The Academy Awards is the oldest, most authoritative and professional film award in the United States, and the most influential film award in the world. The Academy Awards have an unmatched influence over any film award in the world.

So what are the Chinese who have won Oscars? Let's take stock today!
< h1 class = "pgc-h-center-line" > first Jackie Chan</h1>
In 2016, he won the 89th Academy Award for Lifetime Achievement, the first time the Oscar Lifetime Achievement Award has been awarded to a Chinese person, and the fourth time that an Asian has won this honor after Japanese director Akira Kurosawa (1989), Indian director Satyajit Rey (1991), and Japanese animation master Hayao Miyazaki (2014). Jackie Chan, 62, is the youngest Ever Oscar Lifetime Achievement Award winner.
< h1 class= "pgc-h-center-line" > second Ang Lee</h1>
On July 7, 2000, the martial arts drama film "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" was released, which won the Best Foreign Language Film Award at the 73rd Academy Awards.
Ang Lee is the first in the history of cinema, won the British Academy Film Academy Golden Ball Award, the Chinese director who won the best director honor at the three world film awards, and as of 2013, Ang Lee has won three Academy Awards, five British Academy Film Awards, four Golden Globe Awards, two Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Awards and two Berlin Film Festival Golden Bear Awards, and is known as a well-deserved master of the Chinese film industry.
< h1 class= "pgc-h-center-line" > third place Tan Dun</h1>
In 2001, he won the Best Original Music Award at the 73rd Academy Awards for his film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Tan Dun is one of the world's leading Chinese musicians. The soundtracks of "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon", "Hero" and "Night Feast" are all written by him, and he has won the Academy Award for Best Original Music, the Grammy Award for Best Film Original Music Album, the music director of the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008, and the theme song for the Shanghai World Expo in 2010.
<h1 class="pgc-h-center-line" > fourth place Huang Zongchen</h1>
Chinese-American cinematographer and director. On December 12, 1955, the cinematographer's love film "Rose Tattoo" was released, with which it won the Best Cinematography Award at the 28th Academy Awards. On May 28, 1963, the western action film "Iron Man in the Wild" as a cinematographer was released, for which he won the Best Cinematography Award at the 36th Academy Awards.
On July 12, 1976, Huang Zongchen died of illness in Hollywood. On October 17, 2003, the International Society of Cinematographers of the United States named "the world's eleven most influential photographers", and Huang Zongzhan ranked fourth.
< h1 class="pgc-h-center-line" > fifth place Ye Jintian</h1>
In 2001, he won the 73rd Best Art Direction Award for the film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
< h1 class="pgc-h-center-line" > sixth place Su Cong</h1>
Won the 60th Academy Award for Best Film Composition. Other awards won by Su Cong include the ABC Award, the Grammys for Best Background Music Original Album, and the Essenkrupp Foundation Scholarship in Germany.