Qiao Qi

Most Popular Qiao Qi Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

Four Chefs and a Feast Trailer (1999)

01 May 1999

Fifty years after partners in a prestigious Shanghai restaurant split, others try to restore it to its glory.

What Is Love? Trailer (1980)

01 January 1980

Set in the period just after ten years of chaos, several love stories associated with the tourists on a bus indicate more meanings of love.

Midnight Trailer (1981)

01 January 1981

In 1930's Shanghai, Wu Sunpu, chief executive of the Shanghai Yuhua Silk Company, faces many struggles: with plant workers, with strikers, others in his industry, and most of all with bourgeois comprador Zhao Botao.

Romance in Philately Trailer (1984)

01 April 1984

A young man leading an aimless life finds that he must change his outlook to life when he falls in love with a hard working letter carrier.

Troubled Laughter Trailer (1979)

02 January 1979

During the Cultural Revolution a powerless newspaper writer struggles with his conscience at the pervasive dishonesty and immorality from the top on down.

Zhi po qi an Trailer (1989)

01 January 1989

She Turns 28 This Year Trailer (1984)

01 January 1984

Fang Xiuying (played by Li Lan) is a female worker in a textile workshop, she and her boyfriend Zeng Qiang (played by Mao Yongming) have been in love for many years, and they plan to get married after waiting for their work unit to assign them a house.

Wonder Boy Trailer (1988)

01 January 1988

The moment Bebe was born, a glowing UFO streaked across the night sky. His parents find that his hands are electrically charged and are able to manipulate electrical appliances.

T Province in 1984 & 1985 Trailer (1986)

24 July 1986

Death Ray on Coral Island Trailer (1980)

01 January 1980

Said to be the first science-fiction film produced in China (and perhaps having its North American theatrical premiere in Future Imperfect?), Death Ray on Coral Island spares no bile, camp, or latent envy in portraying America as the cunning archenemy that will stop at nothing—industrial espionage, assassinations, even ballroom dancing—to steal China’s futuristic weaponry.