Liu Yulin is a Chinese film director, a graduate with the Master of
Fine Arts degree from the Graduate Film program of the Tisch School of
the Arts at New York University. In 2014, her short narrative film
Door God, which is about a girl in China awaiting the return of her
mother, won her the first international film prize - silver medal
under the narrative category at the 41st Student Academy Awards. The
same film later won in the category of Best Woman Student Filmmaker at
the 20th Annual Directors Guild of America Student Film Awards - East
Region. With her NYU thesis film Someone to Talk To, which is adapted
from her father Liu Zhenyun's award-winning novel One Sentence Is Ten
Thousand Sentences, she made her feature film debut in October 2016 at
the New Currents section at the 21st Busan International Film
Festival.
Fine Arts degree from the Graduate Film program of the Tisch School of
the Arts at New York University. In 2014, her short narrative film
Door God, which is about a girl in China awaiting the return of her
mother, won her the first international film prize - silver medal
under the narrative category at the 41st Student Academy Awards. The
same film later won in the category of Best Woman Student Filmmaker at
the 20th Annual Directors Guild of America Student Film Awards - East
Region. With her NYU thesis film Someone to Talk To, which is adapted
from her father Liu Zhenyun's award-winning novel One Sentence Is Ten
Thousand Sentences, she made her feature film debut in October 2016 at
the New Currents section at the 21st Busan International Film
Festival.
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