Scene from Chinese-South Korean documentary

The Busan International Film Festival (BIFF) opens Thursday with more than 300 movies -- including 94 world premieres -- on the screening schedule.

Here are five films that look set to stand out from the pack and generate a particular buzz at what has become Asia's most influential cinema showcase.

1. "Zubaan" (India):

The first Bollywood film selected to open BIFF in a year that India's film industry produced two of its biggest global box office hits -- "PK" and "Bajrangi Bhaijaan." Also notable for being by a first-time director, Mozez Singh, one of India's most promising screenwriters. The film follows a man who uses music to question his role in life.

2. "The Battle of Gwangju" (South Korea):

Director Yi Ji-Sang uses an experimental style to chart one day in the life of an assortment of citizens who fought military police in support of the 1980 student uprising in the South Korean city of Gwangju. It's the latest in a series of films to address sensitive moments in South Korea's recent past -- some to great critical and commercial success like courtroom drama "The Attorney" (2013).

3. "Bad Guys Always Die" (China/S.Korea):

A crime thriller-comedy from first-time Chinese director Sun Hao, backed by two of the most successful filmmakers in China and South Korea -- Feng Xiaogang and Kang Je-Gyu. The two veterans say the project is all about passing the baton on to a new generation. Set on the South Korean holiday island of Jeju, the film stars Taiwanese  heartthrob Chen Bolin as a mild mannered school teacher and South Korea's Son Ye-Jin as the mysterious hitwoman he becomes entangled with.

4. Twenty Two (China/South Korea):

A documentary on the lives of 22 surviving Chinese "comfort women" -- forced to work in Japanese military brothels during World War II.Director Guo Ke made a short entitled "Thirty Two" in 2013 but 10 of the women have since died. The comfort women issue remains a highly sensitive and emotive one in China and South Korea where most of the women were forcibly recruited. The film is in a very strong field for this year's Wide Angle documentary competition at BIFF.

5. "The DMZ" (South Korea):

This 1965 film was the first to be shot in the demilitarised zone (DMZ) set up 12 years before at the end of the Korean War as a buffer zone between North and South Korea. It was thought for decades that the film was lost until a print was found in 2005. Director Park Sang-ho used "non-actors" to play a brother and sister eking out a living in the DMZ, and the film looked so real that people initially thought it was a documentary. A rare and timely look at a classic given recent tensions on the peninsula.