A Hong Kong psychological drama born from a government talent-development scheme will open one of Asia’s most prominent film festivals next month, signaling a deliberate choice to spotlight the region’s next generation of filmmakers at a moment when the industry is searching for fresh voices.
Afterpiece, produced by veteran director Derek Yee and helmed by first-time feature filmmaker Keane T.K. Wong, will world-premiere on June 12 as the opening film of the 28th Shanghai International Film Festival. Written and directed by Wong, the film follows Owen, a celebrated stage director who has spent more than a decade in creative paralysis.
When his former lover resurfaces and his wife begins drifting toward betrayal, Owen commits to writing, directing and starring in a new theatrical production — only to become dangerously entangled with an untrained young actress encountered during casting, steadily dissolving the boundary between stage and life. Stephen Fung stars as Owen alongside Chrissie Chau, Myolie Wu and Angela Yuen.
The project grew out of the Directors’ Succession Scheme of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government, which pairs established filmmakers with emerging directors as producer-mentors. Yee, whose filmography spans gritty crime films and the beloved 1993 romantic drama C’est la Vie, Mon Chéri — which swept the Hong Kong Film Awards that year — brings considerable institutional weight to the pairing. Wong previously worked in below-the-line roles on several commercial Hong Kong productions before making this debut.
The festival itself arrives with notable momentum. This year’s edition received approximately 4,100 submissions from 125 countries and regions, a new record, with 82 percent of eligible works being world or international premieres. First-time submissions came from countries including Ghana and Mozambique.
Presiding over the main competition Golden Goblet jury is Tony Leung Chiu-wai, who built a more than 40-year career across upward of 100 screen credits, working with directors including Wong Kar-wai, Zhang Yimou, Ang Lee and John Woo, and who became the first Chinese actor to receive the Golden Lion for lifetime achievement at Venice in 2023.
His seven-member panel includes Chinese director Guan Hu, Tunisian producer Dora Bouchoucha, Georgian writer-director Déa Kulumbegashvili, Mexican filmmaker Fernanda Valadez, Kyrgyz director Aktan Arym Kubat and Chinese actress Xin Zhilei, who won best actress at Venice last year. The full competition lineup will be announced June 3. The festival runs June 12–21.





















































