Project Detail

Do You Like Chinese?

Synopsis

A sexually frustrated Oriental widow and a Spanish nymphomaniac tussle over a Romanian illegal immigrant, who is really a serial killer.

Details

Year
2007
Type of project
Shorts
Running time
18 mins
Format
S16mm
Director
Gwen Ong
Producer
Gwen Ong
Co-Producer
Gwen Ong
Editor
Nicholas Dimitropoulos
Screenwriter
Gwen Ong
Director of Photography
Steven Priovolos
Production Designer
Julian Nagel
Sound
Martin Thornton
Composer
Martin Thornton
Principal cast
Octavia Yen, Camilio Bosso, Natalia Hernedez

Genre

Categories

Production Status

Production Company

Gaia Productions

T+44 (0)7765 478 624

pipsquik.objectis.net

Page updates

This page was last updated on 12th May 2025. Please let us know if we need to make any amendments or request edit access by clicking below.

See also

You may also be interested in other relevant projects in the database.

Rings of Fire Rings of Fire

Director: Gwen Ong

Year: 2008

A Cameroonian asylum seeker detained by the UK Home Office for imminent deportation is released and granted a three year stay in Northern Ireland as a result of a campaign that gained widespread support from the Northern Irish public and politicians like Martin McGuinness.

Savage House Savage House

Director: Peter Glanz

Year: 2026

England, 18th Century. The Savages are at their lowest: they despise each other, their house is falling apart, and they are disliked in polite society - sleeping with their servants, and selling off jewellery to keep their gambling and drinking going. Oh, and Chauncey Savage’s foot might be rotting off. This is until they are set to be visited by higher ranking nobleman. The honour gives them a renewed energy to get new outfits, polish their silver, and hire new help to make sure the House of Savage is looking as impressive as possible. Official Selection SXSW London 2026

A young man stares forward, surrounded by darkness, with some passing by distorting one side of his face Fair

Director: Benjamin Turner

Year: 2027

A group of teenage boys become entangled in a series of escalating "games" built around a single rule: don’t flinch. What begins as playful competition gradually shifts into something more controlled, more psychological, and more dangerous. As the boundaries blur, each boy is forced to navigate power, performance, and the pressure to appear unbreakable. FAIR explores how identity is shaped under pressure, and what it takes to hold your ground in a world where showing weakness isn’t an option.