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@SGIFF2015: Review - The Fourth Direction

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In the history books during the film’s period of reference, the road to the famed golden temple at Amritsar was treacherous and ill-fated. In the film ‘The Fourth Direction’, the journey to Amritsar as taken by a few men, both physical and mental, also proved to be uncertain, difficult and particularly wayward. This is a film that takes several steps off the conventional beaten narrative track, breaking some rules in storytelling, edging on our curiosity and sense of adventure at some points and making us scratch our heads at most other points.

‘The Fourth Direction’ aims to explore the climate of tension between the Sikh militants and the Indian government during the period of Operation Blue Star in 1984. Perhaps this film will give new meaning to the word obtuse. The film meditates on a few simple encounters hoping to provide enough colour to complete its portrait of the troubled times. It follows the trail of two men, Jugal and Raj, who are trying to hop on to the last train that will take them to Amritsar. They managed to nudge their way onto the last carriage, only to find it filled with others equally desperate as them. The second set of encounters manifests itself through the memory of Jugal. Centred around a Sikh family whom Jugal stumbles upon by chance, it recounts their experience trying to shelter a Sikh militant friend from the Indian military and their dilemma with a dog that refused to stop barking.
The strangest part of the film is the way director Gulvinder Singh joins up the dots in the plot without any real causal connection from one segment to another. The narrative trail takes us from the first set of encounters at the train station and the train carriage to the second set of encounters in the house of Joginder, aka the Sikh family with the dog, with each segment having no bearing on the other. For all the masterful build-ups, the anticipation of full-blown clashes, the expected window to the world of Operation Blue Star, we are left short-changed at several points in the film. The film skips the visual and narrative gratification for something more atmospheric and also skips completing what it meant to ignite. 

On one hand, being insulated from the real depth of the conflict seems to do Operation Blue Star a real injustice. One the other hand, its focussed depiction of micro battles, like those that happened within the Joginder household compound, brings home, excuse the pun, the human issues on a more profound level. Particularly effective is the use of the dog as a focal point of condensed tension between the various people who, stand at different sides of the conflict, driven more by circumstances than pure ideology. It provides an angle through which to study the various human motives and stakes involved in the situation. Director Gulvinder is also evidently sensitive to sound interplay in the film, having created an aural ambience that evokes the presence of conflict larger than what the visuals show. From the running sound of the train, the chirping of cricket choirs to the starker sounds like the dog’s barking and gunshots, sounds in this film function like narrative sign posts, signalling our journey from one point of the story to the next, creating a sense of immersion in the situation. All in all, these stylistic and technical triumphs do not hide the fact that the film has many voids to fill and it takes a lot more storytelling rigour, than the director has exercised, to make this journey back in history complete.


Review by Jeremy Sing



This review is part of the Asian Feature Film Competition series at the Singapore International Film Festival 2015. Read more about the film here.

This film won the Best Film Award in the SGIFF 2015 Asian Feature Film Competition.


ShoutOUT!: Watch Local @ Objectifs: First Short. First Feature.

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Still from Raihan Halim's 'Banting'

The Watch Local programme is back at Objectifs! This year's series features the first short and feature films from an eclectic selection of Singapore filmmakers such as Boo Junfeng, Wee Li Lin, and Liao Jiekai. Each night will focus on a different director, giving a unique perspective on each one’s creative journey from their first short film to their first feature film. Post-screening discussions will accompany some of the sessions, allowing the audience insight into how these filmmakers have grown in their craft. From comedy to horror to drama, there’s something for everyone!

23 Feb to 4 Mar 2016, 7.30pm 
Chapel Gallery, Objectifs
Admission: Entry by donation

Screenings are free but pre-registration is required via Peatix: http://ptix.co/1U6yD1P
Please also note that some films are rated M18 and R21. We will be adhereing strictly to age limits for restricted age shows. Please bring along your IC or equivalent.

Programme Schedule

23 FEBRUARY, TUESDAY / 7.30PM / RAIHAN HALIM / PG 
First Short: Sunat / 2009
First Feature: Banting / 2014


24 FEBRUARY, WEDNESDAY / 7.30PM / LIAO JIEKAI / PG 
First Short: Paradise / 2006
First Feature: Red Dragonfiles / 2010


25 FEBRUARY, THURSDAY / 7.30PM / WEE LI LIN / PG
First Short: Norman on the Air / 1997
First Feature: Gone Shopping / 2007

26 FEBRUARY, FRIDAY / 7.30PM / CHAI YEE WEI / M18
First Short: Lao Sai / 2005
First Feature: Blood Ties / 2007


27 FEBRUARY, SATURDAY / 7.30PM / RIC AW / PG
First Short: Buy Me Love / 2005
First Feature: Standing In Still Water / 2014

28 FEBRUARY, SUNDAY / 3PM / DJINN / M18
First Short: By the Dawn’s Early Rise / 1998
First Feature: Perth / 2004

1 MARCH, TUESDAY / 7.30PM / YONG MUN CHEE / R21
First Short: 9:30 / 2004
First Feature: Where the Road Meets the Sun / 2011

2 MARCH, WEDNESDAY / 7.30PM / MENG ONG / PG13
First Short: China Doll / 1991
First Feature: Miss Wonton / 2001

3 MARCH, THURSDAY / 7.30PM / KAN LUME / PG
First Short: The Assassin / 2004
First Feature: The Art of Flirting / 2006

4 MARCH, FRIDAY / 7.30PM / BOO JUNFENG / M18
First Short: A Family Portrait / 2004
First Feature: Sandcastle / 2010

Short Films That Leave Us Thinking: A Conversation

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Some films ground us in the action of the moment. But others leave us with lingering thoughts, even after many days after viewing.

Last month, we encountered a selection of contemplative short films that have left them musing about migration, family love and nostalgia for the past. Titled “Spirits of Cinema”, the screening featured shorts by the local collective 13 Little Pictures, with the programme co-curated by the collective and the Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore (ICA), in lieu of Singapore Art Week.

SINdie writers Choon Ling and Sharanya chat about their experience watching these films under the stars at the special outdoor screening in LaSalle’s campus.
The Films:

KOPI JULIA (Tan Bee Thiam, 2013)
TICKETS (Sherman Ong, 2010)
A LION’S PRIDE (Wesley Leon Aroozoo, 2008)
MY FATHER AFTER DINNER (Gladys Ng, 2015)
ANIMAL SPIRITS (Daniel Hui, 2013)
AN AUTUMN AFTERNOON (Lei Yuan Bin , 2015)
SILENT LIGHT (Liao Jiekai, 2015)
THE MINOTAUR (Yeo Siew Hua, 2015)

Sharanya (S): Which film was your favourite?

Choon Ling (C): Tickets definitely left a deep impression on me. I liked how minimalistic it was in terms of visuals and sound. It only had two different scenes — one was the interview itself, while the other one was the protagonist tending to the ticket box — and it was scored with a natural diegetic track. Despite only presenting the barest of the film medium, it managed to pull us into the story. It didn’t feel like it was 10 minutes long!

Sherman Ong’s Tickets

S: Yeah, and I found the ticket box very interesting! It’s a rare sight in Singapore nowadays, especially how the protagonist manually takes the tickets from the drawer to pass to the customers. It’s not like the modern cinema where tickets are just printed out of machines, and you don’t even think twice about it.

C: That’s true! It’s fascinating, how the film was shot at the former Oriental Theatre. I think the director wanted to pay tribute to a forgotten time and place, where movie theatres promised dreams and magic for the people. And the actress was a natural. Even though we were just listening to her talking, It’s almost as if we’re in the room with her!

S: It was nice how the film plays on the concept of how everyday people have such moving stories. You don’t really need to look very far to get a good one. I think especially here, in Singapore, there tends to be a bit of resistance towards Chinese nationals. But while she was sharing her own hopes and dreams, it didn’t feel like she was of a different nationality.

C: Yeah! I guess that’s the point of the film, to highlight how the immigrants that some of us are prejudiced against are actually just like us, with the same kind of dreams. I suppose that’s why this film is my favourite of the lot. It had a strong message and managed to move me with the bare essentials.

What about you? What was your favourite film?

S: I would say The Minotaur. I was entranced by it; I couldn’t take my eyes off the screen. The whole feel of it reminded me of short film, The Ghost King by Dick Chua. It’s a documentary about this annual ritual in a Malaysian town where they would burn the paper statues of the Gods. It’s also filmed at night and has very riveting, slightly eerie music. So this film really transported me back to that. I think I enjoy this genre of films!

Yeo Siew Hua’s The Minotaur

C: Like horror?

S: It’s a little horror, but not exactly. More like mythology. I find Chinese mythology very fascinating!

C: It is! Especially when they are about the 18 levels of hell. I like how the film started with the Ah Gong (grandfather) trying to scare his grandson through the myth.

S: Yeah! This is not the nurturing kind of Ah Gong. I like how the boy doesn’t cry. He’s not a whiney kid, he’s actually quite independent. And I think the sound really intensified the mystery of the whole storyline. Even without the visuals, I think it would have been just as impactful as an audio-story.

C: Yeah, I agree! What really stood out for me when watching the film was the venue. It enhanced the horror experience quite dramatically. There were moments in the film where there was silence and I could feel the entire atmosphere thickening.

S: That’s true! I think that made it even better. This film was very heavily stylised, kind of the opposite of Tickets. But it didn’t feel heavy-handed!

C: I thought that this was a very nice ending to the entire programme.

S: Yeah! And it’s interesting that they also started the programme with another horror film, Kopi Julia. Though it’s a very different kind of horror.

Tan Bee Thiam’s Kopi Julia

C: From the description it says that the film fuses two different genres — silent films and Malay horror. That’s interesting because I’ve never been exposed to Malay horror films. Maybe this is the gateway to a sub-genre. The film was a bit comedic too! Especially with the overacting and title cards and light plot. A Lion’s Pride is totally different! It was a fun eight minutes.

S: I still took it seriously until the lions started mating! I guess they were trying to mock those National Geographic documentaries!

C: Right! I think it’s interesting because it took a familiar cultural symbol and subverted its myth. It’s an alternate universe where nian wasn’t chased away and survived! I wonder how the elderly Chinese audience felt about it…

S: I think they might have been a bit horrified by the humping.

C: They probably were!

S: I think it’s good that they put it in the middle, after a very serious one like Tickets. That was more introspective, and this one just makes you laugh! And then after that is another introspective one: My Father After Dinner, which won best local short film at the recent Singapore International Film Festival.

Gladys Ng’s My Father After Dinner

C: This felt the most local out of all the films. It’s the most relatable one.

S: It actually reminded me of my mum. She used to work night shifts, and like the father in the film, she would prepare food and remind me and my sister to eat. And we wouldn’t see each other most of the time, as though we were living in different timezones!

C: Oh! And you’re living that life right now, because of your night shifts!

S: Yeah! Even in this film, the girl only meets her father when he comes back home. It’s something I’m experiencing now, so it’s quite relatable. When I see security guards working night shifts at my office, I always wonder what their story is. Some of them look really young, some of them look like they’ve retired. I think they all have interesting backstories that bring them to this job.

C: That’s true. I like how the director uses food to symbolise the father’s love. He cooks this sumptuous feast for the family every weekend but he just keeps the leftover rice for himself to fry the next day. You could tell he really loves his children.

S: It’s like Tickets, they didn’t have to look for an exotic story to make a compelling film.

C: Yeah! And the film features the director’s actual father, so that’s interesting. I guess this is really a slice of the director’s life. But the next film, Animal Spirits, is not directly inspired by the filmmaker’s own life. Instead, it’s a Singaporean filming an American and Korean story in America. I like how international it is.

S: I guess for me, it was less relatable, maybe because it was set in America. So there might be certain nuances that are just lost on me. But I thought the contrast was nice, between a native and an immigrant. Immigration seems to be a big issue in many local films.

C: Especially because we have such a high volume of people coming in! This film is interesting because although it’s talking about the same issues — moving, sacrifice, hopes and dreams — it’s from the perspective of an American lady moving to another state and a Korean immigrant who’s living and studying in the US.

S: I guess the common theme for them is that they kind of believed that they had gotten their big break when they moved. Just to realise that things are not as rosy. And I think that’s something immigrants everywhere experience. You just move somewhere and realise this is not what you signed up for.

C: That’s true. I find this surprising, but I actually really liked An Autumn Afternoon. Mainly because even though I watch slow films, I’m not particularly attracted to them. But for this film, even though there was no human protagonist, the place and space dominate the screen, like the cemetery and train station setting. That was really interesting to me! It felt like a documentary without narration.

Lei Yuan Bin’s An Autumn Afternoon

S: Even for me. Before this, I was very bad at appreciating slow films. This film was inspired by Ozu, and I’ve watched two Ozu films — Tokyo Story and Late Spring. And I have to confess I initially found it very hard to concentrate during the long, static shots. But eventually, I learnt to stay with the director as he explored different elements within the frame. And it was a similar experience watching An Autumn Afternoon. The director chose very interesting locations and objects to explore, like a tombstone.

C: Right, and it was oddly peaceful!

S: It really was!

C: The title definitely put the film in perspective. The film really captured the essence of what an autumn afternoon in Japan feels like. The quiet setting, the warmth of the sun, the unnoticeable passing of time… The venue again complemented the audio-visual experience! I remember it was really windy that night, and we were sitting there admiring the calm beauty of Japan. It really added to whatever’s on screen.

S: And it’s really nice because the film is outdoors, and you are outdoors. I thought there were really nice little subplots happening within the frame. It mimics the experience of just sitting somewhere and observing your surroundings.

C: Just people watching, like looking at the trees moving. It really encapsulates times passing. It’s real time. And you hardly get that in a lot of recent films because they are usually narratively driven.

S: Yeah, they usually try to manipulate time.

C: And this just presents time! I think nowadays with everyone being so busy, you don’t actually experience time yourself.

S: Actually, there were a lot of people at the start. I realised towards Animal Spirits and An Autumn Afternoon, people started leaving. In a way, these kinds of films test us. Are we so busy that we can’t even afford the time to just sit and stay with a film? I guess the thing about slow films is that it requires trust in the filmmaker, and when your trust is not betrayed then you feel very happy!

C: Yeah, you’ll feel like you are rewarded. I guess with slow films, the directorial vision is very prominent. You are forced to see what the director wants you to see. Without words! Which is really hard, actually.

S: I’m wondering if the ordering of the different locations had any significance.

C: Actually, it’s true! I don’t really remember the exact ordering, but now that you mention, it feels like he started off with quieter and stiller shots, like a secluded area with minimal movement, before slowly introducing civilisation.

S: It’s a bit like Silent Light!

Liao Jiekai’s Silent Light

C: Yeah, because it’s also talking about time, but in a completely different way. Because it’s about his grandmother’s funeral, and you can tell that he’s missing his grandmother, but in a very subtle manner. Even the use of old film. Initially I thought this was made like ten, twenty years ago. Because of the film texture.

S: Right, 16mm.

C: And it’s expired film stock! I feel like this was chosen deliberately. Because he’s with his grandmother’s passing.

S: How do you know that it’s expired?

C: The texture. And then you see the noise in weird areas. And there was this part where they had the black lines.

S: Right! I think there was some discolouration as well.

C: Yeah! That’s why I thought it was something from so many years ago. And it was interesting because the film was very voyeuristic. Observatory. Like shots of the empty funeral parlour and stuff. You could really feel that this film is like a tribute to his grandmother. The woman recounting her memories, growing up in the early 1960s… You can almost imagine that her story is his grandmother’s story, even though this is not her talking.

S: Yeah! I watched another one of Liao Jiekai’s short films at SGIFF last year, Darkroom. It was a documentary about this photographer who still believes in using the traditional darkroom technique for her experimental photography. And the film used a technique very similar to Silent Light; he overlaid shots of the darkroom process with the conversation he had with the photographer. I think he likes to experiment with how narration doesn’t necessarily have to sync with what he’s showing you, but how it creates a different feel.

C: He’s really using film as a medium. Kudos to that!

S: Yeah! He believes very strongly in using traditional film. Singapore films always make me feel very nostalgic. I mean Kopi Julia is nostalgia, Tickets, maybe a little.

C: And I guess like the overall programme was really really interesting because you got to see so many different kinds of genres. And the entire experience was very varied, which I really liked.

S: I was quite surprised there were a lot of people there.

C: Yeah especially because it was short films! Like usually short films don’t get an audience. And the variety of people that were there! It’s interesting how older people were also drawn to the programme. When I saw the programmme on Facebook, I didn’t really know what to expect even though I had the lineup, because not all of them have trailers.

S: I think it’s so hard to make a trailer for a short film, because it’s already so short!

C: It’s like how much can you show without showing the entire thing! And I guess the thing with short films is like, it’s a screening. For movies you have the synopsis, trailer for you to get to know the film before you watch it. But like for short films, you don’t get that kind of introduction. So when you go there you are trusting the filmmaker, and the curators. You are trusting their taste.

Tony Yeow, the 'has-been who never was'?

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I was one degree of separation away from the late Tony Yeow about 6 years ago when I had the opportunity of meeting ex-bipolar patient Choo Kah Ying who turned her life around after being hit by the mental disorder. She told me she had plans to turn her life story into a movie and she had already found a producer. That producer was Tony Yeow. I had an inkling that Tony was a well-known person in the film circle because I had seen this name pop up a few times in film programme booklets. At the same time, I surmised that he must be quite senior based on the fact that his name does not pop up among the younger class of filmmakers that were emerging in the late 2000s. 

The first time I saw him was at the screening of Saint Jack at the national museum where he attended in the capacity of being one of the key crew members. Of course, in the presence of other bigger personalities like veteran Chinese actress Lisa Lu and the cast, his presence was sidelined. Most of the people involved in Saint Jack, made in the 70s, are no longer active in the film industry, so my impression of Tony Yeow went along those lines. Little did I know what this man did for the film industry would reverberate in my thoughts as much as his deep, radio-presenter voice.

Tony Yeow can be argued to be the person who sparked the first flame for Singapore movie-making after its long drought in the 1980s, with the film ‘Medium Rare’. ‘Medium Rare’ was based on the true story of murderer Adrian Lim who drank the blood of children. Having started his filmmaking journey earlier in the 70s, he never stopped searching for film stories and ideas and ’Medium Rare’ was one of the fruits of his labour. Though he ignited the engine of this film project, he eventually stepped down as director due to some disagreements. Some would remember how a Caucasian man was strangely cast to play Adrian Lim. This and many more trivia about him and his films were shared at ‘Remembering Tony’, a talk presented by film writer Ben Slater, attended by players in the film industry who had brushed shoulders with Tony or were simply here to open their eyes into the world of a filmmaker whose efforts were invested at the worst time for any filmmaker to be producing anything in Singapore. 
Still from 'Tony's Long March'

Ben showed a documentary film made by himself and filmmaker Sherman Ong during the talk, titled ‘Tony’s Long March’, about Tony and his films. In the video, Tony called himself ‘The has-been who never was’, based on the fact that his films won won neither commercial success nor critical acclaim. While the video aimed to explore the rigour of Tony’s passion for filmmaking and expression, it undeniably sounded like a ‘Why Tony Yeow was a failed filmmaker’ exposition. Tony unabashedly recounts the trials and tribulations of his journey as a filmmaker, and does not mince his words when turning the microscope on himself on why each film failed. 

Discussing this chronologically, he recounted his first setback with his first film ‘Ring of Fury’, made in 1973. ‘Ring of Fury’ was about a hawker who wanted to get rid of gangsters and underwent some ass-kicking kungfu training to become a fighter. Though a honest dig at the state of gangsterism in Singapore at that time, which was rife, the government banned it for depicting gangsters as they were in the process of ‘cleaning up’ Singapore. This film did not to see the light of day until about 20 years later when Channel 8 TV broadcast the movie. Tony then went on to discuss the second time success eluded him - ‘Two Nuts’. ’Two Nuts’, a comedy about fishermen out-of-water, which his wife found ridiculous, failed to stay afloat in the box office. After a job at Mandarin hotel and an aborted attempt at ‘Medium Rare’, ‘Tiger’s Whip’, made in 1998, was another concerted shot at hitting gold in the box office. That too was a miscalculated shot as it was not only not well-received at home, it failed to attract distributors in the US, despite a salient dose of ‘Americanisation’ in the movie. By ‘Americanisation’, I mean using an American lead and playing up the exotic aspects of Singapore’s culture. By then, other new filmmakers like Eric Khoo and Jack Neo had risen to the fore from critical acclaim and box office success respectively.
'Tiger's Whip' a film made for the American market

History tends to attach labels and roles to characters, in order to simplify our understanding of evolution and change. It is not intuitively easy to point a finger at what Tony has contributed to the film movement in Singapore. He has done many things but has hardly built a reputation for himself in any particular field. But yet, one cannot deny his eager presence in the scene and his never-say-die spirit. By refusing to drop the curtains on local cinema in the late 70s, by holding on to blind faith with ’Medium Rare’, Singapore cinema’s ‘comeback shot’, he became somewhat a brave flag holder for Singapore cinema in its time of transition. Watching ‘Tony’s Long March’, there is a certain palpable sense of reckless optimism about him. He reminisced fondly about every new project that came along, and seemed hardly dented by the failures, only to laugh off the follies he made. Filmmaking was akin to driving a car through unknown terrain and lapping up the bumps and turns that came along the way. The state of filmmaking today is akin to a 90-degree turn from this as the industry has gained some footing over the years and filmmakers are a lot more cautious. If there is a term that encapsulates the kind of filmmaking that was happening during the industry’s transition then, it would be ‘trial-and-error’. And of course, nobody embodied ‘trial and error’ more than Tony.

Arguably, trial and error led Tony to make Singapore’s first kungfu flick ‘Ring of Fury’. Trial and error led to finding the means to making his second film. Tony shared an anecdote about getting his first burst of funding for his second film ’Two Nuts’ in which he met a financier named Mr Koh, a businessman who owned Golden Mile Cinema. Mr Koh asked what his film was about and Tony Yeow described it. Just after ten minutes, he asked Tony how much he needed. Tony replied and the next thing he did was summon in his secretary to prepare a cheque of S$40,000 for Tony. Tony added that at the point of time when he walked away with this cheque, Mr Koh barely knew who he was and had not even watched Tony’s ‘Ring of Fury’. In a later part of the documentary, Tony reflects on the performance of his films again and wonders if he would have made more successful films if he had been challenged more right at the beginning and not been offered money like the above-mentioned Mr Koh.
The experience with Mr Koh is perhaps also reflective of the times and the circumstances unique to the movie business at that time in Singapore. While the industry tide was on the decline in the late 70s and 80s, any attempt or flash of an idea to make a film might have been a welcome burst of wishful thinking that took the monotony out of a highly-industrialised Singapore. And wishful thinkers like Tony were few and far in between. Obviously, circumstances are different today and making a film is necessarily a more calculated and concerted attempt rather than a trial and error effort. Film producer Nicholas Chee thinks the real challenge filmmakers face today lies not in the first film for it has become relatively easy to get a first film made. After all, there is discernibly a bigger pool of professional talent and finances available today. The real challenge is being able to continue making your second, third, fourth film and more and achieving a reasonable amount of success each time. This calls for a lot of marketing savvy and business acumen in making a film and many filmmakers are still miles away. So, by today’s standards, Tony’s actually one lucky man who’s been able to repeatedly find financing for films. Either that, or back to the familiar lesson that it never hurts to try.


And when it comes to trying, this man has tried everything. Having survived the Japanese occupation, he’s been a TV producer, presenter, made the government’s ‘Stop at Two’ TV commercials and even acted in the original cast of local musical ‘Beauty World’. He embodies a certain spirit in late-80s, early-90s Singapore when the arts, theatre and film were not so institutionalised and less structured, where people came together, with whatever knowledge they had and tried to cook up a show. And the end-products were often surprising, sometimes explosive and always genuine. Things are noticeably different now. Many people are trained or schooled in strict disciplines, injecting a lot more professionalism into the trade. But I dare say, also more afraid of making mistakes. Not that it is any fault of theirs that they don’t experiment like their predecessors used to do but I think, and rather regrettably, many of us are caught in the industrialisation of art and film, where the margin for error is lower. At the end of ‘Remembering Tony’ the talk, I met the wife and son of Tony outside the theatre. We exchanged introductions and niceties and when I felt they had warmed up a little, I asked if his son was also dabbling in film. To which, Serene, Tony’s wife responded, ‘No, he’s in finance. More practical lah.’ A tinge of regret there but I guess Tony’s in a league of his own.

Written by Jeremy Sing

SINdie reviews: 1400

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The most remarkable fact about 1400 was that it was even made at all. With no script, no funds, and little support, director Derrick Lui laboured through 7 years of production hell to finally finish the film in 2015. Thus, regardless of its stumbles, the film remains a Herculean accomplishment, and Derrick Lui certainly deserves praise for enduring where lesser men would have faltered.

In the same vein as the recent In the Room (although it was conceptualized and filmed long before its release), 1400 is an omnibus film set in a hotel, the eponymous 1400 in Geylang. It follows 4 different stories of love, and as each unfurls, seeks to weave them into a greater narrative about the nature of modern love.

For a shoestring budget, a feature debut, and with a director playing almost every single conceivable production role, 1400 is technically achieved. Sidestepping potential hurdles with a simplistic, minimalist set and certainly with deft skill, director Derrick Lui has each sequence glossed with a professional sheen, such that every frame is watchable, and nothing looks out of place.

And yet, the film is not without its troubles.


1400 is neither subtle nor abashed in its darker take on love, with the film segmented into vignettes, each labelled explicitly to signify loss, lust, etc. Unafraid to pursue the plotlines to their ends, however tragic or melancholic, it’s conceptually fresh among local films and dramas, who never seem to grapple honestly with love’s sombre realities. But the poignancy of whatever conclusions the film seeks to draw is neutered by bland and uninspired characterization. The fragmented and transient nature of the scenes starves the characters of badly needed screen time, and coupled with a weak dialogue that descends into stereotypes and platitudes, none of the characters progress meaningfully. The relationship between an aspiring songwriter and blind florist’s daughter seems like an import from mando-pop music videos, with both playing the role of idealistic lovebirds whose emotion and affection come assumed, and worse, remain unexplained. The sinful union of 2 adulterous professionals is rendered inane by conversations that rarely offer much to consider other than the fact that both are married, and bored. The story of an elderly widower who relives her touch through the services of prostitutes is a refreshing breather, with a more far better and more convincing character, but alas, it cannot save the rest.


Thematically, the film does not succeed to tie the disparate strings of its multiple plotlines into a cohesive whole. Yes, each plot is somewhat about love, but that is insufficient to justify any overarching theme. Each of the plotlines progress independent of one another, which can work for an omnibus film, except that the insights and conclusion each derives don’t mesh to create any unifying framework, and sometimes contradict each other. Throughout the film, the characters interact at the 1400 hotel, sharing dinner conversations and chance encounters, but their interactions are hollow: a lack of clarity as to what the film is trying to say, when translated down to the level of dialogue, often results in garbled interference. There are confusing mixed messages as well. The film does not end well for many of its characters, many of whom find their expectations ruined, or are consumed by their inner demons. And yet, the singer and his blind girlfriend manage to ride off into the sunset in an idealistic celebration of young love, which juxtaposed with the jarring realities of their parallel stories, seem foolhardy and perhaps even immature.

The acting itself is inconsistent. Vincent Lee, a veteran, plays his tragic character stalwartly, particularly in the moments of vulnerability. Although limited by poor scripting, Ya Hui delivers her lines as best as she can, and while nothing stellar, the scenes of intimacy survive scrutiny with her convincing acting. But somewhat cringe-worthy are Maria Alexander and William Luwandi, whose accents and mannerisms are so off that they only seek to reinforce the stereotype of an airheaded, pretentious middle class professional.

In conclusion, 1400 had an idea with potential and solid technicals, but when it came to the plot and some of acting, it was an uneven performance. Director Derrick Lui surely has the guts, and willingness to work with more difficult material, and my hope is that with a better team, and particularly with better scripting and casting, he can one day produce a great Singaporean film.

Singapore Heritage Short Film Competition: A Wistful Yet Lucid Glimpse Into Slices of Our Heritage

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Heritage film. It's a phrase that local cinephiles greet with trepidation. Many are, after all, weary of the endless sepia filters, over-generous doses of sentimentality, and nostalgic voiceovers that seem to have become hallmarks of the genre.  So it's with relief that I say that the Singapore Heritage Short Film Competition, which organises an ongoing series of screenings (and is seeking new submissions for its next edition), might shatter some of your expectations.

Sure, not all of the entries were immune to the trappings that come with capturing the past and/or disappearing traditions, but after watching the entire crop of finalist shorts, concerns subside. As far as revealing snapshots of vanishing subcultures goes, the best submissions from this batch are clear-eyed and coherent, telegraphing a sense of loss without wallowing in it.

Kuda Kepang

I’m not sure if the Singapore Heritage Short Film Competition mandates all submissions to be styled as documentaries (it’s possible to capture Singapore’s heritage via fictional work, though certainly more difficult and resource-intensive), but all the finalist entries hewed to the non-fictional approach, for better or worse. You’ll find entries that are guilty of the usual cinematic sins found in documentaries: too much exposition via narration, for example – Beyond the Checkmate, an ambitious if somewhat sterile film that traces the 80-year history of Chinese chess in Singapore, does stumble in this regard, dumping overwhelming amounts of information at viewers via a monotonous voiceover.

Regardless, most of the films offered captivating glimpses into more esoteric slices of our heritage: the personal experiences of two Eurasians in the aptly titled I Am Eurasian; the dying practice of visiting graves at Bukit Brown cemetery during Qing Ming Festival; and the earliest form of signboard-making through traditional means in Tools of the Trade, among others.

What I admired most about the films was their refusal to surrender to "past is better" cliches; for the most part, they tend to avoid making grand statements about the changing landscape of Singapore and simply focus on their subject matters. I've resented films that have consistently hectored me to feel, feel, feel for the past, for dying traditions, and their tendency to conflate Old Singapore with "authenticity" (i.e. modern Singapore is not "authentic") sits uncomfortably with me, so it’s a relief the films here manage to conjure a sense of wonder and intimacy without committing to lazy cliches.

Beneath the Spikes

The top two prizes of the competition went to deserving entries: Kuda Kepang: Reviving the Culture, a wry, fascinating look at a stigmatised Javanese dance form where practitioners enter a trance; as well as Beneath the Spikes, which tells the real-life story of Hari, who undergoes more than 100 body piercings in the Hindu festival Panguni Uthiram, as a way of giving thanks to the deities for his son’s wellbeing. Both were technically competent, eschewing long, cumbersome chunks of narration in favour of smart, visual storytelling (shouldn’t they all?).

The SHSFC is now seeking submissions for its next edition. You can visit here for more information.

The State of Motion: A Tour of Rediscovery

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I have to admit I was never much of a history buff. Still, the one afternoon retracing and relearning the history of local Cinema made me realize how grave a misconception I had, in thinking that the early Singapore was a cultural desert. The tour was almost an imploration to uncover my historical narrative again - not just where we came from, but how far our roots in art and culture have propagated.

This was the State of Motion tour that I was on, a twin programme (tour and exhibition) organized by Asian Film Archive, and a precious product of the extensive research done by artist and filmmaker, Toh Hun Ping. 



Armed only with excerpts from Cathay-Keris films shown to us and a head full of curiosity, the group of us packed into a cozy van that transported us to places of the past. Interestingly, the directors of Cathay-Keris films advocated shooting only on locations, using spaces such as existing kampongs and fusing popular spots to string the physical and imaginary narrative. 



We arrived at Outram Park, where Outram Prison once used to be. Unsurprisingly, it is now a barren field, with a surrealism heightened by an artwork that resembled a labyrinth of white mesh. It was meant to be a collaborative piece - encouraging more democratic forms of memorialization - but knowing that I could write whatever on the artist’s work actually made me feel nervous. Isn’t this monument too sacred to be drawn on? Yet, as I watched others pen their thoughts and well-wishes, I started to understand how art could coax our reflective process. 



The rest of the tour rolled forward nicely, save for the rain that burdened us with ponchos; we strolled down Queen Elizabeth Walk listening to the bizzare whisperings from an audio guide, I imagining myself as the lovesick protagonist in the film My Darling Love (1965). At Kampong Siglap, we were educated on the nuances of Sumpah Pontianak (1958); though the film appears to be a horror flick, it reflected the anxieties of society then, embodied in the female form. Along Pilot East Coast, the sculpture of a bus stop made of sand referenced the film Mat Tiga Suku (1965), but more ingeniously, made us question the notion of displacement and re-think the idea of a mirage.

That was what I found meaningful about the afternoon. It wasn't a mere lesson on films of the past, nor simply a revisit of locations that were filmed in the past, but a genuine provocation of thought through art, seeing, and being. 



Though at times, because the films had such vivid imagery (and memorably kitschy tunes), it was hard to reconcile its scenes with the actual locations today. Like how a quiet estate of private houses was a thriving kampong a mere 50 years ago. It was a rather bittersweet experience - witnessing how much we have progressed, yet knowing that all these quaint, singular spaces will never be again.

While I ended the tour feeling a little more knowledgable, there was also the painful awareness of how our history has been left behind. I would never sell nostalgia, but I do think that even as we reimagine a future in these evolving landscapes, the curiosity to discover our heritage should be ever expanding.

Written by Amelia Tan


State of Motion was a bus tour that retraced lost monuments of Singapore captured on film, with Singaporean artist and filmmaker, Toh Hun Ping through his extensive research on 20th century Singapore films and their filming locations. With a focus on a selection of classic Cathay-Keris films, audiences went on a trip to these film locations where an artwork responding to both the film and its site awaits them. 

ShoutOUT!: New Waves - Emerging Voices of Southeast Asian Cinema

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The Singapore International Film Festival is presenting a series of dialogues called New Waves. This series shines a spotlight on young filmmakers who are making waves through the archipelago, forming an emerging community within Southeast Asia. Join them in a series of dialogues with Singaporean artists, writers and curators from different disciplines, as they recollect their entrance into cinema, their unique and personal approaches to utilising film as a mode of expression, and its convergence with other art forms and everyday life. Come participate in these open dialogue sessions to find out more about this emerging community of filmmakers in anticipation of the upcoming 27th edition of the Singapore International Film Festival.

Schedule:
Every last Wed of the month 8.00pm - 10.00pm

Dates:
27 Apr 2016: Gladys Ng: Capturing the Ephemeral (In dialogue with Yu-Mei Balasingamchow)
25 May 2016: He Shuming: Feminine/Masculine (In dialogue with Marc Nair)
29 Jun 2016: Tan Jingliang: A Place in Displacement (In dialogue with Adrianna Tan)
27 July 2016: Chulayarnnon Siriphol: Vanishing Memories - Between Video Art and Cinema (In dialogue with Chun Kai Qun)

31 Aug 2016: Truong Minh Quy: Into the Forest (In dialogue with Jennifer Teo)

Venue: *SCAPE Gallery (Level 5), 2 Orchard Link, Singapore 237978 Admission: Free Seating (Refundable $5 ticket via Peatix)


Info & Tickets: http://sgiff.com/newwaves


Tags: #newwaves #sgiff2016


Sessions:

Gladys Ng
Yu-Mei Balasingamchow
Gladys Ng [Singapore]
Capturing the Ephemeral (In dialogue with Yu-Mei Balasingamchow)
With soft-focuses and dreamy imagery, Gladys Ng has carved a niche in Singapore filmmaking with her distinct style and vision. She will be joined by local author and editor Yu- Mei Balasingamchow as they discuss the artistic craft of capturing the personal and the ephemeral. This session includes a screening of Gladys’ award-winning short, My Father After Dinner (Best Singapore Short Film, SGIFF Silver Screen Awards 2015) and a script reading.


He Shuming
Marc Nair
He Shuming [Singapore]
Feminine/Masculine (In dialogue with Marc Nair)
He Shuming is an experienced young filmmaker who has travelled the film festival circuit, worked in TV and new media across Asia-Pacific, and trained with LASALLE College of the Arts in Singapore and the American Film Institute Conservatory in Los Angeles. His works have a particular focus on the female experience, as evidenced by the constant use of women protagonists. Together with poet Marc Nair, Shuming will discuss his works and the emphasis on femininity in its myriad forms and situations. This session includes the screening of Shuming’s And the Wind Falls.


Tan Jing Liang
Adrianna Tan
Tan Jingliang [Malaysia]
A Place in Displacement (In dialogue with Adrianna Tan)
Born in Malaysia, Singapore-based Tan Jingliang has completed five short films including the celebrated The Transplants (2013) which premiered at the 43rd International Film Festival Rotterdam. She will be joined by nomadic social entrepreneur Adrianna Tan as they delve into the feeling of displacement in Jingliang’s work shot in Singapore and overseas, and the importance of travel, wanderlust, and the mobility of a filmmaker as a vessel for experiences. During the session, get a sneak peak into Jingliang’s work in progress, Notes in the Wind, alongside her short film, Open Sky.


Chulayarnnon Siriphol
Chun Kai Qun
Chulayarnnon Siriphol [Thailand]
Vanishing Memories - Between Video Art and Cinema (In dialogue with Chun Kai Qun)
Intersecting between video art and cinema, Chulayarnnon Siriphol is a prominent young artist with a slate of experimental films usually presented in galleries rather than cinema halls. He is often compared to his Thai film contemporaries Apichatpong Weerasethakul and Jakrawal Nilthamrong. Chulayarnnon will present excerpts of his earlier works, including Sleeping Beauty, which capture day and night in a hypnotic exercise; which eventually led to his short film, Vanishing Horizon of the Sea (Special Mention, SGIFF Silver Screen Awards 2014). In dialogue with artist-curator Chun Kai Qun, Chulayarnnon will talk about the experimental art of filmmaking, and the personal and political core of his playfully subversive projects. Both films will be screened during this session.


Truing Minh Quy
Jennifer Teo

Truong Minh Quy [Vietnam]
Into the Forest (In dialogue with Jennifer Teo)
A prominent voice from South Vietnam, Truong Minh Quy’s films deal with both his country’s
and his own personal histories, the disjuncture between urban and rural space, and an intimate relationship with natural landscapes where he invests his desire of things past and future. Joined by Jennifer Teo from Post-Museum who has mounted a series of community and art projects in Bukit Brown, both guests will discuss what it means when we enter a forest. This session includes the screening of Min-Quy’s short films, Someone is Going to Forest and Mars in the Well.


Call for Entry for SGIFF
The Singapore International Film Festival (SGIFF) is calling for submissions for its 27th edition, which will be held from 23 Nov - 4 Dec 2016 in various partner venues across the city. SGIFF is the largest and longest-running annual film event in Singapore comprising film screenings, masterclasses & talks, a film competition section, and development programmes for aspiring filmmakers and writers. Come 15 April 2016, independent filmmakers and aspiring directors, writers, critics may enter their new films (completed no earlier than 1 Jan 2015) or apply for the Southeast Asian Film Lab or Youth Jury & Critics Programme. Visit sgiff.com/submissions for details.

Submission Forms:
Available from 15 April 2016 at http://sgiff.com/submissions/ 

Submission Deadline:
22 Aug 2016, 6.00pm (GMT +8)

Entry Fees:
For Film Submissions

  • Regular phase submission: The Festival does not charge entry fees for film submissions made before 8 August 2016.
  • Late phase submission: The Festival will charge a submission fee of USD25 for films submitted in the final two weeks (8 August - 21 August 2016) of submission.

For Applications to the Southeast Asian Film Lab / Youth Jury & Critics Programme
- No entry fees. 

ShoutOUT!: Serving up FoodCine.ma, a film festival on food

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'The Birth of Sake' by Erik Shirai
FoodCine.ma is a film festival on food. Presented by the creators of A Design Film Festival, it is a wide-angle, round-table take on contemporary food culture and subcultures.
The festival is launched in Singapore at anchor venue Objectifs from 29 April to 14 May 2016 with 8 feature-length films selected from over 80 international submissions. The festival programme includes satellite screenings that are paired with film-inspired menus, exhibitions on food culture, and a talk-show on the creative relationships between food, film and design.
Tickets are available online at tickets.foodcine.ma at $15 for regular screenings, $25 for the talk-show and $65 for satellite screenings.
Eight feature-length films selected from over international 80 submissions inaugurate the festival. With a World Premiere and seven Asia Premieres, the line-up takes us from the worlds of artisanal saké making and competitive baristaship to an Arctic seed bank and behind the scenes at top restaurants. Their discussions span ideas of food creation and consumption, its art and its politics.

Eight short films, including one looking at Hong Kong's cha chaan teng and another at Singapore's kopitiam, will be shared as bonus content to the screenings. A short film will be paired with and screened before each full-length feature.


Aside from the screenings at Objectifs, two off-site screenings, each paired with a film-inspired menu, will be held at House@Dempsey and Common Man Coffee Roasters.



TALK-SHOW: EAT DRINK FILM DESIGN

Festival curator Felix Ng will be joined by guests including Hong Kong film-makers Tian Ji and Adrian Lo to chat about the relationships between food, film, and design. More guests to be announced.
30 April, 12.30pm - 2.00pm
Important Links:
Website: www.foodcine.ma 
Facebook @foodcine.ma
Instagram @foodcine.ma
Twitter @foodcine_ma
'Barista' by Rock Baijnauth
'Tasteology' by Amanda Nordlow

Making music like they used to, in Xinyao

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The Straws and Eric Moo
In Eva Tang’s documentary on Xinyao (made-in-Singapore Chinese folk music) ‘The Songs We Sang’ (TSWS), singer of former Xinyao trio The StrawsKoh Nam Seng said that pride and having an inferiority complex are two sides of the same coin. He was referring to the burgeoning of the Xinyao movement in the early 80s, running in parallel with the demise of Chinese education and the close of Nantah (Nanyang University). As government policies and the inevitable wave of commercialisation systematically reduced the prominence of the Chinese language, many among the Chinese-educated felt a need to reclaim what was being taken away, in the form of poetry and music creation that arose with a hint of defiance. 

This movement, which lasted about slightly more than a decade, spawned numerous hits, overcame many odds to gain prominence and sowed the seeds for the emergence of stars like Stefanie Sun and JJ Lin. Notably, it happened without government funding. People, especially students, formed Xinyao groups, purely out of passion and the movement resembled a huge national network of interconnected Chinese songwriting and singing CCAs. Just like the documentary itself, there is a mixed bag of emotions that accompanies being in the movement. Pride in asserting one's cultural identity. Sadness in losing the battle against the system. Rebellion in going against tide of having better English grades than Chinese grades. Adventure in the creating of original works in an arena where there were no rules. 

One look at the lyrics of many Xinyao songs reveals the bittersweet quality of Xinyao. The songs often sing of dealing with change, time, loss, friendships (seldom love), often set in the context of life in school and growing up, with an air of innocence right at the core and always treading a fine line between joy and regret. Like how there are good times…. which will come to an end, or how one can find tiny spark of simple joys in a hopeless place. The documentary, with its soul-wrenching prelude on Nantah’s chapter, actually does colour our perception of Xinyao, coercing us, mere observers, to feel this overhang of sadness surrounding music-making in the Chinese language.

But one must not forget that many people who participated in it were also in it for the joy of music-making and the warmth of brotherhood or sisterhood, making this a ‘happier’ movement that what the documentary depicted it to be. In fact, just 2-3 years into its being, Xinyao had become so infectious that its corps of participants across the different schools had become a formidable force hard not to notice. As singer Eric Moo relates in the documentary, people outside this circle, especially the ‘Speak English’ types, would look at them with envy of their unity and camaraderie. This was perhaps one of the best grassroots activities in more peaceful times.

Sadly, grassroots activities of this scale, sans the political ones, have seen their better days. To be fair, people movements are a product of their times. Xinyao flourished at a time when songwriting and music were the perfect tools to wield in culture politics and the answer to Singapore’s ‘cultural desert’ situation. In today's world, to express yourself, you can simply be a keyboard warrior and post something on social media. It is also a no-brainer a 'selfie' generation highly attuned to reality television, YouTube and other media trends where individuality is a commodity would find it difficult to make music like these groups used to. Interestingly, one look around you might suggest that the biggest grassroots activities today in Singapore are religious cell groups, whose purpose might be founded on the growing pressures and pains of living in the world’s most expensive city!

How about the filmmakers here? Do we call ourselves a filmmaking movement, industry, family, community or simply groupies?

Fundamentally, filmmaking, even at an independent level, is a different animal from the kind of independent music-making seen in Xinyao. Filmmaking is a long-drawn process, whose work moves in phases and relies on a considerable deal of technicality. In comparison, music-making has a less elaborate structure and can be said to be more instantly gratifying. In filmmaking, the roles people play are distinct and everyone from the cinematographer to the sound designer is almost an artist in their own field. In contrast, Xinyao performers relish in act of blending in and making a mark as a group, (sometimes even in various forms of colour coordination!). Some will even argue filmmaking is self-centred activity, driven by singular viewpoints. However, a keen observation of how independent filmmakers in Singapore have organised themselves reveals a heart-warming side to scene here.

Beyond the joint suppers at the neighbouring food court after screenings at the National Museum, filmmakers or the film community here has come together in some semblance of solidarity at various instances. During the Singapore International Film Festival, filmmakers took turns to moderate post-screening Q&As or even take visitors out for meals. Issues like censorship and the banning of films are classic cases in which filmmakers have banded together to act or petition. Groups like 13 Little Pictures operate like a brotherhood of die-hard filmmaking troopers who offer a bedrock of support to each other in skills, effort and time, while flying the flag of boundary-breaking cinema high. Filmmakers have also lent support to each other in being that word-of-mouth channel to promote each other's works.... which brings us to the origin of this article, what compelled me to watch 'The Songs We Sang' - strong words from another filmmaker.

Indeed, Xinyao grew under very special social circumstances that brought together pride, a sense of mission, a desire to challenge the tide, friendships, shared anxieties and common dreams as students. It would be unrealistic to expect music to be made in this way again, which explains why the film's nostalgia carries a lot of pain. But with it also comes a purpose, to remind us to return home to what makes us artists or creators, to keep that better side of that proverbial coin facing up.

Written by Jeremy Sing


Read our review of 'The Songs We Sang' by Jenson Chen here.

How the South Koreans "Reach for the SKY"

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The stock market opens an hour laterPlanes are groundedAnd police makes sure every student gets to school on time
    Reach for the SKY

South Korean students have studied their whole life for this: The College Scholastic Ability Test, or more commonly referred to as suneung. The entire nation comes to a standstill (quite literally) every second Thursday of November, when more than half a million high school students take this 8-hour long multiple-choice exam that will “make or break their futures”.

This sounds way too intense for a multiple choice exam, even if the standardized test is used to determine which university one goes to.

That’s where “Reach for the SKY” fills in the gaps. A compelling documentary that takes a hard look at the suneung phenomenon, the film premiered at the Busan International Film Festival in 2015 and was curated by Objectifs under their “Stories That Matter” programme earlier this year.

Co-directed by Steven Dhoedt and Wooyoung Choi, the Belgium-South Korean production follows the lives of suneung first-timer Hye-In, retakers Hyunha and Min-Jun, as well as celebrityEnglish tutor Kim-Ki Hoon. By exposing the arduous preparatory period leading up to D-Day itself, Dhoedt and Choi retains a highly evaluative stance towards Korean society and the exam.

Studying becomes a mechanical affair, especially at the Sparta-like boarding school Min-Jun attends. Strict routine is enforced by discipline masters. The students start the morning off with a military-inspired role call and Physical Training, before shuffling off to the various labs and classrooms after breakfast. Studying through the night is popular and strongly encouraged. If teachers aren’t available, students can access online material that ensures learning 24/7. Everyone toils away, but it is uncertain whether their laboring translates into results. Being away from home, from friends and family and the normalcy of civilization—to a bystander, that seems like a heavy price to pay for something that will ultimately just be a piece of paper.

In a chilling scene, a teacher takes positive visualization to the extreme. He drones on in the darkened classroom, while everyone soaks in their visualized ideals of D-Day. From their earnest expressions, you can tell that this is a dream that has provided them peace and respite amidst the studying and stress. In this moment of silence, they find their purpose to study for the rest of the day and the morrow.
One of the more peculiar revelations in the film is the omnipresence of religion and superstition towards the exam. As the exam closes in, parents—mothers especially—and students turn to the divine. They become regulars at temples and churches. The fervent prayers of parents last from dusk to dawn, in the hopes that the higher power would bless their children with easy questions and perfect grades. Rain or shine, day or night. There is nothing the parents wouldn’t do for their children.

There is nothing they wouldn’t believe in either. Early on in the film, Hyunha visits a fortune teller with her mother, hoping for a peek into her future. The fortune teller asks them to pick out a flag. She nods approvingly at the chosen colour. “Study hard, and you will be a teacher,” she tells Hyunha. “It is in your fortune.” Hyunha and her mother doesn’t question. With their path now a little brighter, they march on.

In this Korean thirst for excellence, the likes of suneung “master” Kim Ki-Hoon are worshipped like Gods. Glassy-eyed students and determined parents are placing their money and faith in private education. And it isn’t so much education as it is a private corporation. Fancy videos, extravagant stage sets and big indoor arenas—it is almost as if tutoring has become a glorified motivational performance that doubles as a money-sucking machine. The desperate become the willing consumers of this multi-million franchise and society makes sure that there’s a fresh batch every year. Has this gone too far?

Most of “Reach for the SKY” presents a shocking case of South Korean society. To become the top 1% of the country admitted into the prestigious SKY universities, students are willing to sit through this limbo of stress and depression again if it means that they will emerge victorious in the next suneung exam. The silver lining is that they are not alone. The entire nation is mobilized in this paper chase. On the days leading up to the exam, crowds of juniors and teachers and even strangers would stand at the gates and cheer for the go-sam seniors who will be taking the exam for the first-time. Although not shown in the film, Korean stars have been known to encourage these exam takers through social media and fan club pages. It is one thing to go to war a lone soldier, but another to be sent off like a champion.

The suneung phenomenon isn’t an unfamiliar situation. In The Straits Times article on private tuition in Singapore, Associate Professor Jason Tan from the National Institute of Education observes that “parents see the PSLE as a high-stakes exam, as it will decide the secondary schools and academic streams that their children will enter”. 7 in 10 parents send their children for tuition even if they know that it won’t help them significantly. In 2014, AsiaOne reported that $1 billion is spent on tuition between October 2012 and September 2013, up from the $650 million spent a decade ago. Extremes in education is a timeless issue that plagues the region, along with tiger mothers and impossible standards set by Asian society.

“Reach for the SKY” not only illuminates the nail-biting situation in South Korea, but reminds the region as a whole that “no matter how important education might be, it should never be at the cost of self-development of the child”, as put forth by the directors in their statement. Perhaps through this thought-provoking documentary, through conversation and discourse, change in the system will come.

Written by Leck Choon Ling
Trailer for "Reach for the SKY":

Review: Long Long Time Ago 2 - The Problem with Part Twos

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Everything that you thought Jack Neo threw out of the window in Part One of ‘Long Long Time Ago’ for the sake of reinvention was brought back again in Part Two. These include preachiness, television-style histronics, and in-your-face product placements. Resting on the shaky grounds of a paper-thin plot, the film very soon resembled a montage of national-education commercials, reminding us to respect your elders, work hard and foster racial harmony. If Part One and Two were made together, one wonders how the discrepancy could be so great, where Part One had most of the suspense, substance and special effects.

‘Long Long Time Ago 2’ picks up where Part One ended - the pig sty. Zhao Di (the lead character played by Aileen Tan) builds a pig farm form scratch, with her children. This undertaking proved, very soon, to be rocky with Ah Kun (played Mark Lee), trying to make things difficult for her again by throwing all kinds of demands on Zhao Di. These include mending the leak in the roof and buying a new television set or the family. Unfortunately, many of these were little bumps that amounted to nothing and the plot only started half an hour into the film on the eve of Chinese New Year, when the kids, who were playing with sparklers and firecrackers, caused a fire in Ah Kun’s bonsai plant. Ah Kun presumptuously pushed the blame on Zhao Di and this led further sibling rivalry (is this the season for sibling rivalries?) However, partly due to Zhao Di’s submissive nature, there was a lack of a clear build-up in tis rivalry. Instead, we are taken on this virtual carousel of the government throwing new regulations, Ah Kun voicing a new complaint, the Lim patriach weighing in, Zhao Di’s eldest daughter defending Zhao Di (and getting whacked by Zhao Di) and the chopping and cooking of pig feed. 
The redemption was found in the sub plot of an interracial marriage between Ah Hee and Rani. The swiftness in which Rani was introduced into the story was commendable. She simply came as the mystery girlfriend of Ah Hee to his family. The film then wasted no time in milking the culture-clash for laughs, especially with Rani calling all of the adults at the dinner table either ‘aunties’ or ‘uncles’, disregarding the supposedly more respectful relative names. The laughs continued when the father turned out to be the health inspector who used to raid street hawkers and had a previous ‘encounter’ with Ah Hee. Jack Neo must be lauded for bravely tackling a sensitive topic. Despite milking stereotypes and cultural differences for humour, it was dealt with respectfully and with empathy. One fine example is how Rani confessed to Ah Hee about how uneasy she felt being the only Indian eating at the family dinner. The wedding dowry discussion was another ‘culture-clash’ made funny, with the two families offering to follow each other’s tradition, to avoid paying the dowry. if Jack Neo wanted to claim another first (like the many ‘firsts’ he has claimed for Ah Boys to Men), this is the first depiction of an interracial marriage in Singapore’s formative years. In fact, the kampung setting made the wedding sequences even more iconic. 

However, a smattering of a few good scenes do not save the film from its fundamental problems like weak plot development, characterisation, trite direction and its propensity to ‘teach’ the audience what we were supposed to gather from the film. Very often, the plot was predictable and issues resolved too quickly. Just as the real plot started late, it also ended too early with a big argument that drove Ah Kun into a very ‘shitty’ vehicle accident. Just like a television soap opera, that becomes a turning point in his relationship with the family and Zhao Di. The film also suffers from trying to portray too many characters with only perfunctory shots that carried little depth. It seemed during every big event or argument, the camera went on ‘round-table’ mode and need to seek a talking-head reaction from every adult character. While Aileen Tan played Zhao Di to perfection, Zhao Di’s two-dimensional goody-two-shoes characterisation became increasingly exhausting to watch. Bringing respite to the shallow characterisation was actually Su Ting, Zhao Di’s oldest daughter (also the film’s narrator, until Jack Neo usurped that voice at the end of the film!), who brought some depth to the film with her tussle between her values and the complexities of adult politics, and also displaying emotions that ranged from vulnerability to strength. 


Is it fair to say Jack Neo is running out of new ideas? Not entirely because after all, he broke many new grounds with ‘Long Long Time Ago’ just like how he did with ‘Ah Boys to Men’. This was actually a painstakingly-accurate portrayal of Kampung life which pulled all stops at attaining authenticity and risks were taken with the recreation of a flood, riots and other technically challenging scenes. Perhaps, it was because most of the money-shots were parked in Part One, in order to entice viewers to come back for Part Two, that Part two felt like a let down. But on closer look, stripping away the visual spectacles, both parts were trying too hard to entertain rather than telling a story, which brings home the big question about commercial films, where to draw the line between entertaining and getting the story across? Seems like an easy question to answer but not always clear-cut in practice.

Review by Jeremy Sing

[Review] Stories that matter: Screening of 3 documentaries on 8 March 2016

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I’ve got to be honest – I picked the screening on 8th March 2016 for my review for two reasons, the larger of which was that the stories had a public health theme, a topic that I am interested in and am familiar with; and the lesser reason was that the screening slot fitted my schedule. But after attending the session, I learnt that the three documentaries had one additional similarity – that they were made by three photographers from the internationally renowned VII photo agency. An agency who represents several of the world’s pre-eminent photojournalists. In a sheer comparison of bang for buck, I must have gotten the most value possible for my dollar.

Dying to Breathe starts with He Quan Gui, a middle aged man who used to work as a gold miner, sitting in his backyard, narrating a letter to the President of China. We learn that he is ill, having worked in the coal mines for years without having taken work safety precautions and he has developed pneumoconiosis as a result – at present an incurable disease that restricts its sufferer’s breathing. He requires constant oxygenation to survive even as he wheels himself around his house - all while being connected to a supply of oxygen from a cylinder. His wife is his caregiver, taking care of his daily needs, giving him massages, keeping his spirits cheery by singing with him or to him despite his poor prognosis. In fact, she forbids him from dying and goes into a hysterical state whenever he goes in respiratory distresses.

And can we blame her? HQG is an example of a good husband, having worked in the mines for long hours as the pay was better than any other thing he could do back in his village. Dying to Breathe is one of many documentaries that I have come across in the last few years, depicting the difficulties people from developing countries such as China face, especially with less than ideal work environment conditions due to lack of knowledge, governmental non-intervention, poor legislation of occupational health laws etc. Filmed over 4 years, I thought that this was one very ingenious documentary that combined the use of different interview styles, mediums (whatever was convenient), and was praise worthy in that the photographer could work on it over such a relatively long period of time.

The Ninth Floorwas my personal least favourite. Maybe because to me, drug use is a social ill that is really mostly a choice and I brought my personal bias with me when viewing it. However, getting the addicts to talk and to film them – still deserves commendation. I saw the birth of a baby bring hope to her parents, who were both heroin addicts, giving them the motivation to get clean, and through their story, I saw some beauty despite their dire circumstance. It was quite sad though, that because the mother was using heroin while she was pregnant, her baby might have developed foetal deformities, which thankfully was not apparent in the video.


Syria’s Lost Generation stood out as being the most audacious of the lot. I imagine that it must have been the hardest to film, but having had two other emotionally charged pieces before it meant that I had little emotional bandwidth left to feel for the characters. The female interviewee shared about how her education was disrupted, and that her parents were not able to be placed in the same camp as her. What will become of this generation of people in Syria? I wonder. War is brutal, and I, who although have thankfully never experienced it first hand, will probably get to see the aftermath of this one in my lifetime. 

Photo Credit: Ed Kashi/ VII Photo Agency

Reviewed by Gwen X

Take a Bow, Moving Images

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“A film venue should not just be a beautiful space to showcase work. It should also be a communal space where people can discuss the film works they have just seen and encourage each other. After all, film is a collaborative medium and how does one form a team, unless through friendships?”
- Tania Sng, Filmmaker

In February this year, the film community awakened to the news that The Substation's Moving Images programme would have its Swan song at February's First Takes. Reacting with a mix of desperation, shock, nostalgia and curiosity, active members of the independent film circle turned up at the final First Takes to soak in the final moments of Moving Images and to find out why this was happening. For many people, Moving Images or even The Substation, as a space, was the starting point of their filmmaking careers and a dozen important friendships. 

In the early 2000s, The Substation started to earn its reputation as a haven for emerging works. If they were snubbed by the established film festivals or commercial screening platforms, many independent filmmakers knew that their works may stand a chance with Moving Images. Never mind the creaky seats or the seeping through of sound from the bar ‘Timbre’. The film community that slowly emerged from this regular affair at The Substation treated it like home. It can almost be said that many names in the Singapore film community’s hall of fame had their roots, or for some, their first films screened at The Substation.

However, while many hold Moving Images in a special place in their hearts, attendance numbers did not reflect the same affection. One look around today reveals a more varied film landscape. Filmmakers today can hope for sharing they works between the two extremes of the glitzy Marina Bay Sands Theatre and the grungey underground Substation Guiness Theatre. Inevitably, the lure of huddling together at The Substation, every first Monday of the month (for First Takes) or other screenings has been diluted. 

Artist-curator Alan Oei took over The Substation as the Artistic director in 2015 and brought to the Substation some new impetus for change. To say the least, it has its eyes on a slightly different audience, a wider, less 'grungey' audience. In his own words, Alan relates that beyond being a place artists care about, he hopes it can be a place the general public cares about as well, and this would guide his efforts to bring change to The Substation. Moving Images was unfortunately on the 'weeding' list and remains so even after the Townhall discussion between Alan and arts practitioners, at The Substation on 31 March 2016. So we guess it’s goodbye, hard as it is to say. But memories can stay and here are some personal parting shots to take home.



Space 

The Substation was born alongside venues like the old Drama Centre at Fort Canning Park. The late Kuo Pao Kun could still be seen walking around in his slippers. He coined the term 'A worthy failure is better than a mediocre success'. The spirit of this phrase is well-channelled into the space we see at The Substation. Random well-executed graffiti surprises visitors at unexpected corners, including the toilets. The gallery space - a humble rectangular 'white box' - has been re-imagined by artists for countless shows, many of which were the edgiest you will ever see in Singapore. Even the first First Takes was held in the small Blue Room, more recently known as the Random Room, next to the Guiness Theatre - sinking its 'underground' roots right at the start.

“It was beyond a screening venue. To me, it was an educational institution without any accredited diploma or degree. We had a chalkboard (the projector) and lesson plan (the films). And some time, professors will come (invited filmmakers) to give a talk about their lesson plan (the film)……..It’s different from any cinema. It felt like a family watching films together.’
- Ghazi Alqudcy, Filmmaker

“First Takes …the way it allows showcases of films where it doesn’t quite have any agenda. The way it allows people to discover not just other people’s new works, but also allow people to discover new approaches to filmmaking through experimentation. There is a spirit of openness that seems to allow artists to take risks, regardless of outcome.” 
– Chai Yee Wei, Filmmaker

Some would argue part of its charm is its immunity from ‘gentrification’. Amidst the emergence of newer screening venues that were ‘gala-friendly’ or offered some ‘lifestyle’ chic, The Substation remained that ‘community centre’ that stayed as unpretentious as Madam Chua who locks up the rooms at the end of each day.

“The atmosphere was relaxed and I felt very at home. Since then, it has been a space for me to experience alternative films - experimental, documentary, even Asian and Israeli films. Many times, the screening venue is so packed that people are seated on the floor. But most of all, because it’s such a relaxed unpretentious space, filmmakers get a chance to meet, share and inspire each other.
– Tania Sng

“To be honest, it is really sad that filmmakers is loosing a primary space and a program that supports local filmmaking. But I think we will still continue this legacy with or without the program. We are stronger then dwelling over 'nostalgia’.”
- Ezzam Rahman, Filmmaker



Agenda

Moving Images had a persona. 

One could argue it was that of a slowly maturing 22 year-old punk rocker who had a ‘make-do’, ‘just come together and jam’ spirit about him. 

“I was a film programmer for Moving Images for 4 years, and it was one of the most treasured experiences in my time involved with film. The amount of freedom I had at The Substation, to be able to program and play around with different incarnations of micro-festivals, and other mediums while still incorporating film, was liberating and humbling.”
 – Aishah Abu Bakar, Moving Images Programmer 2010 - 2014

Indeed, there stood a prevailing sense that any film could find a platform with Moving Images, not that it was a home for orphaned works, but that the programmers behind it worked hard to stretch boundaries of genre and style. 
Moving Images was arguably a ground-up initiative and the programmers shaped it with their personal tastes, knowledge and flair. 

“I started working at The Substation in 1999. Those who came for the Moving Images programme then may recall seeing me tearing tickets and giving out photocopied programme flyers at the front-of-house, closing the door, running to the stage to introduce the programme, and then tip-toe-ing in the dark to the control room to play the VHS tapes. Lucky for me the "digital revolution" was around the corner and soon mini-DV tapes were introduced and we soon had "multiple" formats to play around with. Even though I was literally making my own tickets (photocopy and tear) and designing primitive flyers (photocopy and sometimes go to print if we had money), there was great energy and curiousity amongst the filmmakers and the audience. These were the people that made up our film community.

Because I had to be really resourceful, I reached out to many organisations I thought may be interested in other film cultures. I had no idea if they were interested in Singapore film but I offered an exchange programme, and as a cultural institute with a great history, The Substation was the perfect place for me to do not only film screenings but discussions and forums to create a deeper sense of understanding of what we were watching. I really wanted our film community to be connected to other film communities around the world. It doesn't sound like much now but this was a time before Youtube, Vimeo or Facebook was ever around. 
– Yuni Hadi, Moving Images Programmer 1999 - 2005

The Substation was that virtual ‘Black Box’ for many ideas. Owing to its spirit, mission and unique atmosphere, it gave rise to programmes no other venues could hope to develop. The Asian Film Symposium that started at the beginning of the millennium, helped forge some identity for Southeast Asian cinema, while allowing local filmmakers to reposition themselves from the knowledge of the greater neighbourhood out there. The Experimental Film Forum, questioned the boundaries of film and art, bringing some of the most adventurous, genre-bending works to the audience. Then there was that one night during Halloween in 2014, filmmaker Chris Yeo brought ‘Hell’ in its 18 incarnations to a full-house crowd hungry for spooks. Needless to say, no institution embodied the word ‘indie’ more than ‘Moving Images’, and no doubt its programmers over the years, from Yuni Hadi to Vincent Quek, ought to take full credit for feeding this ‘punk rocker’ and keeping it alive.


“One of my fondest memories of Moving Images was co-organising Asian Film Symposium 2015, where towards the end of the 4 day Symposium, 8 countries and their respective programmers and filmmakers enjoyed a hearty dinner and then drank till the wee hours of the morning. We had put our international guests up in a boutique hotel, where there was a common area on the 2nd floor with loads of beanbags and sofas. It was there that we all poked fun at each other, shared swear words in our own languages and generally been a tad obnoxious (but thankfully no one else was there in the wee hours of the night). The laughter, and drinks that we shared that late evening. after an intense 4 days of film screenings, panel discussions and Q&As was truly serendipitous. It reminded me that films are above all, about the relationships that we have and develop from person-to-person."
- Vincent Quek, Moving Images Programmer 2014 - 2016

“I remember the Third Experimental Film Forum fondly…… There was an overflow of audience members at the screening of Singapore experimental shorts, from filmmakers as young as 16. Revisiting 10 years of Lowave, our partner from the first Experimental Film Forum. Collection of short films from FLEXfest (USA), with the curators attending. Showcase of Charles Lim's video works, remixed in presentation. Debbie Ding's exhibition,  The Collection and Exchange of Ethnographic Fragmentsfrom Singapore, accompanied the first instance of a collaboration with the talented Kent Chan. Working with Kent Chan for the first time, with Drive.”
– Aishah Abu Bakar 

I hope for the local film community to continue the Experimental Film Forum started by Beng Kheng, then programme manager at the Substation. The Experimental Film Forum was not the festival to draw the biggest crowds, but I feel it was a festival which needed time to grow and be nurtured. To me it is an important festival which is a big loss to filmmakers who wish to attempt going into experimental filmmaking.”
- Wesley Leon Aroozoo, Filmmaker

“It was a madness filled with late nights in the office and in the theatre. There was even a time when I was testing the screen in the theatre at 3am and thinking what would I do if I were to see a ghost…..But there was also a lot of joy too….the friends I made, my wonderful colleagues Annabelle, Terence, Wai Chin, Emily, Chun Lai... the filmmakers that have pass through the Moving Images programme and whom I saw climb to greater heights... It really felt that Moving Images was doing something good.”
- Low Beng Kheng, Moving Images Programmer 2008 - 2010



Faces

No one misses the effervescence of filmmakers Ghazi Alqudcy and Ezzam Rahman at the Substation. They would often be seen helping out at the screenings, lending their larger-than-life energy to event. When the lights are turned off, the conversations continue outside the theatre and Ghazi and Ezzam are firmly planted somewhere amidst the tote-bag-sporting students, enthusiasts and other filmmakers. Their relationship with Moving Images is long-standing and deep and the idea of ‘home’ transcends the physical space. Moving Images has been an incubator for their passion for films, a periscope to the larger filmmaking world outside of Singapore and a basecamp for honing their craft. 

“I can’t really remember my first encounter with Moving Images but my close friend, Ezzam Rahman, introduced me to Substation. I remembered that it was Kristin Saw who was the program manager for Moving Images. 
At that period of time, I was still a student. I remember going to film screening events where I met many of my peers and colleagues of the film scene…. As a student, I did not have a lot of personal funds to watch films. Kristin gave me odd jobs like tearing tickets and allowed me to enter the theater for free. It felt good.

I became close to Moving Images and often volunteer to help them run the festivals. One of the best tasks was being the artist liaison. I met many wonderful filmmakers and programmers from other country. One day, I was tasked to pick up a female Hong Kong filmmaker (of which I totally forgotten her name). I was standing at the airport arrival gate, holding a piece of paper with her name written on it. She felt happy to see someone picking her up from the airport. In the taxi, I sat at the front seat to give her more space at the back. We talked a lot and I told her that I am jealous of her, someone picking her up from the airport. I told her that I wish I am at her position. She replied, “one day you will be.” A year later, I was invited to present my film at a small festival in Germany. I arrived in Germany at 5am in the morning carrying a heavy backpack. There stood a man all suit up holding a piece of paper with my name on it. The man insisted to carry my bag and escorted me to the festival limo. At that moment, all I remembered was that HongKong female filmmaker.”
- Ghazi Alqudcy 

“For me personally, back in 2008, I screened my ever first 3minutes short film / experimental video at First Takes. I received best film for that month and that encouragement kicked off a series of other experimental films / videos after and my works were screened in other venues locally and internationally. All thanks to Moving Images…. I will always miss the sense of "home" here where creatives get together to share, critic and encourage each other. A safe haven for us to witness each other's careers blossoms and grow. We supported, collaborated and worked with each other like one big family……On a side note, I remember going for screenings and having momentary crushes with cute good looking filmmakers! And after a screening there will be a question and answer session, I will ask a filmmaker whether he is single or not then flirt with them outside the theatre! Hahaha.” 
- Ezzam Rahman 

‘Basecamp’ can indeed be a word many independent filmmakers in Singapore associate The Substation with. In 2009, when MDA announced changes to its film-funding criteria, The Substation became a natural host to a series of community meetings among the most active independent filmmakers to debate and discuss film funding. At one point or another, Moving Images had been a pivotal part of the careers of many filmmakers, either through providing the first screening platform, the first contact with other filmmakers or that first important award. Conversely, good programmes aside, it was these faces who made Moving Images the ‘home’ it grew to be, that family living room where you could come and put your feet up on the couch. 


“I remember my first screening was a magical little screening that introduced me to this whole community of filmmakers and enthusiasts……In fact, my first memory of Moving Images is of Yuni tearing open the plastic wrap of packet drinks as she was setting up the front desk for my first film screening with the then emerging batch of filmmakers - Wee Li Lin, Han Yew Kwang, Royston Tan et al. Wenjie joined a little later if I remember correctly. It was a very friendly and unguarded atmosphere by the people running it……First screenings shape our outlook on the film scene, and I couldn't have asked for a better programme run by better people to nurture me in that way.”
– Sun Koh (Filmmaker)

“My favourite program from Moving Images was the Asian Film Symposium……So for one week in September, you get to watch amazing short films that you will never otherwise get to see (this was in the pre-Youtube days). And you have this bunch of young filmmakers together for a week. Before the screenings, everyone will meet at the coffee shop across the street for coffee and smokes. The front of house opens and everyone rushes across back to The Substation. These young filmmakers will be sitting in the front row, the first in line to watch each other’s short films. This happens screening after screening. You get this intense one week experience of film watching, talking, criticising and digesting. It is different from the one off screenings that happen elsewhere. No other local institution was doing it. When you see the films from each country consecutively, you appreciate the differences and similarities.”
- Hatta Moktar (Regular audience member at Moving Images)

“Besides the fact that Moving Images was the first programme in Singapore to showcase my films, the programme also ran a Digital Filmmaking workshop where I met Yee Chang Kang and Ho Choon Hiong. We attended the workshop together guided by Graham Streeter from USA. Many years later, Graham and I produced a feature film, CAGES together. Many of the friendships I have made at the Substations are dear friends to this day.”
- Tania Sng 

“It was my first exposure to the local film community. Many friends and important connections began from here.”
- Chai Yee Wei 

“Filmmakers would often go for coffee chitchat session after film screenings at the Moving Images. Often, it will be at the kopitiam nearby. I remember, being new to Moving Images, I walked to kopitiam with my friend Ezzam Rahman after a screening session. At that kopitiam, the same filmmakers from the screening are having their supper. Feeling awkward, me and Ezzam ordered our food and decided to seat at a different table. Victric Thng, stood up and pointed at us. Victric ordered us to join the table.”
- Ghazi Alqudcy 

“At some point there was a very visible line across the projection screen, but still we came to every screening to see our own films and those made by our regional and international friends, and we would stick around and chat about those films a lot.”
- Sun Koh

In this repository of memories and personal notes, can you find your own etching on the tree bark?


Classmates

Writer Ben Slater wrote an article titled ‘Whatever happened to the Class of 2002?’ The Class of 2002 referred to a pioneering batch of independent filmmakers whose films influenced the aesthetics and tonality of more locally-produced short films that were to come after 2002. They included Sun Koh, Han Yew Kwang, Wee Li Lin, Tan Pin Pin and a few others. Not quite a Singapore New Wave, but they certainly demonstrated how Singaporean cinema would look like to Singaporeans fed on Hollywood fare, right in the premises of the Substation. 

“Substation showed Moving House (1997 version), my first film, in 1997. The film was programmed by Audrey Wong and it was screening together with a few other international documentaries, one of which was by a Korean american director about Comfort women. I remember feeling very happy that someone thought that this homemade film was worthy of showing to the public, a documentary at that, given that documentaries weren't always on people's radar. At that time I can't remember if the programme was called Moving Images. The opportunities for screening work is so different now with a plethora of platforms on and off line, but at that time, it was an important landmark for me, in my journey as a filmmaker.” 
– Tan Pin Pin, Filmmaker

Over the last 10 to 15 years, Moving Images remained a cradle for local works and among the alumnus of First Takes, are some rather prominent names in Singapore cinema currently. While not always a first choice for filmmakers choosing where to ‘premiere’ their films, the numbers speak for themselves. Moving Images has arguably showcased the most number of independent works in Singapore and is the largest repository of local works. Premiere or no premiere, everyone’s screened something at Moving Images and faced questions from the audience. We’re all ‘classmates’ from the same school.

“To me, what I have gone thru with Moving Images has been vital to my filmmaking career. I am happy that I had the chance to be part of this family. Everything has its time, and this time its moving images ending. I am just sad that new generation of filmmakers wont be able to experience this.”
– Ghazi Alqudcy

“Moving Images, particularly, was dedicated to showcasing short films, emerging and returning filmmakers. Many venues now show feature films as they are more commercially viable. I certainly hope that there will still be a vibrant space that will showcase short films as it is a medium of its own. A poem, a moment, a feeling.” 
– Tania Sng

“Filmmaking has so many ups and downs, many filmmakers have had help along the way and support and resources are always needed especially independent cinema. Sometimes it's just about knowledge exchange and knowing that Singapore cinema extends beyond us to the next generation. We had a time when there were no Singapore films. We should not take what we have for granted.” 
– Yuni Hadi


Goodbye Moving Images,  but see you soon in another place, time and form.

Article by Dawn Teo, Ivan Choong and Jeremy Sing

Sindie would like to thank all the contributors to this article who kindly and freely shared their memories (and pictures)



Production talk with Jason Chan on "Bang Bang Club"

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Singapore short film, Bang Bang Club, created by BananaMana Films, recently won a prestigious REMI award in the short film category of the 49th Annual Worldfest-Houston International Film Festival 2016. One of the oldest and largest film competitions in the world, with more than 4,500 entries received from 37 countries in 2016, Worldfest-Houston International Film Festival is renown for having discovered Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Ang Lee, the Coen Brothers, Oliver Stone, Ridley Scott and David Lynch by giving them their first honours. The short has recently also been nominated for Best Editing and Best Original Score at the Indie Series Awards 2016.

In this Production Talk, we had the opportunity to get the thoughts of Jason Chan who co-wrote, directed, produced, acted and individually composed all the original music !



Film Synopsis:

Banks control the world beyond our imaginations. When one bank strips away the livelihood of two young men they take revenge by joining an elite assassins training group: The Bang Bang Club. Only problem is the club has links all the way to the highest financial powers of the world and has other plans for them: covert murders and their own demise. An affair that blossoms with one of the elite female assassins of the club may be the only thing that will ultimately save the two men BUT they’ve both fallen for the same girl. Framed for murder the two men are pitted against the law, an elite assassins group and eventually each other as they try to uncover deadly secrets at the highest level of the financial system in order to save their lives.




1. How did you get the idea for the film? What was the inspiration?

The inspiration for our story was the financial crisis of 2008 and the impending global financial crisis today. The fact that banks and the financial elite were and are often making massive profits whilst many “investors” or retirees lose their life savings was something we thought was worth exploring. We wanted to get into the darker world of the financial elite and the powers they held because they controlled great wealth. We wanted to explore not only the corruption of the system but also the people within who tried in vain to fight against it. Putting this together with an assassination group made it quite thrilling. We thought of it as the Bourne Identity meets Wall Street and thought an Action Thriller with intrigue from the financial world would be fun to make. Of course it was also very overwhelming and it took us awhile to find the courage to even start writing it let alone go into production.




2. What were the challenges you and your team faced when making Bang Bang Club?

Because it was an action thriller we had to pull off action scenes. At first the biggest challenge was guns - how to make them look realistic. We spent a lot of time painting and experimenting with toy plastic guns for the film. The next biggest challenge was the fighting. Both of us had some martial arts training but fight choreography for film is very different - it’s more about what looks good to camera than what works in a real fight. We worked with a Kali expert, Ben Boeglin from Kali Majapahit, who helped us to create a tight, efficient style that still looked very dynamic on camera. We studied the Bourne movies and each and every fight scene to understand the editing dynamics and camera angles. Then we just broke down the fight bit by bit and rehearsed like crazy. We were quite happy with the end result but it took up most of our time in pre-production - it was the most complex part to film and needed a lot of planning!

We shot it over one week, all at night from 11pm till sunrise. Night shoots are always problematic because of lighting issues but we used the Sony a7s for the first time and were blown away with how much available light we could use. We also designed and manufactured our own LED light. We needed something portable, focusable, with high color rendition and with barn doors to shape the light. We found there were not many on the market that was affordable so we made our own - it really changed the speed of our workflow - our entire lighting kit could now fit in half a backpack! The entire film was made with just 2 x Z96 leds and 4 of our special LED torches (BMFOCUS) which we will be putting on indiegogo soon.

http://bananamanafilms.com/bmfocus



3. How long did you take to make Bang Bang Club and was there a particular audience, or story that you wanted to tell?

We pre-produced and rehearsed for 3 weeks. We shot for 1 week and we did post production in just under 2 weeks. We specialize in Asian dramas in English - with the view to distribute globally. We truly believe there is a huge audience hungry for this type of content. We wanted to explore the darker sides of the financial world as well as integrate the romantic and action-thriller genres. We always like to challenge ourselves! The story we want to tell as a company is that you can use Singapore talent and locations and create narrative content that travels globally. Getting nominations at the Indie Series Awards in Los Angeles and winning a Remi in Houston confirms we are on the right track.


4. How would you like the audience to remember the film as they walk out the cinema?

We want the audience to feel exhilarated and thrilled especially with the action sequences and to aspire to be like the characters. We also want to leave the audience wanting more which is why we left it on a cliffhanger.




5. How do you feel receiving award recognition for Bang Bang Club (coming off Perfect Girl’s nominations and wins)? And to be in the company of such greats as Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Ang Lee, the Coen Brothers, Oliver Stone, Ridley Scott and David Lynch?

After pivoting our company to producing narrative dramas we started with a TV series which won an Outstanding Directing award in LA. On our second attempt, Perfect Girl, we had an amazing ride with 16 nominations and 7 wins (beating out US and Canadian series in the Best Drama category). So when coming off that ride we were nervous because people were pigeon-holing us as the “romance web-series guys”. We didn’t know what to expect going into an action-thriller short film so when we received the news of the REMI win, at Hong Kong Filmart, we were not only elated but got the immediate attention of buyers and agents. To be in the same company as those great filmmakers is an honour and validates our path towards making global, premium content from Singapore. 




6. Was there a particular reason for the short form?

This short was actually planned as a pilot for a TV series of 8 x 30min episodes for an international platform. However, if you watch it you’ll see that we managed to pack a lot into the pilot.


7. Do you feel there is a Singaporean voice in film? Or if there is a need for a Singaporean voice?

In our opinion it’s not about a Singaporean voice or a non-Singaporean voice - it’s just about good story and execution. When you focus on a great story, your personal voice and where you’re from will always shine through.




http://bananamanafilms.com/singapore-film-wins-at-houston-international-film-fest-2016/

Edited by Ivan Choong

Review: In The Room

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In The Room, an omnibus feature comprising six stories by local director Eric Khoo, has been touted as Singapore’s first - gasp! - sex drama. But while much hoo-ha has been made about this film’s transgressive content, In The Room is ultimately a snooze-fest that contains nary a hint of sensuality or derring-do.

In The Room weaves together several narratives spanning several decades, all of them transpiring in Room 27 of a Singaporean hotel. In the first vignette, shot in black and white, a pair of lovers – an Englishman and a local – part ways a day before the Japanese invasion. Later, In the ‘70s, Damien (Ian Tan), a musician, dies of a drug overdose on New Year's Eve and his spirit sticks around to observe the shenanigans of the guests. Shortly before his overdose, he meets young hotel maid Imrah (Nadia Ar) and promises to write a song for her. After death foils his plans, his ghost continues to pine over her. Their scenes are interspersed between the vignettes, threading the disparate stories together.

The film’s second chapter is its most exuberant one. Taking place in the ‘50s, this surreal, brightly-coloured comedic yarn is a tribute to cabaret dancer Rose Chan, and features feisty sexpot Orchid’s (Josie Ho) attempts to teach her students how to exert sexual dominance over the men who would otherwise control them. The entire sequence may seem ridiculous at first, but it is so silly, so over the top that it morphs into something genuinely hilarious. If women shooting ping pong balls from their genitalia don’t get you laughing, nothing in this film will.

Barring this inspired segment, the other stories bore. A particularly dreary vignette involves a Singaporean man (Lawrence Wong) and a married Japanese woman (Show Nishino) enjoying a tryst. The man yearns for a shared future for them, but the woman, the more cynical one, rebuffs his romantic hopes. Their sex scenes were oddly filmed: Nishino is made to moan all the time even when there’s hardly any body contact between them. It’s difficult to understand why the actors were directed in such a timid manner – they were so cautious around each other, their body contact so awkward, it’s hard to evince even an iota of chemistry between them. I had to summon all my willpower to stifle my laughter even as I kept seeing Nishino’s character do the sexy moaning thing while Wong’s character was barely even touching her.



That the film fails to evoke any semblance of poignancy or passion isn’t because the sex captured in the film is bad – other films have managed to use bad sex in purposeful ways. It’s because the sex in In The Room is bad in an unintentional fashion: a mix of unconvincing acting and strange directorial choices rob the film of any sensuality, turning what’s supposed to be affecting or provocative into something absolutely banal.

But chief among In The Room’s transgressions is its utter tone-deafness regarding its sex scenes. In “First Time”, the film’s last segment, a sexually adventurous but emotionally scarred Korean girl (Kim Kkobbi) shares the room with her virginal male friend (Choi Woo-shik). The guy first witnesses his friend bringing a stranger to their hotel room, then her having sex with the latter. Brimming with frustration, he has sex with her later while she is inebriated and oblivious to what’s going on. The entire scene is played up for laughs without any awareness that what has transpired in the scene is basically rape.

In the end, the film is no greater than the sum of its parts, which never gel into a coherent examination of how sex affects our lives. Vignette after vignette, the film tries to use sex to grasp at something universal about the human experience, but with every passing segment, all it does is limp towards its hollow, flaccid end.


Rating: 2.5/5

Upcoming Debut Feature Film "Popeye" by Kirsten Tan , Giraffe Pictures

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Produced by Lai Weijie and executive produced by Anthony Chen, the film stars veteran Thai singer-songwriter Thaneth Warakulnukroh, and follows a middle-aged man on his journey to bring his childhood elephant back home.

Popeye was previously invited to Berlinale Talents, Cannes L’Atelier, and TorinoFilmLab, where it received the 2014 Production Award. The project was also a recipient of the Media Development Authority of Singapore’s New Talent Feature Grant.


The film has currently entered Principle Photography and therefore we here at SINdie are extremely excited to catch the film soon. Stay tuned to SINdie as we gather more information and production stills on the film, when made available, to share with all our readers!


Kirsten Tan's latest work Dahdi, which won the Best South East Asia Short Film Award at SGIFF 2015 Silver Screen Awards, was well received and emphasizes Kristen's storytelling ability. She is certainly one upcoming director to take note of in the near future. 


Written by Deitrich Mohan





*Updated* Lasalle College Of The Arts Avant Premiere 2016, BA(Hons) Film Graduation Showcase - Event Shout Out

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Graduates from film schools enter the industry year after year and one institution stands out from the rest - Lasalle College Of The Arts Puttnam School of Film. Its illustrious alumni include directors such as Boo Junfeng, Jow Zhi Wei and He Shu Ming. This May, Lasalle College Of The Arts Puttnam School Of Film presents seven shorts from the BA(Hons) Film Graduating Year of 2016.

Here are descriptions of the films presented:



Somewhere Only We Know -

This film focuses on the relationship between 3 secondary school classmates and how an incident influenced the lives of these boys.

An identifiable story for many of us, the film is supported by a strong cast of actors, and pacing that showcases the skills of the director and editing choices. An interesting film questioning the frailty of life and the strong bond of friendship.




Blind Alley

When a school girl is sexually assaulted, a intellectually disabled cleaner is put on trial for the deed. The cleaner's fate now lies in the hands on his lawyer and the court. Most note worthy for the stand out performance by its lead actor.





Tulacy

Tulacy is an observational documentary capturing the life of Tulacy, a seventy eight year old male to female transgendered woman.

The director touched on critical issues faced by Tulacy through providing strong relatable experiences for the audience.  The film provided great insight into a woman fraught with a difficult past.





Block 427

Kenneth, a blogger, discovers the murder of his neighbour Mr Tan. He takes it upon himself to solve the murder but uncovers a truth he may not be prepared to accept.

A mix of dark comedy and thriller flick, the film provided great comedy pacing interwoven with sharp dialogue that provided a few chuckles.




Bangla

Faiyaz, a Bangladeshi worker in Singapore, faces the harsh realities of working overseas and the implications of his choices as his situation gets progressive dire with each passing day. A particularly relevant theme for Singapore today, it showcases the difficulties that foreign workers face in a land far away from home.


Searching For Wives

Partha, a foreign worker from South India, sends a photo of himself back to India in the hopes of finding a wife. This documentary focuses on modern day matchmaking for Indian men and women.

A light hearted documentary, it focuses on the charismatic character of  Partha by painting a clear picture of the predicament he is in.


Ave Maria

Emilio, a Filipino school teacher travels to Singapore in search of his wife. His search leads him through a journey of realization that he may not ever find her. Noted for an impressive performance by its lead actor who truly embodied the character's journey.



Avant Premiere by Lasalle College Of The Arts, showcased a line of new filmmakers ready to hit the industry who no doubt would only grow and improve as they hone and refine their storytelling skills. I look forward to watching the future films they bring onto screens.


Do drop by on their daily screenings from 20th May - 1st June

12.00 pm to 2.30 pm or 6.00 pm to 8.30 pm 
Screening Room , Block F Level 2 , Room F208
Lasalle College Of The Arts
1 McNally Street

Get your tickets @ itsawrap.peatix.com

There is also a exhibition from 11.00 am to 8.00 pm daily 
@Flexible Performance Space


(*After reading various comments, I decided to consult various attendees and reviewers and have decided to edit this piece. I apologise if any of my opinions came across as too dismissive or hurried, and I will continue to work better on reviews in future.*)


Crowdfunding for Short Film "Frog" , Local Filmmaker Jesmen Tan. Support local talents

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Currently a short film is looking to crowdfund their film and with only days left to the end of the campaign, SINDIE would like to extend to all readers to head over to their campaign website right now to support them as much as you can.

Here is information on the film and some words from the director to everyone.





FROG
A short film by Jesmen Tan

THE STORY

Set in Singapore, Frog is a short film that follows the romantic circumstances between two ideologically different people - Jay and Ting.
Jay, a Singaporean news reporter strongly rooted in his principles, meets Ting, an aspiring Malaysian actress who believes adapting to the environment to meet its challenges is a course of nature. In an event of helping Ting expose a production scandal, Jay unwittingly becomes a boiling frog.
The boiling frog is an anecdote describing a frog slowly being boiled alive. The story is often used as a metaphor for the inability or unwillingness of people to react to or be aware of threats that occur gradually.



JESMEN TAN JIN LIN / WRITER & DIRECTOR

Jesmen is a film graduate from LASALLE College of the Arts – Puttnam School of Film. His short films, Polling Day (2012) and Silence (2013), were shown at the 4th and 5th Singapore Short Film Festival.

Versatile, Jesmen has also contributed as key grip in Liao Jiekai’s As You Were (2014), Assistant Director in Boo Junfeng’s Mirror (2013), and Production Coordinator in Anthony Chen’s Ilo Ilo (2012), to name a few. Jesmen was also the script supervisor for Pink Dot 2011 – 2013. Frog is Jesmen’s first short film since his graduation in 2013.



WHY I WANT TO MAKE THIS FILM

Frog is a reflection and response to a series of events after my graduation. I found myself under circumstances that challenged my values, and wavered my confidence as a person and filmmaker. This a story about integrity. It does not prescribe an answer to right or wrong, but pushes us to question the reality we are in and who we are at the end of the day. It is also a story of hope - to remind us there are real individuals out there who are facing similar circumstances. I hope this film, no matter how little, helps individuals find strength in trying times.





THE PROGRESS NOW

We’re at the last lap of our crowdfunding campaign (ends 26 May) and we’re almost 50% funded. It’s amazing how our friends and family have stepped forward to support us. It has also been very humbling to see people whom we’ve never met (from across the globe!) believe in the project.

To give an impression of how the film is going to be like, a group of good friends helped us film our teaser for our crowdfunding campaign. You know it really is an independent effort when the Director and Producer are both forced to go on-screen!

Crowdfunding Teaser
https://youtu.be/OvC0y6T8e-A


END WORDS

While we’re looking for other sources to help fund the project, the bulk of our funds will still come from our crowdfunding campaign. We understand not everyone can contribute cash, but you can give in other ways. We ask that you please share this campaign across your social networks. The more people who are aware of the campaign and the film, the better chances we have to hit our goal. Any contribution is appreciated.

If you would like to support my film you can also contact me via email : jt.jinlin@gmail.com

Director’s Statement
https://youtu.be/kfktMJDRxAo



QnA with Producer Anthony Chen and Directors Shijie, Yukun and Sivaroj for Distance

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On 27th May 2016, SINdie was invited to the Singapore Gala Premiere of Distance by Producer Anthony Chen, featuring Directors Shijie, Yukun and Sivaroj who were behind the short films that made up this omnibus. Here are their thoughts about the film and the process behind it!


ANTHONY


(From left, Anthony Chen, Bolin Chen, Yeo Yann Yann, Cheng Huan Lin and Tan Shijie)

1. Which came first, the idea of "Distance" as an omnibus or the directors?

The idea of doing an omnibus to nurture/showcase young directors came first. Then the concept of Distance emerged as we confirmed the directors. I came up with that as an overarching theme since the directors come from different countries so there is a physical and cultural distance between all of us. Of course the idea is to explore the emotional distance between people and in their relationships as well.

2. How did you also come to pick these directors, especially Sivaroj Kongsakul and Xin Yukun?

I have known Shijie's work for quite a few years now and have always admired him as a filmmaker.

For Sivaroj, I got to see his work before getting to know him.I remember seeing his first feature film, Eternity (Tiger Award for Best Film at the Rotterdam Film Festival) at the Singapore Arts Festival as my short film Lighthousewas programmed to play before it. I got to know him later on through Thai filmmaker Aditya Assarat.

Yukun was introduced to me through a film critic in China. At that time, he had just completed his first feature Coffin in the Mountain that was selected for Venice Critics' Week. I thought it was a real breath of fresh air, a new voice that differed from the young contemporary Chinese filmmakers coming out of China these days.

3. Were there any challenges working with diverse filmmakers?

There certainly were difficulties, since there are cultural differences between everyone on board. For example, in Thailand, the director didn't speak Chinese, so I was the one who had to listen to the actors' dialogue on set.

4. "Distance" was fully sold out when it premiered at the 2015 Golden Horse Film Festival. What was the audience reaction there like and did you expect it?

We had a wonderful premiere. And I was surprised by how everyone had their own favourite segments. Different segments spoke to different people depending on what they valued most - family, love, friendship, and also what phase of life they were in. 

5. The film has since been travelling around the world to Los Angeles and even Dublin. I am curious to know, were the reactions there similar to Taiwan or were they very different?

It's hard for me to know as I haven't been to those festivals. I'm just the Executive Producer after all. But I really like this little write-up from the Los Angeles Asia Pacific Film Festival about the film when it played. I thought it sort of captures the spirit of the film well: http://laapff.festpro.com/films/detail/distance_2016


6. Last but not least, you mentioned that you were writing a script about a Singaporean secondary school boy. Any details on how that is going and if there are any other upcoming projects you are working on?

I'm still working on tweaking the script and have also begun some initial casting. I can't exactly say it will surely be set in Singapore, but certainly in Asia. I am also developing two other English language projects (both novel adaptations) in the UK.

Director’s QnA featuring Tan Shijie, Yukun and Sivaroj
(Yukun’s answers have been translated by Sebastian Lim)


1. A lot has been said about what is it like working with Anthony. So I am going to ask something different, what is one interesting thing you have noticed about each other? Please try to describe a habit or quirk that they themselves won't know!

Shijie: I don't know if I he knows this about himself, but I found that Anthony comes to tears easily! (I think I can say this because I am this way myself - just not at my own work.) At certain points of the shoot, I would find him sitting by the monitor and sniffing, watching the performances. I found this strangely comforting, *laughs*.

Yukun: Anthony is sometimes very innocent, which does not quite tally with his age. His speech and actions would be child-like, which then requires any conversation or discussion to be carried out in a simplified, child-like manner. Otherwise, it will feel weird.
哲艺身上偶尔会有一种很天真的状态,跟他的年纪不相符。语气和举止想个孩子,如果此时你要和他沟通事情,也要把自己也调整到孩子的语气,不然感觉就怪怪的。


Sivaroj: He is a gentleman, I believe.

2. How does it feel to be part of an omnibus with the other directors? What was your reaction like when Anthony first approached you?

Shijie: In this particular case, the writers started film development together, in London, where first ideas were discussed as a group together with Anthony, so that there is thematic coherence in the stories from the omnibus. Also I knew from the beginning that my portion would be in the middle, and this contributed to how I approached the film as well, knowing the stories before and after. As such, on a conceptual level, there was a lot of collaboration, which was stimulating, and different, because I was thinking of what would come before and after my film as well. An interesting process.

I was naturally excited to be approached for this project, and accepted immediately; getting to make films is such a privilege so I felt like there was no other response. I was in a little bit of a dilemma, though. At the time when Anthony approached me, I had already committed to working on a film-set in China for 3 months. Given the Distanceproject timelines, I would have to develop ideas during the other shoot in China. That was tough! I was working on set all-day and working on my computer at night, thinking of ideas for the material in Distance. Tough, but extremely rewarding. And now there is a film.

Yukun: I was able to interact more with the other two directors during the scripting phase, allowing me to better understand and familiarize myself with their styles and habits. Director Tan Shijie left a deeper impression in me as a solemn, capable and experienced colleague. Though it took him longer to finish his script, every line and detail was carefully thought through. It is a pity that I was unable to learn from him on set during their filming as I was busy preparing for mine. However, I would find out from Anthony about the other directors. As expected, we all have our unique styles.
I loved Anthony’s “Ilo Ilo” and I feel that working on this project with Anthony would be a good experience and opportunity for me to learn and brush up on my skills, especially in portraying intricate feelings on screen which I feel inadequate in.
在剧本创作阶段很其他两位导演接触的比较多,熟悉了大家的创作方式和喜好。对陈世杰导演印象深刻,他很沉默干练。剧本写得很慢,但每一句都深思熟虑。只可惜他们在拍摄时,我正在筹备没时间到现场去学习。我会跟哲艺打听另外两位导演在现场的状态,的确每个人都不一样。我对很细腻的情感的影像表达并不在行,也想向借此向哲艺请教,因为我很喜欢《爸妈不在家》,就这样答应加入了。

Sivraoj: I'm honoured and glad to work with everyone in 'Distance' especially with Anthony but also working together with another two directors from China and Singapore. I don't only admire them because of their capability in filmmaking but it is in the passion and love they have towards the filmmaking that I feel connected.

3. Can you describe a moment or scene in the other two directors' parts that you enjoyed very much?

Shijie: I'll try to answer this that doesn't give too much away.  
In the first part, the protagonist meets someone from his past, who doesn't recognise him. At this point in the story, we know what sort of relationship they have, so their interaction is really loaded and I always liked this, even from the script.

In the third part, the protagonist, a professor from out-of-town, who goes on a small tour of Bangkok with a local student. We see bits of Bangkok and see the developing relationship between the two that follows naturally and casually. I enjoy this very Thai way of seeing love.

Yukun: I was exposed to, and understood the message and story behind Director Tan Shijie’s “Lake” in the early stages of this project, and was able to see the final script for his segment. Thus, I would picture the directions of the story in my mind. However, after watching the final product, I felt that Tan’s directing captured deeper, more substantial elements which better brings out the essence and intended message in such a short segment. Tan also made it a point to carefully connect the transitions, especially at the beginning and end of the segment. It is not easy for so many details and so much emotion to be packed in such a short film, but Tan did a good job.
因为陈世杰导演的第二部分《湖畔》,我从创作之初就了解到这个故事,也看过最终版的剧本。所以自己脑海里也会去描摹这些画面。但我看到成片后发觉世杰导演处理的更有底蕴一些,并且结尾的镜头也有安抚,在很短的时间里囊括了众多的情感和感悟是极难的,世杰做的不错。


Sivaroj: I love every time the walking-father scene appeared in the first part and every scene at the lake in the second part.

SHIJIE
You mentioned that you really enjoyed working with Chen Bo-Lin and Yo Yang, can you describe some memorable instances of working with them that you enjoyed?

In the film, they play very old friends that meet after a very long time apart. The scenes where the characters meet are sparse scenes with very little dialogue, but underlying them is a reservoir of feeling, under intense circumstances. This requires commitment from the actors, and they gave their all. I am always moved when actors put their emotions and put themselves in service of a creation, and in this case both of them gave very much, very generously. As their director, I can only be grateful.

YUKUN
Your first feature, "The Coffin in the Mountain" is noted for its relatively unknown cast. So what was it like to work with Chen Bolin who is an established actor?
I have no prior experience working with established celebrities. I was hesitant at first, but gradually as I worked through and discussed the script with Chen, I felt less worried. Chen is a professional actor who would go all out to play his character well. This pre-requisite allowed us to build up strong rapport and paved the way for the smooth working relationship ahead. During filming, when both the actor and director share a common goal of creating the best show for their audience, then how popular or how established the actor is does not matter anymore.
起初有些犹豫,自己并无与明星合作的经验,是对剧本的沟通让我慢慢放下忧虑。柏霖是个认真敬业的演员,会为了角色塑造做出极大地付出。这些都是我们之间合作默契,沟通无阻的重要前提。在拍摄时如果彼此合作的目的是塑造更好的角色,为了打磨出一部好片,其实也就没有什么明星之分了。


I understand that the film was released in China on 13th May. How did you expect the Chinese audience to react to it?
The Chinese market in the past two years has been more lively, but also more impetuous. Films on romance, comedy, and blockbusters on youths have all achieved impressive box office results, reflecting a solidifying taste for these types of films in the Chinese market in recent years. For the audiences that lack the knowledge in film aesthetics, more sophisticated films which focus on deep intangible emotions yet portrayed and captured in mild, subtle manners are likely to appeal less. Nevertheless, for the more experienced and more knowledgeable audiences, they should still be able to feel the filmmakers’ sincerity in bringing out the deeper messages of the film.
这两年的中国电影市场热闹也浮躁,各种喜剧爱情青春大片取得票房佳绩,让观众和影院的口味固话。加之新形成的观影人群对电影美学和类型知识的匮乏,导致大家很难接受一些表达含蓄,以情感流露为主线的影片。但是观影经验丰富的观众还是可以从中体会的作者的意图与诚恳的心态。

Finally if you could show this film to anyone, who would you show this film to and why?
Everyone! This film allows viewers to explore and consider the complicated emotions and feelings in life – subjects which we tend to ignore or shy away from. As human beings, how can we ever spend our life in solitude, without any form of social or emotional attachment?
推荐给所有人,因为这部电影让你有机会在影院里面对那些你不愿,不敢面对的人和情。生而为人,谁能真正的孑然一身无所牵挂呢。

SIVAROJ
Was this your first time working with a foreign lead actor? Were there any challenges in communicating?

I remember well how stressed I was before the shoot. I don't understand Chinese at all but when it comes, I go with it naturally. My eyes are on the monitor and the characters without being interrupted by the language barrier. Their emotions and expression are far more important to me.

Do you think any of your ideas from Eternity or Arunkarn have seeped into Distanceas well?

My first feature is Eternity (ที่รัก), I made that film with the feelings I have towards how much I miss my father who left me long time ago. For my second feature Arunkarn I have a strong interest in the moment before our death. The story is told through two soldiers. It portrays their lives before they die. 
After Distance, I shifted to the next chapter of my belief towards filmmaking, which is that I still don't know exactly where we are all heading. No path, no destination. Maybe we all just have a duty to be the best we can, I believe. 


*Responses have been edited for conciseness, clarity and grammar

For more information: https://www.facebook.com/distancemovie2016/
Photo Credits: Jenson Chen and Distance
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