THE HONGFU HOTEL
https://tribecafilm.com/films/hongfu-hotel-2024

Undoubtedly one of the most visually spectacular short films at Tribeca 2024, Tian Xu’s THE HONGFU HOTEL finds a father and son on the eve of the demolition of their family hotel in New York City. Feng arrives to check in on his father, Chan, the proprietor of their generations-old Chinatown hotel. Sold and marked for destruction to make way for a new road, Chan’s mission to see the spirits of the hotel’s old inhabitants reincarnated has seemingly failed. He plans to return to China and wishes to sign over the hotel and the profits to Feng.
Feng battles demons past and present as he agrees to bid farewell to the upper floors one last time. What he finds has little impact on him but transfixes the audience with the lush production design. The set is intricate from ceiling to floor. Without spoiling the magic of THE HONGFU HOTEL, the film delves into Chinese mythology and religion in a mesmerizing way, challenging the viewer to open their minds to intergenerational trauma and the things we cannot see.
Tian Xu and the entire HONGFU HOTEL crew have something indisputably special on their hands. I would be incredibly interested in an expanded universe here. The possibilities are endless. THE HONGFU HOTEL is spellbinding.

World Premiere
The HongFu Hotel
Shorts
Short | United States | 19 MINUTES | English | English subtitles
Director
Tian Xu
Producer
“Amy” Kouxiao Zhang
Screenwriter
Tian Xu, Michael Ben-Iftah Nutovits, Bing Xu, Jacob Vaus
Cinematographer
“Steven” Sixiong Xie
Editor
Tian Xu, Yumeng “Judith” Zhu
Production Designer
“Mojo” Miao Wen
Executive Producer
Bing Xu
Associate Producer
Michael Ben-Iftah Nutovits
Co-Producer
Xiaojia Zhu
Cast
Kevin Dang, Zhu-Sheng Yin, Annalee Richards, Christine Liao, Jason Sun

Genre: Horror, Family, New York
Synopsis: A son reunites with his father on the eve of their family hotel’s demolition and is asked to bid farewell to the lingering spirits of the hotel’s past guests.
The film combines Chinese mythology and religion with modern-day New York City. Telling an immigrant story through the lens of horror.





















World Premiere – Spotlight Narrative
Based on the 1999 novel Too Many Men by Lily Brett
**WORLD PREMIERE**
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Kynlee Heiman
The camera work from Mike Lobello and Paul W. Sauline is brilliant. The audience experiences the goings-on from a child’s eye level. Beautifully lit close-ups of Sally convey the emotional rollercoaster. 

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DIG! XX





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