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  1. Hong Kong 1941. HK$7.22 million. [1] Hong Kong 1941 ( Chinese: 等待黎明) is a 1984 Hong Kong war drama film directed by Po-Chih Leong, produced by John Shum and written by Sammo Hung. The film stars Chow Yun-fat, Cecilia Yip and Alex Man. For his performance in this film, Chow was awarded his first Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actor.

  2. 2 nov 1984 · Hong Kong 1941: Directed by Po-Chih Leong. With Chow Yun-Fat, Cecilia Yip, Alex Man, Stuart Ong. Years later, a woman narrates her personal story of the Japanese takeover of Hong Kong in 1941.

  3. Gedenkstatue im Hong Kong Park – Verteidiger von Hongkong 1941. Die japanische Seite gab ihre Verluste in einer Publikation aus den 1950er Jahren mit 675 Gefallenen und 2079 Verwundeten an. Die britische Seite gab ihre eigenen Verluste mit 2113 Toten und mindestens 1332 Verwundeten an, Tausende weitere gerieten in Kriegsgefangenschaft.

  4. Years later, a woman narrates her personal story of the Japanese takeover of Hong Kong in 1941. She’s Nam, young, attractive, daughter of a wealthy rice merchant, and prey to painful, disabling seizures. Her boyhood friend is Coolie Keung, whose family used to have wealth in love with her.

  5. Batalha de Hong Kong (08-25 dezembro 1941), também conhecido como a Queda de Hong Kong, foi uma das primeiras batalhas da Campanha do Pacífico, durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial. [ 1 ] Na mesma manhã do ataque à base naval dos Estados Unidos em Pearl Harbor , no Havaí , as forças do Império do Japão também atacaram Hong Kong , então uma possessão do Império Britânico .

  6. British Hong Kong Garrison. The Hong Kong Garrison was a British and Commonwealth force that protected Hong Kong. In December 1941 during the Battle of Hong Kong in the Second World War, the Japanese Army attacked Hong Kong and after a brief but violent series of engagements the garrison surrendered. The garrison continued until 1989.

  7. The defence of Hong Kong was a brutal chapter in Canada's military history. Of the almost 2,000 Canadians who sailed to Hong Kong in late 1941, more than 550 would never see Canada again. Many would die in the fierce combat of December 1941. Others would perish in the grinding conditions of the Japanese prison camps throughout the rest of the war.