Qin is best known for her role in the film
Durian Durian (2000) by
Fruit Chan, which portrays the experiences of a young girl and her sex worker neighbor in Hong Kong. The film won the Best Picture award at the 38th Taiwan's
Golden Horse Awards, and Qin won the Best Actress and Best New Performer awards. Thereafter, Qin starred in Yip Wai Man's film
Everlasting Love (2002) with Hong Kong actor
Daniel Chan. In the film, Qin plays a country girl who meets and falls in love with a young doctor (played by Chan) who is working for the United Nations. Despite much effort, the film failed to gain much attention and was not well received in theaters. Also in 2002, Qin starred in the film
Chicken Poets by Chinese musical director Meng Jinghuai. In the film, Qin plays a colorblind country girl, who dreams of leaving her village in search of a new life. Qin also co-wrote and starred in the Taiwanese drama film
Return Ticket (2011), based on a true story of a group of village women who rented a bus to go home for the holidays; which earned her the Best Original Screenplay award at the
Golden Horse Awards. Aside from films and dramas, Qin has also participated in numerous stage plays; including
Red Rose and White Rose (2010),
Four Generations Under One Roof (2012), and
Green Snake (2013). In 2012, she won the Outstanding Actress at the China Golden Lion Award for Drama, the highest honor awarded for theater play, for her performance in
Four Generations Under One Roof. Qin starred alongside
Zhou Xun in
Red Sorghum (2014), based on Nobel laureate
Mo Yan's 1986 novel of the same name. She was awarded the Best Supporting Actress at the
Shanghai Television Festival for her performance. According to the jury, Qin was able to "handle well her role and figure with a characteristic artistic image." In 2017, Qin launched her upcoming directorial debut
Go It Alone at the Asian New Talent Award. ==Filmography==