Bollywood actress Rani Mukerji, whose Hindi comedy-drama film "Hichki" was screened in China last year, said Chinese audience watching her film with Chinese subtitles reacted similarly to Indian fans.
"You realize that you don't have to know the language to connect with the film. I think that's what makes movies so, so special ... If the emotions are universal, it can connect anywhere," she told Xinhua in an interview earlier this year.
In "Hichki," Mukerji played the leading role of an aspiring teacher with Tourette Syndrome, who must prove herself by educating a group of underprivileged students.
Taking note of Bollywood's developed industrial system and China's huge film market, the Indian actress is also looking forward to India-China film co-productions.
"I am actually very keen to do India-China co-productions where I can be part of a Chinese film or Chinese actors can be part of Indian films," she said.
YOGA IN CHINA
Before Yu Songsong, a young man from southwest China's Guizhou Province, started to practice yoga, he knew little about India, where the practice originated.
Having spent the last six years learning yoga, he is attracted by the yoga culture and eager to travel to India.
Yu used to suffer from an emotional disorder. "It was yoga that turned me around. I was no longer lost. I've found a direction for my life," he said.
Yu started to practice yoga when he was a freshman and became a vegetarian. "The physical and mental practices relieved me of psychological distress," he said.
【国内英语资讯:Spotlight: Film, yoga, smartphone industries enhance China-India links】相关文章:
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