-2100 星期二、四:0830-1500 星期六:0900-1400 附近屋苑: 世宙   李信華醫生 Dr. Lee Shun Wah  李信華醫生醫務所 新界元朗阜財街街日新大廈地下D號舖 Tel: 24799196 星期一至五:0930-1300,1430-1930 星期六、日:0930-1300 附近屋苑: 康德閣   劉莊敬醫生 Dr. Lau Chong King 劉莊敬醫生醫務所 元朗大馬路220號富興大廈地下 Tel: 24730881 星期一、三、日: 1530-2100 星期二: 0830-1330,1530-2300 星期四: 1530-2300 星期六: 0830-1330 附近屋苑: 富來花園   劉煒強醫生 Dr. Lau Wai Keung, Timothy 劉煒強醫生醫務所 新界元朗康樂路27號嘉好大廈地下B4號舖 Tel: 24420928 星期一、三、五:0830-1330,1530-1900 星期二、四、六:0830-1330 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   王錦麟醫生 Dr. Wong Kyin Lin, Peter 王錦麟醫生醫務所 新界元朗教育路38A號豐興樓地舖 Tel: 24771399 星期一至五、日:0830-1300,1430-1800 附近屋苑: 好發洋樓   劉家業醫生 Dr. Lau Ka Yip 創健環美醫務中心 香港新界青山公路元朗段20號 Tel: 26736630 星期一至日:0930-1330,1530-1900 附近屋苑: 譽88   潘兆榮醫生 Dr. Poon Siu Wing 匯心醫務中心  新界元朗牡丹街37號大棠樓地下B-2舖 Tel: 24781134 星期一、二、四至日:0900-1330,1530-2300 星期三:0900-1330 附近屋苑: 康德閣   李玉儉醫生 Dr. Li Yu Jian, Jane  基健醫療中心 新界元朗牡丹街合益廣場A62號地舖 Tel: 24782000 星期一至五、日:0830-1400,1500-2000 星期六、公眾假期:0830-1400 附近屋苑: 康德閣   李玉儉醫生 Dr. Li Yu Jian, Jane  基健綜合醫療中心(元朗) 青山公路206-216號華昌大廈A座地下C舖 Tel: 24784277 星期一至六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   姚津珠醫生 Dr. Yao Jin Chu 姚津珠醫生醫務所 新界元朗朗屏村石屏樓M12號舖 Tel: 24423050 星期一至五、日:1000-1300,1630-2130 附近屋苑: 朗屏8號   殷錦新醫生 Dr. Yan Kan Sun, Charlie 情緒醫學美容治療中心 新界元朗福德街30號地下 Tel: 24420867 星期一至五:0830-2000 星期六:0830-1700 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳鴻偉醫生 Dr. Chan Hung Wai, Patrick 陳鴻偉醫生醫務所 新界元朗錦綉花園商場C17號舖 Tel: 24719580 星期一至五 ︰ 0900-1300,1530-1930 星期六 、公眾假期︰ 0900-1300 附近屋苑: 加州花園   陳子沛醫生 Dr. Chan Tse Pui  陳子沛醫生醫務所 元朗西菁街富盛樓地下8號 Tel: 24792716 星期一至六:1030-1230,1530-1630,1900-2000 星期日、公眾假期:1000-1230 附近屋苑: 好發洋樓   陳子沛醫生 Dr. Chan Tse Pui 陳子沛醫生醫務所 洪水橋麗虹花園地下8號 Tel: 24484676 星期一至六:0800-1000,1700-1900 星期日、公眾假期:1700-1900 附近屋苑: 翠珊園   何偉明醫生 Dr. Ho Wai Ming 新都綜合醫務中心 新界元朗大馬路50號豐裕軒8-9號舖地下 Tel: 24436224 星期一至五:0900-1800 星期六:0900-1700 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳冠華醫生 Dr. Naing Win Tun, Thomas Nelson 新都綜合醫務中心 新界元朗大馬路50號豐裕軒8-9號舖地下 Tel: 24436224 星期一至五:0830-1400,1500-2030 公眾假期:0900-1400 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳鳴偉醫生 Dr. Chan Ming Wai 陳鳴偉醫生醫務所 元朗建業街84號聯發洋樓地下2號舖 Tel: 24736123 星期一至五:0830-2130 星期六:0830-1900 星期日、公眾假期:0830-1330 附近屋苑: 好景洋樓   鄧逸明醫生 Dr. Tang Yat Ming  鄧逸明醫生診醫務所 新界元朗同樂街2號金寶樓1樓 Tel: 24786677 星期一至六:0900-1200,1600-2000 附近屋苑: 世宙   歐陽恆醫生 Dr. Au Yeung, Henry 歐陽恆醫生醫務所 教育路18-24號元朗商業中心4樓 401-2室 Tel: 24775522 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   陳駿基醫生 Dr. Chan Chun Kei 陳駿基醫生醫務所 新界元朗安寧路59號同昌大廈B5地舖 Tel: 24757482 附近屋苑: 世宙   鄧顯裕醫生 Dr. Tang Hin Yu, Peter 鄧顯裕醫生醫務所 新界元朗水車館街興旺樓4號舖 Tel: 24760748 星期一至三、五、六: 0830-1800 星期四、日: 0830-1230 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨   潘嘉賢醫生 Dr. Poon Ka Yin  新都綜合醫務中心  新界元朗大馬路50號豐裕軒8-9號舖地下 Tel: 24436224/ 24436220 星期一 :0900-1300,1400-2000 星期二至五:0900-1300,1400-1900 星期六:0900-1300,1400-1800 星期日:0900-1330 附近屋苑: 世宙   梁志豪醫生 Dr. LEUNG CHI HO, STEVE 基健日夜綜合醫療中心 新界元朗牡丹街合益廣場A60號地舖 Tel: 24700640/ 24700961 星期一:0930-1400 星期二至四:0930-1400,1930-2330 附近屋苑: 康德閣   何書韻醫生 Dr. Ho Shu Wan, Sharon 基健日夜綜合醫療中心 新界元朗牡丹街合益廣場A60號地舖 診所電話 Tel: 24700640 星期一至日:0930-1400,1930-2330 附近屋苑: 康德閣   梁壽雄醫生 Dr. Leung Sau Hung  匯心醫務中心 元朗牡丹街37號大棠樓地下B-2舖 Tel: 24781134 / 24781135 星期二、四、六:1600-2030 附近屋苑: 康德閣   楊立和醫生 Dr. Jong Lip Foh, Alexander 楊立和醫生醫務所 新界元朗青山公路165號閣樓 Tel: 24736988 星期一至六:0900-1200,1600-2000 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   黃思杰醫生 Dr. Wong Sy Kee, Donald 思健醫療中心  新界元朗炮仗坊19號地下 Tel: 24430041 星期一至五:0900-1300,1500-1900 星期六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 世宙   鄺冠民醫生 Dr. Kwong Koon Man 鄺冠民醫生醫務所 新界元朗安寧路俊賢坊28號安基大廈地下14號舖 Tel: 24784111 星期一至三、五、六:0800-1300,1700-2000 星期四、日:0800-1300 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   王淑貞醫生 Dr. Wong Suk Ching 元朗老人健康中心 新界元朗西菁街26號 Tel: 24702732 星期一至五:0900-1300,1400-1700 星期六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 好發洋樓   方書國醫生 Dr. Fong Shu Kwok 方書國醫生醫務所 新界元朗同樂街25-29號鴻福樓2樓4座 Tel: 24755171 星期一至五:0900-1230,1530-1830 星期六:0900-1230 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳明良醫生 Dr. Chan Ming Leung 陳明良醫生醫務所 新界元朗大棠道23號合益廣場地下A12號鋪 Tel: 23623789 星期一:0900-1300,1500-1700 附近屋苑: 康德閣   葉耀民醫生 Dr. Ip Yiu Man 葉耀民醫生醫務所 新界元朗安寧路140號紫荊樓地下 Tel: 24739898 星期一至五:0800-1300,1530-2000 星期六:0800-1300,1500-1800 星期日:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   鄧世傑醫生 Dr. Tang Sai Kit, Bernard 鄧世傑醫生醫務所 新界元朗朗日路西鐵元朗站20-21號舖 Tel: 24767186 星期一 至五︰0830-1330,1600-2030 星期六:0830-1600 星期日、公眾假期:1300-1800 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   李慶虎醫生 Dr. Khin Haw  博愛醫院 新界元朗凹頭博愛醫院24小時診所 Tel: 24868855 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   游瑞昌醫生 Dr. Yau Shui Cheong 博愛醫院 新界元朗凹頭博愛醫院24小時門診部 Tel: 24868857 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   郭偉麟醫生 Dr. Kwok Wai Lun 博愛醫院 新界元朗凹頭博愛醫院24小時門診及家庭醫學門診 Tel: 24868000 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown  
中醫
莫楚華醫生 Dr. Mok Chor Wah 保安堂藥行(仁樂坊) 新界元朗教育路283號順發樓H座地下 Tel: 24760318 星期一至六:1000-1500,1700-2000 星期日及公眾假期:1000-1700 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   朱建銘醫生 Dr. Chu Kin Ming 天信中醫診所 新界元朗安寧路138-160A號紫荊樓2期地下A舖 Tel: 36116330 星期一、二、四、五、六:0930-1330,1530-1930 星期三:0930-1330 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   鄭偉雄醫生 Dr. Cheng Wai Hun 鄭偉雄中醫診所 元朗教育路109號鴻運樓地下5號 Tel: 68789079 星期一、四:0930-1400 星期二、三、五至日:0930-2000 公眾假期:0930-1830 附近屋苑: 朗屏8號   顏景雲醫生 Dr. Ngan King Wan 景生堂中醫診所 新界元朗大馬路161號年旺樓1樓B室 Tel: 24436661 / 93238068 星期一至六:1000-1300,1400-1900 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳啟耀醫生 Dr. Chan Kai Yiu 陳健雄診所 新界元朗元朗安寧路65號福安樓1樓B室 Tel: 24733364 星期一至六:0800-1200,1400-1900 星期日:0800-1200 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳金滿醫生 Dr. Chan Kam Moon 萬豐行 新界元朗俊賢坊8號兆日樓地下B舖 Tel: 24764532 星期一至六:0900-1300,1400-1930 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   黃永浩醫生 Dr. Wong Wing H 黃永浩骨傷針灸診所 新界元朗媽橫路富來商場1號地下 Tel: 24731366 / 90797599 星期一、五:1100-1300,1600-1900 星期二至四、六:1000-1300,1600-1900 星期日:1000-1300 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   王培增醫生 Dr. Wong Pui Tsang 王老景跌打醫舘 新界元朗泰豐街23號錦華樓D座地下 Tel: 24787975 / 94370337 星期一至六:0900-2000 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨   鄭愛嫻醫生 Dr. Cheng Oi Han  (表列中醫) 鄭愛嫻醫藥局 新界元朗同樂街22號地下B鋪 Tel: 24862159 星期一至五:1100-1300,1400-1900 星期六:1000-1300,1400-1900 附近屋苑: 世宙   阮積濃醫生 Dr. Yuen Chik Lung 恒康醫館 新界元朗鳳攸南街好順利大廈第一座8號地鋪 Tel: 24744558 星期一至三、五、六:0730-1400 附近屋苑: Yoho Town   劉潔明醫生 Dr. Lau Kit Ming 恒康醫館 新界元朗鳳攸南街好順利大廈第1座8號地舖 Tel: 24744558 星期一至三、五、六:0730-1700 星期日:0730-1200 附近屋苑: Yoho Town   陳炳強醫生 Dr. Chan Ping Keung 樂足軒 新界元朗金輝徑金輝大厦地下七號舖 Tel: 93298093 星期一至日:1100-2300 附近屋苑: 好發洋樓   黎任楠醫生 Dr. Lai Yam Nam (Lai, Chin Pang) (骨傷) 黎展鵬跌打醫館 新界元朗安樂路61號永興大廈1樓08室 Tel: 23855563 / 91235623 須預約 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   譚慶瑞醫生 Dr. Tam Hing Sui  (骨傷)     譚慶瑞註冊中醫骨傷科 新界元朗鳳攸北街11-15號益發大廈商場1樓3號舖 Tel: 24790302 星期一至六:0900-1230,1400-1800 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   容超榮醫生 Dr. Yung Chiu Wing, David 容超榮中醫館 新界元朗錦綉花園L-2-32 Tel: 65927008 須預約 附近屋苑: 加州花園   江志榮醫生 Dr. Kong Chi Wing 江志榮中醫師 新界元朗炮仗坊11號珍寶樓1樓A室 Tel: 97803612 星期一至五:1000-1900 星期六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 世宙   文錦亮醫生 Dr. Man Kam Leung 文錦亮醫館 新界元朗東堤街11號聯勝樓地下 Tel: 24764746 / 93818696 星期一至六:0900-2000 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨   方民德醫生 Dr. Fong Man Tak Hong Kwan Medicine Company 新界元朗青山公路225-237號勤業樓1樓B室 Tel: 24785936 星期一、二、四至六: 1030-1300,1500-1900 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   葉麗斌醫生 Dr. Ip, Lai Pan 怡健堂中醫元朗(YOHO)診所  元朗元龍街9號形點2期2樓A227號舖 Tel: 22196667 星期二、四、六:1000-1900 星期五:1000-1400 附近屋苑: 朗怡居   邵帥醫生 Dr. Shao Shuai  元真堂中醫診所 元朗大橋路大橋村4號G/F Tel: 69365823 星期二至五:1100-1900 星期六、日:1100-1700 附近屋苑: 世宙   楊少蓮醫生 Dr. Yeung Siu Lin, Teresa 百草堂 新界元朗大馬路162-168號聯昇樓16字樓D室 Tel: 24431507 / 93654516 星期一、二、四至六:0830-1200,1500-1900 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   劉展鵬醫生 Dr. Lau Chin Pang  和順堂中醫診所 新界元朗錦綉花園市中心A座地下8號舖 Tel: 39529827 星期二、三、六:1100-1500,1600-2000 星期四:1100-1600 附近屋苑: 加州花園   黃光明醫生 Dr. Wong Kwong Ming 上善醫藥業 新界元朗教育路68號兆豐樓2樓C2室 Tel: 24433100 星期一、三、五:1500-1930 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   林玉美醫生 Dr. Lum Yuk Mei 杏樺中醫診所 新界元朗馬田路38號怡豐花園73號地舖 Tel: 67016280 星期一、四、六、日:1200-2000 星期三、五、公眾假期:1400-2000 附近屋苑: 朗景臺   丁佩枝醫生 Dr. Ting Pui Chi 枝子中醫診所有限公司 新界元朗大棠路23號合益廣場1樓C32舖 Tel: 26034777 星期一至六:0900-1800 附近屋苑: 康德閣   陳慧言醫生 Dr. Chan Wai Yan, Alien 生命樹中醫養生館 新界元朗黃屋村165號地下 Tel: 23240003 星期一至四、日:1000-1330,1500-2200 星期五:1000-1330,1500-1730 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   林杰智醫生 Dr. Lam Kit Chi  和順堂中醫診所  新界元朗錦綉花園市中心A座地下8號舖 Tel: 39529828 星期一、五:1100-1500,1600-2000 附近屋苑: 加州花園   施怡如醫生 Dr. Shih Yi Ju 怡寧中醫診所 新界元朗壽富街65號時益大廈13樓D室 Tel: 98766461 須預約 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   李綺莉醫生 Dr. Lee Yee Lee 華林藥行 新界元朗媽廟路永發樓地下36號舖 Tel: 24787396 星期一至六:0600-1100 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   黃志慧醫生 Dr. Wong Chi Wai  永成參茸藥行 新界元朗西堤街2號恆輝大廈地下2號鋪 Tel: 24768309 星期一至日:0830-1330,1430-2030 附近屋苑: 世宙   周靖南醫生 Dr. Chow Ching Nam, William 位元堂 新界元朗阜財街63號地下 Tel: 24771123 星期一至日:1500-1900 附近屋苑: 康德閣   程道鍾醫生 Dr. Chen Ton Tjong  陽光中醫藥研究所 新界元朗鳯攸南街9號好順利大廈地下商場29號舖 Tel: 24275581 星期一、三至日: 0930-2000 星期二: 1500-2000 附近屋苑: Yoho Town   劉國光醫生 Dr. Lau Kwok Kwon 健康中醫療診所 新界元朗合財街33號合益商場2樓92號舖 Tel: 98728372 星期一至五:1000-1900 星期六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 富達廣場   梁楚萍醫生 Dr. Leung Cho Ping 思樂中醫診所 新界元朗壽富街65號時益大廈12樓F座 Tel: 24778033 星期一至三、五、六:1100-1300,1500-1900 星期日:1500-1900 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   黎仲謀醫生 Dr. Lai Chung Mau 黎仲謀中醫診所 新界元朗攸潭美圍仔村攸美山莊F座二樓 Tel: 93232369 星期二至日:0930-1130,1430-1730 附近屋苑: 碧豪苑   陸濼芙醫生 Dr. Luk Lok Fu, Madonna 陸葉中醫診所 新界元朗鳳群街2號年發大廈地下11號鋪 Tel: 69723272 / 94101666 星期一、四:1030-1400,1530-2000 星期六:1030-1400,1530-1800 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   劉照發醫生 Dr. Lau Chiu Fat, Stanley 元朗南北大葯房 新界元朗元朗康樂路12號地下D1舖 Tel: 24781449 星期一至六:0900-1330,1430-2000 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   李樹森醫生 Dr. Lee Shu Sun 李樹森中醫藥局 新界元朗鳳攸北街11-15號益發大廈1樓12號 Tel: 26701331 星期一至六:0930-1930 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   王樂萱醫生 Dr. Wong Lok Huen 仁愛堂田家炳綜合醫療中心 新界元朗壽富街65號12/F, F室 Tel: 24432319 星期一至六:0900-1300,1400-2000 星期日:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳海盈醫生 Dr. Chan Hoi Ying, Katie 天信中醫診所 新界元朗安寧路138-160號紫荊樓2期地下A舖 Tel: 36116330 星期一、二、四至六:0930-1330,1500-1930 星期三:0930-1330 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   姜勝祥醫生 Dr. Keung Shing Cheung 大德堂 新界元朗泰祥街16號盛發大廈地舖 Tel: 24732568 星期一至五:1000-1900 星期六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨   黃神結醫生 Dr. Wong Sen Kit  中醫黃神結診所 新界元朗媽橫路7號富來花園商場地下4號舖 Tel: 24709870 / 95233287 星期一至五:1000-1900 星期六:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   莊嘉希醫生 Dr. Chong Ka Hei  屈臣氏大藥房 新界元朗青山公路元朗段142號地下,1樓及2樓 Tel: 29482913 / 69337306 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   梁偉文醫生 Dr. Leung Wai Man (Leung, Man) 梁偉文中醫診所 新界元朗康樂路6-8號康樂廣場一樓五號舖 Tel: 2473 2108 附近屋苑: 怡豐花園  
牙科
李子樑醫生 Dr. Lee He Leung, Lawrence 李子樑牙科診所 新界元朗西菁街23號富達廣場地下10號 Tel: 24701080 星期一至三: 1000-1300,1400-1800 星期四至六: 1000-1300,1400-2000 附近屋苑: 名御   鄭志光醫生 Dr. Cheng Che Kwong 鄭志光牙科醫生醫療診所 新界元朗壽富街71號元發樓地下7號舖 Tel: 24734035 星期一、二、四至六: 0900-1300 ,1430-1800 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   盧思薇醫生 Dr. Lo Sze Mei 盧思薇牙科診所 新界元朗青山公路39號金豐大廈地下7號舖 Tel: 29445507 星期一、二、四、五:0900-1300,1500-2100  星期三、六:0900-1300,1500-1900  星期日:0900-1400  附近屋苑: 雍翠豪園   何鴻彰醫生 Dr. Ho Hung Cheung, Stephen 基健牙科中心 新界元朗教育路24號元朗商業中心403室 Tel: 24790239 星期一、三、五: 0900-1300 ,1400-1800 星期二: 0900-1300 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   鄧景豪醫生 Dr. Tang King Ho  鄧景豪藍立己牙科醫務所 新界元朗牡丹街合益廣場地下A65號舖 Tel: 24702100 星期一至六:0900-2030 星期日:0900-1330 附近屋苑: 康德閣   藍立己醫生 Dr. Lam Lap Kei, Letty   鄧景豪藍立己牙科醫務所 新界元朗牡丹街合益廣場地下A65號舖 Tel: 24702100 星期一至六:0900-2030 星期日:0900-1330 附近屋苑: 康德閣   張依芸醫生 Dr. Cheung Yee Wan 張依芸牙醫診所 新界元朗教育路54-56號順發大廈地下E2舖 Tel: 24427868 星期一 、四至六:0900-1300,1400-2000 星期三 :0900-1300,1400-1800 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   區家駒醫生 Dr. Au Ka Kui  區家駒牙科醫生醫務所 元朗鳳攸東街9號好順意大廈地下20號舖 Tel: 34619895 星期一、二、四、五:0900-1300,1500-2100 星期六:0900-1900 星期日:0900-1700 附近屋苑: 年發大廈   廖家豪醫生 Dr. Liu Ka Ho 皓仁牙科醫務所 元朗鳳翔路70號冠豐大厦地下3號舖 Tel: 22050722 星期一至五:0900-2000 星期六、日、公眾假期:0900-1800 附近屋苑: 合益中心   羅康裕醫生 Dr. Law Hong Yu, Anthony  康穎牙科 新界元朗青山公路31號元善大廈地下C鋪 Tel: 37047383 星期一至日:1000-1300,1430-2000 公眾假期:1000-1800 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨   谷偉明醫生 Dr. Ku Wai Ming  谷偉明牙科診所 元朗又新街35號怡豐大廈地下8號舖 Tel: 24744830 星期一、二、四至六:0900-1230,1400-1800 星期三:0900-1230 附近屋苑: 富祐閣   鄭志強醫生 Dr. Cheng Chi Keung 鄭志強牙醫診所 新界元朗安寧路146號紫荊樓B座地下 Tel: 24767600 星期一、二、四五:1000-1300,1500-2000 星期六:1000-1300 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   劉明輝醫生 Dr. Lau Ming Fai 美好牙科診所 新界元朗安寧路92號地下 Tel: 24430773 星期一至五:0830-1900 星期六:0830-1730 星期日:0830-1500 附近屋苑: 朗城匯   王振偉醫生 Dr. Ong Chun Wai 王振偉牙科醫生 新界元朗阜財街日新大廈地下D號舖 Tel: 24799576 星期一至五:0930-1900 星期六:0930-1700 附近屋苑: 康德閣   鍾志恒醫生 Dr. Chung Chi Hang 瑞康牙科醫務所 新界元朗教育路68號兆豐樓地下5號舖 Tel: 24757583 星期一、三至日:1100-1830 公眾假期:1100-1830 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   鄧冠賢醫生 Dr. Tang Kwun Yin 鄧冠賢牙醫診所 新界元朗壽富街71號元發樓地下3A號舖 Tel: 24780688 星期一至五:1000-1330,1500-2000 星期六:1000-1330 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   關慧敏醫生 Dr. Kwan Wai Man  關慧敏醫生醫務所 新界元朗壽富街71號元發樓地下7號舖 Tel: 24734035 星期一至六:0900-1300,1430-2000 附近屋苑: 金寶大廈   趙子彥醫生 Dr. Chiu Chi Yin,Eugene  欣澄牙科中心 元朗屏昌徑14-48號聯發樓地下14B舖 Tel: 36188051 星期一至六:0900-1330,1530-1930 附近屋苑: 富來花園   宗穎超醫生 Dr. Chung Wing Chiu 宗穎超牙醫診所 元朗阜財街日新大廈地下D號舖(恆香餅家後面) Tel: 24455339 / 24455119 星期一、三、四:0930-1300,1500-2030 星期六:0930-1300,1500-1800 附近屋苑: 康德閣   黃國仲醫生 Dr. Wong Kwok Chung 建樂醫療中心 新界元朗康景街2號鈞德樓地下3號舖 Tel: 24786333 星期一至六:0900-2100 公眾假期:1200-1800 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   蕭建華醫生 Dr. Siu Kin Wah 蕭建華醫生醫務所 新界元朗教育路68號兆豐樓3號舖 Tel: 24791899 星期一至六:0900-1300,1430-1930 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   許溢清醫生 Dr. Hui Yick Ching, Kevin 許溢清醫生牙科醫務所 新界元朗又新街建威大廈地下5號舖 Tel: 24701777 星期一至六:0900-1300,1500-2100 星期日:0900-1300,1500-1800 附近屋苑: 合益中心   梁惠明醫生 Dr. Leung Wai Ming, Wilson 基健牙科中心 新界元朗教育路24號元朗商業中心403室 Tel: 24790239 星期日:1000-1300 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   胡詠珊醫生 Dr. Wu Wing Shan, Sandy 康穎牙科 新界元朗青山公路29-33號元善大廈地下C舖 Tel: 37047383 星期一至六:0930-1230,1430-1900 星期日:0930-1230,1430-1730 附近屋苑: 世宙  
脊醫(脊骨神經科)
黃裕惠醫生 Dr. Natalie Ng 紐約脊骨及物理治療中心  元朗青山公路元朗段39號地下4號舖(元朗站B出口) Tel: 94934016 星期一至五:1000-2000 星期六:1000-1800 附近屋苑: 金豪大廈   邵力子醫生 Dr. Shiu Lik Chi, Alex 康逸護脊中心 元朗安寧路110A號好景樓地下 Tel: 21915901 星期一至六:0930-1930 附近屋苑: 朗城匯  
急症科
梁志鏗醫生 Dr. Leung Chi Hang, Vincent 梁志鏗醫生醫務所 新界元朗安寧路140號紫荊樓地下G/F樓 Tel: 24739898 星期一至五:0830-1300,1530-1900 星期六:0830-1300 附近屋苑: 好景樓  
兒科
岑鳳廷醫生 Dr. Sham Fung Ting, Connie 岑鳳廷醫生醫務所 新界元朗阜財街日新大廈地下D舖 Tel: 24799196 星期一至日:0830-1430 附近屋苑: 光華中心   黃國榮醫生 Dr. Wong Kwok Wing 黃國榮醫生醫務所 新界元朗元朗新街5號合益廣場地下B9號舖 Tel: 26828192 星期一至六:0800-1130,1800-2100 星期日及公眾假期:0800-1300 附近屋苑: 康德閣   謝建華醫生 Dr. Tse Kin Wah, Dick 謝建華醫生醫務所 新界元朗壽富街71號地下6號舖 Tel: 24788255 星期一、二、四、五:0800-1300,1500-1900 星期六:0800-1300 附近屋苑: 喜利大廈   鄺德麟醫生 Dr. Kwong Tak Lun, Leslie  鄺德麟醫生醫務所 新界元朗大棠道32-34號1樓E座 Tel: 24740242 星期一至五:1030-1330,1730-2030 星期六:1030-1330 附近屋苑: 金倫大廈  
骨科
方子明醫生 Dr. Fong Chi Ming 仁滙專科及物理治療中心 元朗安樂路71號永興大廈12號地鋪 Tel: 24309118 星期一至五:1000-1300,1500-1900 星期六︰1000-1400 附近屋苑: 鈞樂新邨  
眼科
鄧維達醫生 Dr. Tang Wai Tat, Wilson 維達眼科手術及激光中心(元朗) 新界元朗谷亭街2號地下 Tel: 37553133 星期一至六:0900-1900 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳國祥醫生 Dr. Chan Kwok Cheung, Jonathan 康視白內障及眼科醫療中心 新界元朗青山公路63號金豪大廈地下A舖 Tel: 24779101 星期一 至五︰1000-1800 星期六︰1000-1400 附近屋苑: 世宙   陳煥明醫生 Dr. Chan Woon Ming 康視白內障及眼科醫療中心 新界元朗青山公路63號金豪大廈地下A舖 Tel: 24779101 星期一 至五︰1000-1800 星期六:1000-1400 附近屋苑: 光華中心  
內科
李卓鴻醫生 Dr. Lee Cheuk Hung 李卓鴻醫生診所 新界元朗鳳香街26號金馬大廈 Tel: 24799694 星期一至六:1100-1315,1400-1615 星期日:0900-1000 附近屋苑: 鳳翔大廈   蕭沛生醫生 Dr. Siu Pui Sang, Alexander 蕭沛生醫生醫務所 新界元朗又新街榮豐大廈A舖 Tel: 24731870 星期一至五:0830-1300,1430-1930 星期六、日:0830-1300 附近屋苑: 滿利大廈   梁振強醫生 Dr. Leung Chun Keung, Joseph  博愛醫院 新界元朗凹頭博愛醫院內科 Tel: 24868000 附近屋苑: 鳳翔大廈  
外科
高志華醫生 Dr. Ko Chi Wah, Keith 高志華醫生診所 新界元朗鳳翔路2-6號交通廣場地下5號舖 Tel: 24433628 星期一至六: 0900-1200,1700-2000 附近屋苑: 偉發大廈   鄧善祥醫生 Dr. Tang Sin Cheung, Thomas 鄧善祥診所 新界元朗安寧路21B Tel: 24788488 星期一至五:0830-1300,1500-2000 星期六:0830-1300,1430-1800 星期日:0900-1300 附近屋苑: 利群樓
婦產科
陸加寧醫生 Dr. Luk Ka Ling 陸加寧醫生診所  新界元朗又新街17號元新大廈13號舖 Tel: 35230303 星期一 ︰ 1400-2000 星期二 ︰ 0900-1800 星期三 ︰ 0900-1300 星期四 ︰ 1400-2000 星期五 ︰ 0900-1800 星期六 ︰ 0900-1700 附近屋苑: 怡豐大廈  
泌尿外科
葉汝立醫生 Dr. Yip Yu Lap  葉汝立診所 (元朗) 新界元朗同樂街10-16號金華樓閤樓 Tel: 24745909 星期一至六:0800-1300,1500-1930 星期日:0800-1200 附近屋苑: 興隆中心  
腸胃肝臟科
林振烈醫生 Dr. Lam Chun Lit 新都綜合醫務中心 新界元朗大馬路40-54號豐裕軒地下8-9號 Tel: 24436220 星期一、二、四:0930-1200,1500-1830 星期六:0930-1200 附近屋苑: 世宙  
呼吸系統科
利知行醫生 Dr. Lee Chi Hang 利知行醫生醫務所 新界元朗青山公路元朗段228號富興大廈地下 Tel: 24791888 星期一、五: 0900-1300,1500-1930 星期二: 0900-1300,1600-1930 星期三、四: 0900-1300,1500-1800 星期六: 0900-1300 星期日:特別預約 附近屋苑: 喜利大廈  
物理治療科
楊瀚彥物理治療師 Mr. Henley Yeung 紐約脊骨及物理治療中心  元朗青山公路元朗段39號地下4號舖 (元朗站B出口) Tel: 94934016 星期一至五:1000– 2000 星期六:1000– 1800 附近屋苑: 金豪大廈   楊肇基物理治療師 Mr. Yeung Siu Ki, Mark 楊肇基物理治療中心 新界元朗青山公路29A地下B舖 Tel: 24753700 星期一至五:0900-1300,1500-1930 附近屋苑: 豐裕軒   黃燦鴻物理治療師 Mr. Wong Tsan Hung 康怡物理治療 香港元朗壽富街55號元朗中心1樓 Tel: 24751367 星期一至五: 0900-1300,1500-1900 附近屋苑: 好順福大廈   陳允端物理治療師 Ms. Chan Wan Tuen, Wendy 保康治療中心 元朗安駿里2號怡康大廈2號地下 Tel: 24424157 星期一至五: 0900-1900 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   譚美玉物理治療師 Ms. Tam Mei Yuk 環宇物理治療中心 元朗青山公路99-109號元朗貿易中心14樓1402室 Tel: 24421387 星期一、三、五: 1000-2000 星期二、四: 0930-1930 附近屋苑: 鈞德樓   倪琼兒物理治療師 Ms. Ngai King Yi  醫匯物理治療 元朗鳳攸北街5-7號順豐大廈25號地鋪 Tel: 24791813 星期一、四: 1400-1900 星期二、三、五、日: 0900-1300,1500-2000 附近屋苑: Yoho Midtown   徐美琪物理治療師 Ms. Tsui Mei Ki 元朗物理治療中心‎ 新界元朗青山公路65-67號豪景商業大廈24樓 Tel: 24431910 星期一 、二、五︰ 0830-1300,1400-1930 星期三 ︰ 0830-1300,1400-1800 星期四 ︰ 0830-1300,1400-1730 星期六 ︰ 0830-1300 附近屋苑: 聯發洋樓   賴振初物理治療師 Mr. Lai Chun Chor, Eric 元康復康中心 新界元朗青山道150-160號匯豐大廈702室 Tel: 24435022 星期一至五:0900-2000 星期六:0900-1800 附近屋苑: 好盛洋樓   潘慧嫦物理治療師 Ms. Poon Wai Sheung, Cathy 卓健物理治療 新界元朗青山公路65號豪景商業大廈24樓 Tel: 24431910 星期一至五:0830-1900 附近屋苑: 富佑閣   曾德儀物理治療師 Ms. Tsang Tak Yee 博愛醫院楊晉培護理安老院 新界元朗廈村沙州里村58號 Tel: 24721377 附近屋苑: 富茵雅苑   陳卓然物理治療師 Mr. Chan Cheuk Yin 康怡物理治療 元朗青山公路168號聯昇樓5G Tel: 24751367 星期一至五:0900-1300,1500-1900 附近屋苑: 元朗大廈   馮朗星 物理治療師 Mr. Fung Long Sing, Stanley 晉康物理治療中心 元朗安康路怡康大廈地下11號舖  Tel: 24788968 星期一至五:1000-1330,1500-2000 星期六:0900-1300,1400-1800 附近屋苑: 朗景臺   徐美詩物理治療師 Ms. Maggie Tsui  卓健物理治療 新界元朗青山公路65號豪景商業大廈24樓 Tel: 24431910 星期一至五:0830-1900 附近屋苑: 富佑閣  
言語治療科
簡思樂 言語治療師 Mr. Jason Kan  思樂言語治療教室 元朗阜財街65號3樓 Tel: 54073997 星期一至日:0900-1230,1430-1900 公眾假期:0900-1230 附近屋苑: 寶發大廈   https://www.28yuenlong.com/%e5%85%83%e6%9c%97%e8%a8%ba%e6%89%80%e5%88%97%e8%a1%a8%e4%b8%80%e8%a6%bd2021/?feed_id=35635&utm_source=Tumblr&utm_medium=share&utm_campaign=FSPoster&utm_content=%E5%85%83%E6%9C%97%E8%A8%BA%E6%89%80%E5%88%97%E8%A1%A8%E4%B8%80%E8%A6%BD2021
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psitrend · 7 years
Text
UDINE – Who turned out the lights? Nobody did, and the fuses haven’t blown. And no, it’s not even a power cut.
Electricity has just suddenly ceased to exist, so the Suzuki family must now very quickly learn the art of survival: and facing a global blackout is not exactly a walk in the park! It’s with the world screeching to a halt of the irresistible Japanese road movie Survival Family that the highly anticipated Far East Film Festival 19 opens: not just because Yaguchi Shinobu‘s wonderful comedy is the festival’s starting pistol on Friday the 21st of April, but also for a question of symmetry: just like the blackout in Survival Family, the FEFF is an interruption. Normal daily life suddenly stops, and for nine days, the darkness (of the cinema) in the Teatro Nuovo “Giovanni da Udine” swallows up everything and everyone.
Chinese, Hong Kong and Taiwanese  presented at the Far East Film Festival
CHINA (6)
Duckweed, HAN Han, time-warp nostalgic drama, China 2017, International Festival Premiere Hide and Seek, LIU Jie, class-struggle thriller, China 2016, European Premiere I am not Madame Bovary, FENG Xiaogang, eternal lawsuit dramedy, China 2016, Italian Premiere Mr. Zhu’s Summer, SONG Haolin, bitter-sweet school drama, China 2017, World Premiere Someone To Talk To, LIU Yulin, divorce drama, China 2016, Italian Premiere Soul On a String, ZHANG Yang, Tibetan-western road movie, China 2016, Italian Premiere (with Trento Film Festival)
HONG KONG/CHINA (3)
Kung Fu Yoga, Stanley TONG, Jackie-Bollywood style-action comedy, China/HK /India 2017, Italian Premiere Extraordinary Mission, Alan MAK, Anthony PUN, drug-war-action-drama, China/HK 2017, International Festival Premiere Soul Mate, Derek TSANG, girls-best friends drama, HK/China 2016, European Premiere
HONG KONG (7)
Love Off the Cuff, PANG Ho-cheung, crazy cool comedy, China/HK 2017, International Premiere Mad World, WONG Chun, mental illness drama, HK 2016, Italian Premiere – “Creative Visions: Hong Kong Cinema 1997-2017” A Nail Clipper Romance, Jason KWAN, surf and steel romance, HK/China 2017, International Premiere Shed Skin Papa, Roy SZETO, quirky father-son drama, China/HK 2016, European Premiere The Sleep Curse, Herman YAU, blood-splattered horror, HK 2017, European Premiere Shock Wave, Herman YAU, explosive action drama, HK/China 2017, International Festival Premiere – Closing Film Vampire Cleanup Department, CHIU Sin-hang, YAN Pak-wing, hopping vampire comedy-romance, HK 2017, Italian Premiere
CREATIVE VISIONS: HONG KONG CINEMA 1997-2017 (10)
Made in Hong Kong, Fruit CHAN, HK 1997 – restored version 2017, International Premiere A Simple Life, Ann HUI, HK 2012 Accident, Soi CHEANG, HK 2009 After This Our Exile, Patrick TAM, HK 2006 Infernal Affairs, Alan MAK, Andrew LAU, HK 2002 Ip Man, Wilson YIP, HK 2008 Kung Fu Hustle, Stephen CHOW, HK 2004 Love in a Puff, PANG Ho-cheung, HK 2010 The Mission, Johnnie TO, HK 1999 The Grandmaster, WONG Kar-wai, HK 2013
© 2008 Mandarin Films Distribution Co. − All right reserved.
© 2004 Beijing Film Studio − All right reserved.
© 2011 Focus Films − All right reserved.
© 2016 Huayi Brothers − All right reserved.
© 1997 Nicetop Independent − All right reserved.
CHINA NOW: NOT FOR COMMERCIAL USE (4)
Fish Tank, LIU Haoge, experimental animation short, China 2016, Italian Premiere Knife in the Clear Water, WANG Xuebo, drama, China 2016, Italian Premiere The Road, ZHANG Zanbo, documentary, China/Denmark 2015, Italian Premiere What Happened in the Past Dragon Year, SUN Xun, experimental animation short, China 2014, Italian Premiere
More than ever before, this year the Festival has – among other things – focused on creating a peremptory interruption: a packed programme and a massive blackout that counts 83 titles (selected out of more than a thousand films seen) and includes 4 world premiers, including Herman Yau‘s high-octane Shock Wave (which will officially closet the FEFF on Saturday the 29th of April), 12 international premieres, 10 International Festival Premieres, 25 European premieres, one European Festival Premiere and 22 Italian Premieres – testament to the incredible productive and creative vitality of Asian cinema!
We’ll be exploring 12 planets (Cambodia, China, South Korea, the Philippines, Japan, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam and, for the first time ever, Laos) and an incalculable number of artistic nuances. Perhaps the one common thread between all the countries and cinematic styles and approaches on display is the strength of the films themselves: great writing, great direction, a great choice of cast and crew. Films that always feel new. New and capable of narrating an identity (social, geographical, cultural and political), of proudly displaying their origins (China, South Korea and Hong Kong in particular) and of telling stories and inspiring wonder.
After all, expect the unexpected isn’t just the title of a (wonderful) old Johnnie To and Patrick Yau action movie – it’s the short, perfect chemical formula which captures the essence of all of Asian cinema. There are places like the ones we find in fairy tales or in dreams where anything can happen, and Asian cinema is undoubtedly one of them – as, after nearly twenty years of extreme, anarchic, startling visions, the fans and the FEFF are very well aware. It’s a question of soul and of a natural inclination towards the unexpected, and this year the audience will have plenty to admire. Starting, of course, with a certain ex-British colony…
For the FEFF, Hong Kong isn’t simply an inexhaustible source of cinematic wonders: it’s the detonator that gave birth to the Festival itself. The first spark. The “Once upon a time…” from which, back in 1998, the whole thing came to life. What we can today consider the number zero of the Far East Film Festival was originally called simply Hong Kong Film, and one of the films shown at it – a film which later became a cult – will be the symbol of the grand retrospective which is part of this year’s programme: we’re talking about the legendary Made in Hong Kong by dear friend of the Festival Fruit Chan, which we will be shown in Udine once more at the international premiere of the magnificent restored version produced by the FEFF! An absolute masterpiece of independent cinema which had become impossible to find either on film or in any other format.
A grand retrospective, we were saying, and Creative Visions: Hong Kong Cinema 1997-2017 (with the support of the Hong Kong Government and realised together with Create Hong Kong and the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in Brussels and after discussion with the Hong Kong International Film Festival Society) is nothing if not grand: 20 years after the handover that returned Hong Kong to China, the Far East film Festival 19 is showing 10 films that totally immerse the viewer in the fervour of a city and a community. From Johnnie To’s memorable The Mission to Alan Mak and Andrew Lau‘s equally memorable Infernal Affairs, so beloved of Scorsese, the Creative Visions selection will thrill the veterans and fill the new arrivals’ eyes with cinema.
As well as returning to or – finally! – discovering the now-famous laid-back atmosphere of the FEFF (in the Asian zones of the Teatro Nuovo, the Festival’s historic stronghold, and in the heart of the city, once again dotted with 100 Far East Events), new arrivals and veterans alike will bump into actors, actresses, directors, “professionals” of all kinds and, who knows, maybe the 10 young talents of the FEFF Campus, the school of journalism led by Mathew Scott, the producers of the international Ties that Bind workshop (seventh Italian session) or the key players coming to Udine from all over the world for the second edition of FOCUS ASIA.
Last year’s FEFF experimented with its first industry experience by providing Asian and European buyers with the opportunity to discuss genre film production (i.e. the “finished products”), and this year it’s taking the next step: FOCUS ASIA becomes an operational space to create the cinema of the future! 13 genre film projects (from Spain, Indonesia, Japan, France, Taiwan, Italy, Brazil, Laos, Singapore, Finland, Serbia and Lithuania) will be presented during the second edition of FOCUS ASIA. The Teatro Nuovo will host the meetings (in the Sala Fantoni and in the fourth floor lounge, dedicated to one-on-one meetings and round-table discussions with decision-makers) while the Visionary will host the market screenings.
More a “Festival of Cinema” than just a “Film Festival” in the technical sense, over time, the FEFF has become a genuine “Island of cinema”: a place where movies are shown, discussed, dreamed up and even made. Popular films, films that are instantly recognizable and easily cataloged (by genre and origin), films that allow the organizers to structure the programme like an on-demand platform and the viewers to make their own decisions. Looking for a Taiwanese musical? Here’s 52Hz, I Love You by Wei Te-sheng. Looking for a transgender Filipino comedy? Here’s Die Beautiful by Jun Robles Lana (which will be presented under the aegis of FVG Pride). Looking for some Hong Kong splatter? Here’s The Sleep Curse by Herman Yau.
Having grown up together with the FEFF, edition after edition, the audience (or rather, the tribe of Fareasters) knows exactly what it wants from Asian showbiz, while the “new arrivals”, as we called them a few lines back, are about to find out: everything you need to take your first steps and fall in love with cinema, leaving your prejudices and laziness at the door. The second film of Opening Night, fantastic Cambodian action movie Jailbreak by director Jimmy Henderson (who, despite his name and residency, is 100% Italian) and the packed programme, the most beautiful couple in Japanese cinema, Takumi Saitoh and Aya Ueto, and the two giants receiving their Golden Mulberry for Lifetime Achievement Awards – “Chinese Spielberg” Feng Xiaogang and superstar Eric Tsang – will do the rest!
It’s not long now until the black out that’s going to swallow up everything and everyone from the 21st to the 29th of April, but don’t panic: each film will provide you with just the right amount of energy to survive. Because cinema is culture, and culture, especially nowadays, is one of the few antidotes for darkness.
  Far East Film festival presented the Line-Up of 19th edition: THE POWER OF ASIA! UDINE - Who turned out the lights? Nobody did, and the fuses haven't blown. And no, it's not even a power cut.
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architectnews · 4 years
Text
Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects create brick-clad cultural centre in Sydney
Phoenix Central Park is a gallery and a performance space in Sydney designed by Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects.
The performance space, which was designed by architecture studio Durbach Block Jaggers, is shaped like a bell with stepped walls formed by curving horizontal timber louvres.
The brick facade was an architectural collaboration
Connected to the auditirium is a gallery space designed by John Wardle Architects as a stack of irregular boxes formed from concrete that has been left bare as a backdrop for the artworks.
Both studios collaborated to create the alternately jagged and undulating facade of long pale-brick facades that enclose the building.
Long pale bricks were washed with mortar to look like stone
"The facade was the result of equals involved in the back-and-forth serious play of architecture," Durbach Block Jaggers co-founders Camilla Block and Neil Durbach told Dezeen.
"Phoenix Central Park is an essay in the collaborative process," added John Wardle Architects founder John Wardle.
"Our two practices came together, frequently with the client in the room and discussed strategies that were both at variance to and orchestration of both practices and the interior strategies that were being employed."
Concrete galleries were cast in situ
The cultural venue was commissioned by Australian billionaire Judith Neilson as a place to bring together the visual and performing arts.
"One of the intrigues of this commission was the lack of any specific detail given by our client Judith Neilson, she was intent on the brief being as open-ended as possible," explained Wardle.
"This a private gallery space that would at times address public programs, this fuelled the idea of spaces that would contain single works and an audience of one."
Holes left from the casting process can be used to hang art
To execute this concept, the gallery volume contains a mix of rooms, with some designed to display a single piece of art in isolation next to spaces large enough to house whole collections.
Concrete floors, cast "painstakingly" in situ, are connected by a timber staircase with ridges that echo the puckered brickwork of the facade.
"The basement, ground and upper levels are all cast-in-situ concrete, the degree of difficulty was extraordinarily high as the footprint of this building is on a tight inner urban site," explained Wardle.
"The galleries were shaped out of hard walls of solid concrete and soft walls of plaster with deep background for fixing artwork," he added. "We developed a hanging system that utilizes tie rods holes used in the construction of the precast."
Skylights let in soft light to the upper galleries
Skylights allow softly diffuse life to permeate the upper galleries, while the floor below is left atmospherically gloomy.
Another oculus forms a focal point on the exterior wall, with the brickwork dimpling around the circular window and its smaller, slightly offset, twin.
Round windows appear to be pressed into the facade
This unique feature is designed to draw attention from passersby while reminding gallery visitors of the world outside its walls, said the architect.
"We were interested in using brick as a complete surface, as a fabric-like drape that abstracted and approximated the structural characteristics of the internal elements," said Wardle.
"The vast dimple suggests the weight of the two interlocking windows impressing upon the fabric of the brick surface."
Curving timber lines the performance space. Photo by Julia Charles
This sense of drama continues inside the performance venue, where Durbach Block Jaggers chose a layout informed by Elizabethan-era theatres.
The stage is designed to be seen in the round, so a balcony area of seating loops around the perimeter of the curving walls.
There are many different vantage points to view performances. Photo by Martin Mischkulnig
"The performance space is a billowing timber bell-shaped room, a carved 'clearing' that sits within a mute and enigmatic facade," said Block and Durbach.
"Crossing the threshold is an unexpected leap from the ordinary to a secret space of held peace."
Lifts between floors are a dramatic red. Photo by Tom Ferguson
The pale timber ribs provide a striking, tactile backdrop that serves an acoustic as well as aesthetic function. These timber elements were prefabricated in a factory and assembled on site.
Outside the theatre, the lobbies are dark and moody, punctuated by gold-lined arches and striking all-red lifts that spill blood-coloured light when the doors open.
Courtyard gardens are planted with succulents. Photo by Tom Ferguson
Planters in the courtyard garden have similar irregular outlines that echo the asymmetrical walls of the venue. The planters' thick rims double as benches, and inside hardy succulents and cacti are planted in a gravelly surface.
Phoenix Central Park has been longlisted for Dezeen Awards 2020.
John Wardle Architects was founded in 1986 by John Wardle and has offices in Melbourne and Sydney. Wardle won the Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal earlier this year.
Founded by Neil Durbach, Camilia Block and David Jaggers, Durbach Block Jaggers is based in the city of Potts Point. A previous residential project by the studio is this clifftop house that was inspired by a Picasso painting.
Photography is by Trevor Mein unless otherwise stated.
Project credits:
Architects: Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects. John Wardle Architects team: John Wardle, Stefan Mee, Diego Bekinschtein, Alex Peck, Luca Vezzosi, Adrian Bonaventura, David Ha, Ellen Chen, Andy Wong, Manuel Canestrini, Meron Tierney Durbach Block Jaggers team: Neil Durbach Camilla Block, David Jaggers, Simon Stead, Anne Kristin Risnes, Deb Hodge, Xiaoxiao Cai, Adam Hoh Project manager: Aver, Colliers Planner: Mersonn
Structural Engineer: TTW Civil engineer: TTW Geotechnical engineer: Pells Sullivan Meylink Building services engineer: Evolved Engineering Traffic and pedestrian modelling: GTA Consultants Fire engineer: Affinity Fire Acoustic consultant: Marshall Day Landscape Architect: 360º Signage and wayfinding: Studio Ongarato Building surveyor: Philip Chun & Associates Accessibility consultant: Philip Chun & Associates 
Facade engineers: Inhabit Lighting design: Bluebottle Custom bricks: Krause Bricks 
Bricklaying: Favetti bricklaying 
Architectural steelwork and art hanging doors: TILT; All styled, Active Metal Off form concrete: Hi-Form Gallery roof: ARC roofing with ARMA 
Timber source: Dinesen Timber and joinery: Top Knot Carpentry and Joinery 
GRP Ceilings: Shapeshell with DDI Stone seat: Sourced from Hendersons Quarry in Harcourt and worked by Studio 2 CLT performance space ceiling: Hess Specialty Render: CoverUp Dynamics 
Brass basins: Bespoke House Brass linings: Bronzeworks Tiling: Nash Joinery: Debrich 
Commercial kitchen: Austmont Speciality glass: Ozsea; Definitive Glass Brass DBJ hardware: Chant 
Hardware: Keeler Joinery and upholstery: Infracraft Contractor: Bellevarde Construction; FDC Group
The post Durbach Block Jaggers and John Wardle Architects create brick-clad cultural centre in Sydney appeared first on Dezeen.
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Prediksi Timnas Indonesia vs Hong Kong, Lawan yang Berat
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Jakarta - Timnas Indonesia terus bersiap jelang tampil di Piala AFF 2018 dengan melakoni pertandingan uji coba. Kali ini, Indonesia akan menghadapi Hong Kong di Stadion Wibawa Mukti, Cikarang, Selasa (16/10/2018). Dan inilah preview pertandingannya. Menghadapi Hong Kong dalam laga uji coba internasional ketiga dalam persiapan menuju Piala AFF 2018, pelatih interim Timnas Indonesia, Bima Sakti, mencoba untuk mencoba komposisi pemain baru menyusul ada dua pemain baru yang dipanggil. Pasca Rezaldi Hehanussa mengalami cedera dan Esteban Vizcarra dikembalikan ke klubnya seusai laga uji coba kontra Myanmar yang digelar di Stadion Wibawa Mukti, Rabu (10/10/2018), Bima Sakti memanggil dua pemain baru, yaitu Abduh Lestaluhu dan Andik Vermansah.     Abduh Lestaluhu kembali dipanggil memperkuat Timnas Indonesia setelah hampir dua tahun tak lagi berseragam Merah-Putih. Laga terakhir Abduh bersama Tim Garuda adalah final Piala AFF 2016 kontra Thailand, di mana sang pemain sempat membuat kontroversi dengan menendang bola ke arah bench pemain Thailand. Sementara Andik Vermansah kembali dipanggil memperkuat Timnas Indonesia setelah lebih dari satu tahun tidak memperkuat Tim Garuda. Andik tercatat terakhir kali membela Tim Merah-Putih ketika laga persahabatan kontra Fiji di Stadion Patriot Candrabhaga, Bekasi, 2 September 2018. Dengan hadirnya wajah lama yang kembali dipanggil itu, Bima Sakti memiliki strategi untuk menjajal komposisi baru dalam timnya. Bima Sakti berharap bisa melihat semua pemain sebelum memutuskan siapa saja yang akan masuk daftar 23 pemain untuk Piala AFF 2018.     "Ini merupakan proses persiapan kami untuk AFF. Kita sama-sama tahu, di Piala AFF bukan hanya satu pertandingan, tetapi ada empat pertandingan yang harus dijalani di babak grup. Kami semua mempersiapkan pemain untuk bisa bermain kapan pun. Dalam setiap turnamen selalu ada masalah seperti pemain cedera, akumulasi kartu, jadi kami harus mempersiapkan semua pemain terbaik untuk masuk skuat," ujar Bima. "Saya selalu menekankan kepada semua pemain, setiap pemain itu memiliki pengaruh penting. Tidak ada pemain inti dan tidak ada pemain cadangan. Semua pemain dibutuhkan sesuai dengan kebutuhan tim saat menghadapi tim lawan tertentu dan ketika dibutuhkan perubahan pemain," lanjutnya.  
Mengantisipasi Hong Kong
Kehadiran Abduh dan Andik membuat Bima Sakti memiliki opsi untuk mencoba komposisi baru di lini belakang dan sisi sayap. Bima Sakti pun menegaskan laga kontra Hong Kong akan sangat penting artinya untuk persiapan terakhir menuju Piala AFF 2018. "Seperti pertandingan sebelumnya, pertandingan ini adalah persiapan kami menghadapi Piala AFF yang dimulai bulan depan. Kami juga punya beberapa perubahan dengan memanggil Abduh dan Andik yang memang sesuai dengan kebutuhan tim," tuturnya. Sementara bek Timnas Indonesia, Hansamu Yama Pranata, mengakui laga kontra Hong Kong akan memberikan pengaruh baik dalam persiapan tim menuju Piala AFF. Berkaca dari pertemuan dengan Timnas Hong Kong U-23 di Asian Games2018, Hansamu merasa yakin uji coba ini sangat penting bagi Timnas Indonesia untuk mengantisipasi permainan bola mati dari lawan-lawan yang memiliki postur tubuh yang lebih tinggi. "Kami sangat siap dan akan berusaha maksimal. Ini merupakan persiapan Piala AFF dan kami akan memberikan yang terbaik. Berkaca dari Asian Games, Hong Kong adalah tim yang bagus. Kami harus fokus untuk mengantisipasi permainan mereka, terutama di bola-bola mati karena kami kalah dalam hal postur tubuh sehingga kami harus mengantisipasi hal tersebut," ujar kapten Timnas Indonesia U-23 di Asian Games 2018 itu    
Hong Kong Bidik Kemenangan
Di sisi lain, Timnas Hong Kong datang ke Indonesia sebagai bagian dari persiapan mengikuti babak penyisihan kedua EAFF E-1 Football Championship, yaitu turnamen seperti Piala AFF yang digelar di Asia Timur. Hong Kong akan memulai kiprah dari penyisihan kedua dan memperebutkan satu tiket menuju babak selanjutnya. Hong Kong akan menghadapi Korea Utara, Mongolia, dan tim tuan rumah, Chinese Taipei. Laga uji coba kontra Indonesia akan menjadi persiapan kedua bagi Hong Kong setelah kalah 0-1 dari Thailand (11/10/2018). Pelatih Hong Kong, Gary White, menegaskan timnya sangat antusias menghadapi Timnas Indonesia. Pelatih asal Inggris itu menegaskan pentingnya laga uji coba tersebut sebagai persiapan ke turnamen sepak bola Asia Timur. "Kami datang ke sini yakin untuk menang. Kami sangat antusias menyambut pertandingan ini. Kami tahu mereka mendapatkan hasil yang bagus menghadapi Myanmar dan saya yakin laga kami menghadapi mereka akan bagus serta kompetitif," ujar Gary White. Namun, ia menolak untuk membahas pemain yang harus diantisipasi dari Timnas Indonesia. Gary menegaskan timnya perlu fokus untuk mempersiapkan diri menghadapi turnamen yang sebenarnya. "Kami fokus terhadap tim kami sendiri. Namun, kami respek terhadap Indonesia, hanya tidak ingin fokus memperhatikan individu pemain mereka. Kami tahu beberapa pemain yang hebat, tapi kami memilih lebih fokus dengan persiapan tim kami sendiri," ujarnya.    
Prakiraan Susunan Pemain
Timnas Indonesia (4-3-3): Andritany Ardhiyasa (kiper); Putu Gede Juni Antara, Hansamu Yama Pranata, Fachruddin Aryanto, Abduh Lestaluhu (belakang); Zulfiandi, Evan Dimas, Stefano Lilipaly (tengah); Febri Hariyadi, Andik Vermansah, Beto Goncalves (depan) Pelatih: Bima Sakti Timnas Hong Kong (4-3-3): Yapp Hung Fai (kiper); Dani Cancela, Festus Baise, Lau Hok Ming, Leung Nok Hang (belakang); Huang Yang, Wong Wai, Leung Chun Pong (tengah); Jaimes McKee, Sandro, Alex Akande (depan) Pelatih: Gary John White.   Sumber: 
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sheclovercom · 6 years
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一同乘載回憶的列車,繼續懷抱夢想前行 人生是輛不停前進的單程列車,從生命之初開往落日之盡,沿途景色變換各站停靠,那些來來去去的人們,中途時而上車時而下車,月台上的歡欣與悲喜,車廂裡的駐足與遙望,可能擦肩而過,可能短暫停留,緣份讓我們在這段旅程上相識相知相惜相伴。
S.H.E的夢想列車將一路行駛,生命不斷延伸,你與我更多回憶將不停誕生!
S.H.E 十七週年紀念單曲 吳青峰寫詞譜曲量身打造 十七歲的青春詩篇 你我再翻完美一頁
數位收聽『十七』- https://SHE.lnk.to/17
十七 詞/曲:吳青峰
在無窮無盡之間 充滿吶喊的子夜 十七歲的我們 在哪邊 在未來攤開之前 期待又怕受傷害 是我 和你和你 說著夢想 說著心願
在有來有往之後 三種特別的語言 上天選了我們 圍成圈 在潮起潮落之間 將我環繞的世界 拾起 許多情節 如此和諧 如此無間
時間的長河 我非你們不可 緣分的比喻 匯流成一首歌 那是我們 從還懵懂的青春 變成 最重要的人
也許經歷過聚散和離分 也許嘗受過懷疑眼神 我們的生命卻不斷延伸 更多的回憶不停誕生
我們的感情 不是什麼新聞 你身邊也會 有珍惜你的人 那是我們 最想祝福的你們 懂得 活著的快樂
一起走過了 彼此一半的人生 陪伴只會累積得更深
就一起走著走到了永恆 還請你們陪我們見證
數位收聽『十七』- https://SHE.lnk.to/17
製作人:王治平 編曲:溫奕哲 配唱製作人:馬毓芬 和聲編寫:馬毓芬 和聲:S.H.E
弦樂編寫 Music & Strings Arrangement:溫奕哲 Phil Wen 吉他Guitar:鍾丞洋 貝斯Bass:黃群翰 鼓Drums:楊凱淋 口風琴Melodica:溫奕哲 Phil Wen 弦樂監製String supervisor:溫奕哲 Phil Wen 小提琴 Violin:蔡曜宇 Shuon Tsai、朱奕寧 Yi-Ning Ju 中提琴 Viola:甘威鵬 Weapon Kan 大提琴 Cello:劉涵 Liu Hang 弦樂錄音師 Recording Engineer:溫奕哲 Phil Wen 弦樂錄音室 Recording Room:皮老闆錄音室 Master P’s Studio Bass錄音室:Lights Up Studio 鼓錄音室:楊記錄音室 Yang Studio
製作助理:張育碩 錄音師:馬丁 錄音室:華研猛蛋錄音室 混音師:Craig Burbidge @After Shock studio, LA
【工作人員Credit】
Director:Muh Chen 陳奕仁 Production House:Grass Jelly Studio 仙草影像 Client:HIM 華研國際音樂 Starring:Selina 任家萱 / Hebe 田馥甄 / Ella 陳嘉樺 Co-Starring:任明廷Ming Ting Jen / 鄭瑞蘭Cheng Jui Lan /大目DaMove @DANCE SOUL
Makeup:瑤瑤 Ara Wu @Prettycool 美少女工作室 /曾宥寧Queena Tseng /阿鳳 Evone Chang Hairstyle:Ethan Yao @ hc group / Johnny Ho @ hc group / Cora Ho @ hc group / Ban Chen @ hc group Stylist:曾瓊鶯Olive Tseng Stylist Assistant:王瑾瑩Wang Chin Yin Co-ordinator Hairstyle:Nelson @ZOOM Hairstyling /張伊晴Eleanor Chang Co-ordinator Makeup:張伊晴Eleanor Chang Special Thanks:MS IDEAS
Production DEPT.: Production House:仙草影像Grass Jelly Studio Director:陳奕仁Muh Chen Assistant Director:林曉娸Xiao Chi Lin Director’s Assistant:陳湘喬Rita Chen / 洪凡柔Roddy Hung
Producer:王漢聲Hanson Wang @ Wang’s Studio 聲意旺影音工作室 Line Producer:何逢霖Hill Ho Producer’s Assistant:王璽皓Hsi Hao Wang /湯雅庭Mogan Tang
D.P.:范勝翔Sheng Siang Fan Movi Technician:彭茯星Fu Hsing Peng 1st Asst. Camera:陳柏言Po Yen Chen Camera Assistant : 鐘士偉Shih Wei Chung / 賴建榮Chien Jung Lai / 蔡亞玲Ya Ling Tsai
Gaffer:洪國城Guo Cheng Hong Best Boy Electrician:李模��Mo Shuai Li Lighting Technician:王雋元Jiuan Yuan Wang / 李培瑋Pei Wei Li / 張仲翰Chung Han Chang / 溫彥博Yen Po Wen
Production Design:郭志達美術工作室ADALA STUDIO Production Designer:郭志達Chih Da Kuo Set Designer:王則岳Che Yueh Wang Graphic Design:鄭以琦Chris Cheng Set Dresser:王鈺婷Chanel Wang / 張雅涵Ya Han Chang Art Assistant:楊晴亞Ching Ya Yang / 郭秋瑾Chiu Chin Kuo / 黃嘉誼Chia Yi Huang Internship:胡淑媚Shu Mei Hu / 鍾政宏Cheng Hung Chung
Scenic:法蘭克質感創作有限公司Frank Scenic Art Company Scenic Art Consultant:陳新發Frank Chen Lead Scenic Painter:林佩蓁Pei Chen Lin / 謝忠恕Zhong Shu Xie / 陳瑞龍Jui Lung Chen Sceinc Painters:林相如Hsiang Ju Lin / 郭佳妤Jia Yu Kuo / 許毓娟Yu Chuan Hsu / 紀品竹Pin Chu Chi /吳妍樺Yen Hua Wu / 蔡淳馥Chun Fu Cai
Wrought Iron Art:弘展工作室Hung Jan Studio 吳京虔Jing Qian Wu / 潘嘉芳Chia Fang Pan / 辜和益Ho Yi Ku
SFX:路飛特效創意行銷有限公司SFX Special Effect Luffy Tech Corporation
Video Engineering:民偉視訊工程有限公司MEWAY VISION ENGINEERING CO Ltd. 許尚淵Shang Yuan Hsu / 徐立緯Li Wei Hsu / 黃宏明Hung Ming Huang / 陳家榮Chia Jung Chen / 呂卓漢Cho Han Lu / 高棋琳Chi Lin Kao / 吳哲賢Che Hsien Wu / 陳智龍Chih Lung Chen / 許宇騰Yu Teng Hsu /鄭家興Chia Hsing Cheng / 巫國基Kuo Chi Wu
Best Boy Grip:緯盛工作室Weisson Studio 許裕成Yu Cheng Shu / 李宗庭Tsung Ting Li / 陳政翰Zheng Han Chen / 陳彥豪Yan Hao Chen / 譚凱富Kai Fu Tan / 邱詠祥Yung Hsiang Chiu / 許峻豪Chun Hao Hsu / 許誌峯Chim Feng Hsu / 林斯偉Sih Wei Lin / 吳明吉Ming Chi Wu / 邱宥翔Yu Hsiang Chiu / 傅昱仁Yu Jen Fu / 劉川琪 Chuan Chi Liu / 藍功民Gong Min Lan / 呂鴻昌Hung Chang Lu
Stylist:陳八比Barbie Chen @米兔皇造型工作室Mii2 Styling Makeup & Hairstyle:陳怡靜Yi Ching Chen / 林芝羽 Chih Yu Lin
Casting:滃滃國際有限公司Wong Win International Co. Ltd
Studio / Lighting:鴻臣片場Hong Chen Film Studio Camera Rental:班生國際有限公司Ban Sheng International Co. Ltd / 和寬攝影器材有限公司He Kuan Equipment Co. Ltd. Camera Support Equipment:懿生移動影業Grip Trix / 力榮影業有限公司LEE RONG FILM & TV EQUIPMENT CO.
Transportation:莊素 Su Chuang / 葉能營Neng Ying Ye @五福將工作室
Sound Effect:奇奕果有限公司Kiwi Audio & Visual Production Inc. Sound Effects Editor:蔣震道Chen Tao Chiang Voice Talent:許伯琴Po Chin Hsu
Design & Animation:仙草影像Grass Jelly Studio VFX Supervisor:陳威廷Weiting Chen Executive Producer:廖梓雯Iris Liao Project Manager:賴奕如Ekijo Lai Financial Manager:陳奕如Lulu Chen
CG & Compositing Lead:苗天雨Greg Miao
Story:李季軒Both Li / 林曉娸Xiao Chi Lin / 陳湘喬Rita Chen / 洪凡柔Roddy Hung
Designer:梁育碩Yu Shuo Leung
3D Animator:黃勗Nigel Huang / 王玨凝Janet Wang / 蘇袖惠Youzi Su / 陳家和Eason Chen
FX Artist:林伯瀚Han Lin
Compositing:黃勗Nigel Huang / 李文婷Wen Ting Li / 林佳儀Gobao Lin
Compositor‘s Assistant:陳家和Eason Chen / 冀擎Ching Chi / 黃于瑄Yu Hsuan Huang / 陳信翰Wilson Chen / 周祐諆Yuki Chou / 陳家榆Jia Yu Chen / 江敬Gene Jiang
Additional Compositor‘s Assistant:邵偉豪Weahao Shao / 張雅雅Ya Ya Chang / 林于心Emory Lin / 呂庭儀Ting Yi Lu / 梁雅雯Wen Liang
Colorist:陳威廷Weiting Chen
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gbnewssports-blog · 6 years
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World champions upstaged, junior colleagues reach semi-finals by Ian Marshall, ITTF Publications Manager The no.6 seeds, Chen Chien-An and Chuang Chih-Yuan skilled defeat by the hands Ho Kwan Kit and Wong Chun Ting, the highest seeds and a pair very a lot in type; notably two weeks in the past on house soil they emerged profitable on the Seamaster 2018 ITTF World Tour, Hang Seng Hong Kong Open.
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sportsflu · 6 years
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The Thomas and Uber Cup 2018  also known as the 2018 BWF Thomas & Uber Cup will be the 30th edition of the Thomas Cup and the 27th edition of the Uber Cup, This event is a Team event contested by the men and women’s national teams of the member associations     Badminton World Federation (BWF). The tournament will be hosted by Bangkok, Thailand at IMPACT Arena
This will be the first time that Thailand will be hosting this prestigious tournament from 20 to 27th may 2018, where Denmark and china will be defending Men’s championship and Women’s championship crown respectively.
  Thomas and Uber cup finals 2018 draws:
  Thomas and Uber cup 2018 Schedule:
  Thomas and Uber cup 2018 team level details:
Thomas cup: 
Algeria: Abderrahim Bouksani, Balahoune Majed Yacine, Belarbi Mohamed Abderrahime, Hamek Adel, Khaldi Samy, Larbaoui Sifeddine, Mammeri Koceila, Meddah Adel, Medel Youcef Sabri, Ouchefoun Mohamed Abdelaziz
Australia: Chau Matthew, Gobinathan Ashwant, Joe Anthony, Leung Simon Wing Hang, Schueler Jacob, Serasinghe Sawan, Tam Raymond, Teoh Kai Chen, Vuong Eric, Yan Peter
Canada: Dostie-Guindon Paul-Antoine, Ho-Shue Jason Anthony, Lai Jonathan Bing Tsan, Li Antonio, Lindeman Ty Alexander, Yakura Nyl, Yang Brian, Yao Duncan
China: Chen Long, Li Junhui, Lin Dan, Liu Cheng, Liu Yuchen, Qiao Bin, Shi Yuqi, Wang Yilyu, Zhang Nan, Zheng Siwei
Chinese Taipei: Chen Hung Ling, Chou Tien Chen, Hsu Jen Hao, Lee Jhe-Huei, Lee Yang, Lu Ching Yao, Wang Chi-Lin, Wang Tzu Wei, Yang Chih Chieh, Yang Po Han
Denmark: Antonsen Anders, Astrup Kim, Axelsen Viktor, Boe Mathias, Christiansen Mathias, Conrad-Petersen Mads, Jorgensen Jan O, Kolding Mads Pieler, Rasmussen Anders Skaarup, Vittinghus Hans-Kristian Solberg
France: Corvee Jordan, Corvee Lucas, Gicquel Thom, Kersaudy Bastian, Labar Ronan, Leverdez Brice, Maio Julien, Merkle Arnaud, Popov Toma Junior, Rossi Leo
Germany: Jansen Jones Ralfy, Kaesbauer Peter, Lamsfuss Mark, Roovers Alexander, Roth Fabian, Schaefer Kai, Schaenzler Lars, Seidel Marvin Emil, Zurwonne Josche, Zwiebler Marc
Hong Kong: Ho Wai Lun, Hu Yun, Lee Cheuk Yiu, Lee Chun Hei Reginald, Mak Hee Chun, Ng Ka Long Angus, Or Chin Chung, Tang Chun Man, Wong Wing Ki Vincent, Yeung Shing Choi
Indonesia: Ahsan Mohammad, Alfian Fajar, Ardianto Muhammad Rian, Christie Jonatan, Gideon Marcus Fernaldi, Ginting Anthony Sinisuka, Kholik Firman Abdul, Mustofa Ihsan Maulana, Setiawan Hendra, Sukamuljo Kevin Sanjaya
India: Attri Manu, George Arun, M.R. Arjun, Prannoy H. S., Reddy B. Sumeeth, Sai Praneeth B., Sen Lakshya, Shlok Ramchandran, Shukla Sanyam, Verma Sameer
Japan: Endo Hiroyuki, Inoue Takuto, Kamura Takeshi, Kaneko Yuki, Momota Kento, Nishimoto Kenta, Sakai Kazumasa, Sonoda Keigo, Tsuneyama Kanta, Watanabe Yuta
Korea: Choi Solgyu, Chung Eui Seok, Ha Young Woong, Heo Kwang Hee, Jeon Hyeok Jin, Kang Min Hyuk, Kim Dukyoung, Kim Won Ho, Seo Seung Jae, Son Wan Ho
Malaysia: Arif Mohamad Arif Ab Latif, Chia Aaron, Goh V Shem, Lee Chong Wei, Lee Zii Jia, Leong Jun Hao, Soh Wooi Yik, Tan Wee Kiong, Teo Ee Yi, Zulkarnain Iskandar
Russia: Alimov Rodion, Dremin Evgenij, Grachev Denis, Gulomzoda Shokhzod, Ivanov Vladimir, Karpov Georgii, Lemeshko Nikita, Malkov Vladimir, Sirant Sergey, Sozonov Ivan
Thailand: Avihingsanon Suppanyu, Isriyanet Tinn, Kedren Kittinupong, Namdash Kittisak, Phetpradab Khosit, Phuangphuapet Nipitphon, Puavaranukroh Dechapol, Thongnuam Pannawit, Viriyangkura Tanupat, Wangcharoen Kantaphon
Uber Cups: 
Australia: Chen Hsuan-Yu Wendy, Fung Zecily, Khoo Lee Yen, Lim Lauren, Ma Louisa, Mapasa Setyana, Slee Ann-Louise, Somerville Gronya, Tam Jennifer, Veeran Renuga
Canada: Beaulieu Anne-Julie, Choi Catherine, Honderich Rachel, Li Michelle, Pakenham Stephanie, Tam Brittney, Tong Michelle, Tsai Kristen, Wu Josephine
China: Chen Qingchen, Chen Yufei, Gao Fangjie, He Bingjiao, Huang Dongping, Huang Yaqiong, Jia Yifan, Li Xuerui, Tang Jinhua, Yu Zheng
Chinese Taipei: Chen Hsiao Huan, Chiang Mei Hui, Hsu Ya Ching, Hu Ling Fang, Kuo Yu Wen, Lin Wan Ching, Lin Ying Chun, Pai Yu Po, Tai Tzu Ying, Wu Ti Jung
Denmark: Blichfeldt Mia, Bøje Alexandra, Christophersen Line, Finne-Ipsen Julie, Fruergaard Maiken, Kjaersfeldt Line Højmark, Rohde Natalia Koch, Søby Rikke, Thygesen Sara
France: Batomene Marie, Delrue Delphine, Desmons Ainoa, Heriau Vimala, Hoyaux Yaelle, Lambert Margot, Lefel Emilie, Normand Katia, Palermo Lea, Tran Anne
Germany: Deprez Fabienne, Efler Linda, Goliszewski Johanna, Heim Luise, Herttrich Isabel, Kaepplein Lara, Konon Olga, Li Yvonne, Nelte Carla, Wilson Miranda
Hong Kong: Cheung Ngan Yi, Cheung Ying Mei, Ng Tsz Yau, Ng Wing Yung, Poon Lok Yan, Wu Yi Ting, Yeung Nga Ting, Yeung Sum Yee, Yip Pui Yin, Yuen Sin Ying
Indonesia: Ayustine Dinar Dyah, Fitriani Fitriani, Haris Della Destiara, Hartawan Ruselli, Istarani Ni Ketut Mahadewi, Maheswari Nitya Krishinda, Polii Greysia, Pradipta Rizki Amelia, Rahayu Apriyani, Tunjung Gregoria Mariska
India: Bhale Vaishnavi, Ghorpade Sanyogita, Jakka Vaishnavi Reddy, Jakkampudi Meghana, Kudaravalli Sri Krishna Priya, Nehwal Saina, Prabhudesai Anura, S Ram Poorvisha, Sawant Prajakta
Japan: Fukushima Yuki, Hirota Sayaka, Matsutomo Misaki, Okuhara Nozomi, Sato Sayaka, Takahashi Ayaka, Takahashi Sayaka, Tanaka Shiho, Yamaguchi Akane, Yonemoto Koharu
Korea: An Se Young, Baek Ha Na, Kim Hye Rin, Kim So Yeong, Kong Hee Yong, Lee Jang Mi, Lee Se Yeon, Lee Yu Rim, Shin Seung Chan, Sung Ji Hyun
Malaysia: Cheah Soniia, Chow Mei Kuan, Goh Jin Wei, Goh Yea Ching, Hoo Vivian, Kisona Selvaduray, Lee Meng Yean, Lee Ying Ying, Soong Fie Cho, Tee Jing Yi
Mauritius: Allet Aurelie Marie Elisa, Dookhee Kobita, Foo Kune Kate, Leug For Sang Jemimah, Mungrah Ganesha
Russia: Bolotova Ekaterina, Chervyakova Anastasia, Davletova Alina, Evgenova Ksenia, Komendrovskaja Elena, Kosetskaya Evgeniya, Morozova Olga, Perminova Natalia, Pustinskaia Anastasiia, Vislova Nina
Thailand: Chaladchalam Chayanit, Chochuwong Pornpawee, Intanon Ratchanok, Jindapol Nitchaon, Kititharakul Jongkolphan, Muenwong Phataimas, Ongbamrungphan Busanan, Prajongjai Rawinda, Supajirakul Puttita, Taerattanachai Sapsiree
  Live streaming of Thomas and Uber cup 2018:
In India:
Star Sports 2 and Star Sports HD 2 is official Broadcaster of the Thomas and Uber Cup 2018 in India. While Hotstar.com will provide the Live Streaming online through the Internet
Outside India:
If you are outside India then watch BWF youtube channel for the Thomas and Uber Cup 2018 Live Telecast, Streaming.
  Follow SportsFlu for all updates on Thomas and Uber cup 2018!
    The post Thomas and Uber cup 2018: Everything you want to know about appeared first on SportsFlu.
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roodiaries · 7 years
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Sydneyside
Foreword: This blog post is divided into sub-sections to make it seem less long ;)
Residing on Sydney's North Shore: The Compartment Life
I arrived back in Sydney in late January 2017 with a vague resolve to get a house, job, girlfriend, life, etc. on a nice comfy, non-committal, short-term basis. I haven't spent more than a year in one accommodation since I was 18 in fact.
House was the first objective, even before a guarantee of a stable income and some rapidly dwindling funds, post-Asia/East Coast travel. I spent a week of searching high and low for an affordable place with my own room and not in the back end of beyond. I visited numerous dull-sounding (and looking) suburbs, such as Lidcombe, Ashfield, Arncliffe and Auburn. I did also check one out in Woolloomoolloo. That would have been a cool place to call home, and Russell Crowe lives there!
I settled for a shared-room in the north shore suburb of Willoughby, and sacrificed my single-room agenda because there was a giant partition in this room (a deal-breaker and meaning I had privacy and my own corner), and the room-mate seemed a good fit: a shift-working nurse from The Philippines named Andrew, and not a major party guy. The 'landlord' – actually renting out the place himself and sub-letting it to us – was a Korean wing-chun instructor called Sam who worked in the studio area at the front of the house, but lived elsewhere with his family. There was also a single room near ours, where a guy from Taiwan called Dean was staying. I regret not hanging out with those three more often, but our schedules clashed and everyone was always busy. In 5 months (before Dean left), we managed to eat dinner together a total of once! The lack of a communal area or large kitchen kind of prevented much socialising anyway, and I mostly just saw Andrew (but even sharing a room, I wouldn't see him for up to a week at a time). It was functional and comfortable, but not social.
Pullman Prestige
I got a job at the Pullman Sydney Hyde Park Hotel in the Food & Beverage Department in late February. Like my apartment and car, I found the job on Gumtree – the perennial lifesaver! I immediately loved the job, and it was certainly my favourite one so far in Australia. I ended up staying the entire 6 months that I was permitted with the WH visa. I liked the prestige of wearing a tie and uniform at work, and being in a fancy, air-conditioned establishment right in the heart of the city. It was my first taste of hospitality, and I particularly enjoyed the team atmosphere, with staff bonds forged via countless high-pressure stressful-but-funny situations,
e.g.:
Having just two hours to transform two rooms, including the main events room from a day conference into a giant dinner party complete with dance floor, stage, hypnotists and countless decorations, while trying to manage the three-inch high flood of reeking viscous sewage in the pantry next door
Anzac Day when every room was full with lunch events and tonnes of staff were needed (getting paid double-time = $49 per hour), listening to stories of veterans and their relatives (but later that day I was in the wars myself when I fell down the stairs and sprained my ankle!)
Numerous sports teams (AFL and NRL) eating relentlessly and drinking unstoppably, and all the constant clean-ups and late-night stays; listening to their conversations was surprisingly boring
When outlandish day-conference guests and clients rampaged illegally through the uncleaned, bombshell-like pantry and store-rooms, clambering dangerously over furniture
Being behind the pop-up bar during massive rushes, and having my first exposure to lemon and lime bitters (which I learned to make), as well as pouring techniques for wine and beer
The classic 'no cutlery or glasses ready' scenario right before a big event and the rush to find everything with not enough staff or time, making do with the wrong types
Lorenzo not getting along with the rest of the staff, tickling you while you carried stuff and refusing to do the vacuuming because it was beneath him! “Not the hero we deserve, nor the one we need.” But also a legend in his own right
Mardi Gras night in March – our hotel was the starting point for the whole half-a-million-strong parade: as extravagant floats passed by, we served drinks and canapes to numerous drag queens and divas (with requests including putting a sausage roll between their boobs, “can I take you home tonight?” and much more, producing plenty of awkward laughter and lack of a clever response from myself)
Arguments with the narky banquet chefs: “where's your supervisor!?” Plenty of tut-tuts if you couldn't carry three plates or were not on time, but all good fun in the end (I think)
Some shifts in breakfast or room service: plenty of awkward customer exchanges – e.g. saying “have a good day!” and then finding they were just getting up to get food; trying to choose between saying “you're welcome,” “that's OK,” “no problem” and “no worries,” and then mixing them up: “that's no worries, welcome!” Also when the owners of the building were in town, and I took away the coffee of Wong Kan Seng, the former Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore, before he was finished (almost died of mortification); and some good times there too, especially working with Joshua (the only other Englishman who also started on the same day as me), as well as Steve or Anne Sophie in room service
Particular mention goes to the banquets team I worked with the most: Bibek with his sudden high-pitched voice when speaking to customers (“room service”) and the infamous brown bag; Jess, the Aussiest girl in the hotel who always helped me out patiently while never taking shit from nobody; the supervisor Jona who hired me, taught me the ropes and was always keen for after-work beers; Guthrie with his laid-back attitude and film chats; and management trainee Sy whose random soundbites echo in my head to this day (“get to the choppers,” “OK team, it's show time,” “time to disappear”), always facilitating an atmosphere of fun and nonsense in the face of some overwhelming shifts.
Since I still work for the same company in a different location right now, I won't bitch too much, but plenty of staff at Pullman Sydney were not happy and began quitting over various issues, including management and lack of shifts. Money often seemed to be favoured over staff (or customers for that matter) with shifts regularly cut and annoying initiatives to upsell more stuff (the guests don't want a bloody extra croissant, leave them alone FFS). Lack of sufficient staff for a shift was also a constant blight, but in general you had a lot of freedom and variety working in banquets, and were often given considerable responsibility, and the experience was definitely a positive one.
A Brief Commentary of Sydney as a City
Overall, I like Sydney a lot. I prefer it to Melbourne, Canberra and definitely Adelaide. However, it’s a city of two halves. On the one hand, you have the dingy, dull, congested, prosaic, worn-out, uninventive, crappy, commercial-and-business-dominated city centre, which has a surprisingly high East Asian population (it feels like 50% Asian, not that that’s a bad thing; just unexpected). On the other hand, you have the stunning Sydney Harbour & Parramatta River (together known as Port Jackson) with its unending bays and natural/man-made sights; and the relaxed coastal suburbs with further wondrous views west over the city and east out to the vast Pacific Ocean. Public transport is second to none, and the Opal card makes travelling relatively cheap and convenient (by bus, train, tram and boat). Going out is expensive, but there are always cheaper hidden places, and happy hours provide good value for money: the beer and bars improve exponentially when you escape the CBD. Like much of Australia, it feels very suburban, middle-class and family-oriented: sometimes a little too clean and organised for my tastes (though I never visited notorious parts like Blacktown or Mount Druitt). It also has access to some incredible nature and national parks in all directions. It’s somewhere I’m glad I lived, but not somewhere I particularly need to live in the future. It lives up to the hype in many ways, but from my perspective, it can’t match the major European cities for history, architecture, food or atmosphere.
Social Life a.k.a The Pub & A Few Other Things
I had three main friends outside of work: Tatjana and Eisen from my farm work days in Renmark, and Mark from my uni exchange in Singapore. I spent many sessions out in Sydney's array of bars: those at Circular Quay and Darling Harbour which were pricier but had wondrous views while imbibing copious schooners of sweet wholesome 'cold ones'. These included but were not limited to the Bavarian Bier Cafe (lovely German beers for $5 at happy hour), Pontoon, Sweeney's, Hotel Harry's, Lord Roberts, The Clock, The Palace Hotel, Bald Rock Hotel and all other bars in Balmain (where Mark lived and our favourite suburb, full of homely pubs). I was sad when all three of them left in June/July.
I don't want to try and seem cool by boasting about drinking sessions (I could never claim to be cool), but I did not do a lot else outside of work: this was due to the physical and mental toll some of the long shifts (especially night ones) took on me, leading to a reluctance to do any other exercise, and the unpredictability of my schedule meaning I couldn't reliably sign up to many social clubs. However, I did get out and about to enjoy some fantastic city walks along Sydney's coastal suburbs: Botany Bay, Spit Bridge to Manly, Bondi to Coogee, the Royal National Park, and the Blue Mountains to the west. I also enjoyed a four-day holiday in April to Queensland to visit Fraser Island, the world's largest sand island and a natural adventure playground full of intriguing rainforest, a highway on the beach, sea swimming pools, freshwater perched lakes, and lots of dingoes.
In addition, I occasionally worked for my Romanian friend Costi, who helped people move house in his spare time. One extremely memorable, epic job was during the hottest day of the Australian summer, when it was a ridiculous 43ºC in February: we drove 3 hours over the Blue Mountains to the town of Bathurst to help a Bangladeshi family move to Sydney; their new apartment had several flights of stairs which we had to carry everything up by hand, sweating profusely in the mean time; then we had to drive back to Bathurst (so 9 hours of driving that day) because the neighbour also wanted to use our van to move house, so we slept on his mattress, then woke up very early and began packing his stuff into the van. His furniture was way too big, so we had to drive to Sydney with half of it, unload it, and then drive back again to Bathurst, pack the rest and unload again at his new house, finishing at about 6am on Monday morning. It was a full 48-hour working weekend, including 18 hours of travelling and a great deal of physical work: I would name it as one of the hardest, most intense single shifts I've ever done. However, it was made a lot more enjoyable by the company of Costi, who drove the whole time, never bitched or complained and maintained a calm, good-natured demeanour throughout the weekend, making it feel like a doable team effort for which I was well-compensated. A legend and a role model, that's for sure.
Riding the Bus
A boring topic to write about in my blog, but taking public transport on average twice per day over 7 months in Sydney provides one with a window into a city's soul. I loved crossing the Sydney Harbour Bridge every day to and from work or social events, basking in epic sunsets and sunrises over the incredible Sydney Harbour while jamming to the classic tunes (see Crossing the Bridge playlist below for details).
-The time the bus driver didn't know how to get to the Harbour Bridge because of roadworks and shouted to the passengers at large to ask for directions!
-The time the driver yelled at a guy to come to the front because he supposedly hadn't tapped on his Opal card, but it turned out that he had: the incident had a tense racial undertone because he was the only black guy on the bus...
-When the driver of the last bus of the night couldn't pull up at the last stop before the bridge due to taxis obstructing the stop; a girl was waiting and screaming desperately for him to stop – and even I (Captain Quiet On Public Transport) – shouted to the driver to stop somewhere! He didn’t.
-The drunken night bus back to Artarmon after a late shift: two guys that had just met for the first time, the younger, cockier and skinnier of whom constantly disagreed bluntly with everything the much older, bigger guy said, leading to a confrontational end to the conversation (this journey was always followed by an unpleasant 25-minute uphill walk through the lost lonely suburbs where not a soul stirs and spider webs hang over the path ready to snag an unsuspecting face passing through).
Thanks for taking the time to read,
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Oliver
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