BERLIN — Fan Bingbing, one of China's biggest film stars, strode onto the Berlinale red carpet on Thursday (Feb 23), marking her return to cinema following a five-year pause.
Her reappearance also spotlighted the return of Chinese-language film to the international stage, as mainland China and Hong Kong have eased zero-Covid-19 policies, allowing for international travel.
Fan disappeared from public view in 2018, prompting international speculation about her whereabouts, before Chinese authorities handed her a 883 million yuan (S$172 million) fine for tax evasion months later.
Her role in Green Night — a racy thriller by Chinese director Han Shuai set in the crime-infested underworld of Seoul, South Korea — brings that chapter to a close, Fan told journalists ahead of Thursday's premiere.
"Thanks to my friends from all over the world," she said. "Everyone's life has its ups and downs. It can be very difficult and hard work at times, but you actually learn a lot of things in the process. Everything is fine now."
The actor added it had been difficult to restart her career after the lengthy break.
"The biggest challenge is that I haven't acted for five years," she said. "I always wanted to find a story, a script, a character that would resonate with my state of mind."
Featuring both Mandarin and Korean dialogue, the film is one of several from China and Hong Kong receiving world premieres at the Berlinale. Two of those films are competing for the coveted Golden Bear award.
Beijing and Hong Kong both employed targeted lockdowns, mass testing and quarantines as part of zero-Covid-19 policies near the start of the pandemic, before easing restrictions towards the end of last year as anti-Covid-19 protests swept the mainland.
In Green Night, Fan plays the role of Jin Xia, a Chinese immigrant working as a security guard at Seoul airport.
There, she encounters the Green-Haired Woman, a mysterious and rebellious drug trafficker played by Lee Joo Young, who leads her on a journey through Seoul's gritty underworld.
The duo pursue one another through neon-lit backstreets, glow-in-the-dark bowling alleys and grubby eateries, evading dangerous drug barons and murdering Xia's abusive husband, before embarking on a passionate lesbian affair that ends in heartbreak.
Chinese cinema is showing signs of thriving in Berlin, Fan said. "Chinese films taking their place on the world stage and that's very exciting for cinema and for me too."