The one you didn't see back then, the one about the postmortem waiting room - that's probably a Japanese movie called After Life. You should see that one, too.
Here are some more that I watched this semester:
Fearless, for a martial arts film, is really stinkin' good. So is Once Upon a Time in China. Really does a good job at portraying the frustrations caused by Western imperialism. Both are beautifully shot.
Neorealism (I think I have that right) isn't everyone's cup of tea, but Jia Zhangke's recent films, The World and Still Life are both really good. Slow, maybe a little hard to follow, but good.
Ang Lee has a new film out - Lust, Caution. Well done, caused something of a stir because of the MPAA's NC-17 rating.
Kekexili : Mountain Patrol is great. Story of a reporter who goes out into a harsh area of Tibet with a civilian task force trying to stop poaching of Tibetan antelope. Brutal, compelling, very well-made.
A World Without Thieves is a really nice movie. A good story, good acting, good characters.
Chicken Poets is kind of an avant-garde, postmodern satire of China's commercialization. It's pretty neat.
And Blind Shaft. Another satire, but much rougher and darker. Two miners kill younger workers that they lure in and pretend are family members, so they can extort money from the mine bosses (in China's illegally-operated coal mines) by covering it up to look like an accident. More realism, but this time moves quickly, instead of slowly. Really good movie.