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STOP10 Jan 2017: 'The Glare' by K Rajagopal

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With his debut feature film A Yellow Bird premiering at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival, the 27th Singapore International Film Festival and showing in cinemas around Singapore, K. Rajagopal is a name that locals will slowly start to recognise and remember.

He is stranger to the scene, with eleven short films under his belt since his journey from 1995 and winning the Special Jury Prize three years in a row at the Singapore International Film Festival Silver Screen Awards from 1995 to 1997. Some might even recognise him from his contribution to the omnibus film '7 Letters'– a commemorative film project for SG50. Sometimes you really want to catch some of these award winners you always hear about but have no idea where to do so.

The Singapore Film Society (SFS) has organised a retrospective of all his films to celebrate his journey and contributions to the local film industry. The is the second retrospective of his films since the National Museum did one back in 2010.

Here are the event details:

Date: 14th January 2016
Venue: SCAPE Gallery, Level 5
Time: 2pm to 6pm
Admission:
- If you are an SFS member, you get in for free
- If you are an SFS Reel Card holder, you can get in for free also bring up to 2 guests
- If you are not a member you can sign up as a member for $95.68; or your could buy the SFS Reel Cards at either $95.68 (for 20 shows) or $53.62 (for 6 shows)

For more details and to purchase tickets, head down to this link.

Among the short films screened, two of our favourites include The Glare (1996) as well as Timeless (2010). Self-reflective yet explosive in nature of film, The Glare follows the story of a woman in an abusive relationship. In an attempt to escape her reality, she turns to the media – a television set. When this escape route eventually gets destroyed, she submits herself to cruel fate and into the world of despair, racial discrimination and a loss of emotional life. We actually caught these films during his first retrospective back in 2010 and here is a link to our review of The Glare (amongst other films).

David Lee, Vice-Chairman of SFS and Managing Director of The Filmic Eye, who put together this programme, shares that he likes the editing in The Glare, which allows us to peep into the inner psyche of the main character such as when she fantasizes about being a movie character in David Lean's Brief Encounter.

“Her obsession with television and film provides brief respite from the abuse and the harsh reality that she faces, and I like how the ending also leave us with more questions, as to whether the escapism is doing more harm than good,” says David.

We had a brief word with Rajagopal regarding this upcoming retrospective and asked him how he felt about watching a piece of work made two decades ago. He said,"While The Glare is technically more backward, I don't feel shy about showcasing it because it is what we we could put together with the limited resources we had during that time. I am quite happy with how it turned out and it even won a popularity vote at the Singapore International Film Festival then over Moveable Feast. The winning of the vote was even broadcast on national news then. In fact, the audience's eager response at the festival and the fact that they found it funny really surprised me."

"For today's audience, it has many elements that people can still relate to - television culture, larger-than-life characters etc. The film pokes fun at this culture. We have all been glued to our television sets (or YouTube in today's terms) at some point, so it would be easy to identify with it," added Rajagopal.

With a rich body of work made over 2 decades, this is one retrospective that you should not miss. Capturing stories that are heartfelt and always about people, there are definitely realisations and lessons to take away from each work.

About K Rajagopal


As a filmmaker, Rajagopal has won the Singapore International Film Festivalʼs Special Jury Prize for 3 consecutive years with his first three short films I can't sleep tonight (1995), The Glare (1996) and Absence (1997). His commissioned work Timeless (2010) won Best Cinematography and Best Editing at the Singapore Short Film Awards 2011. In 2015, he directed a short film The Flame, which was also part of the SG50 MDA commissioned omnibus film 7 Letters.

He has written and directed several television films for Channel 5 and Okto Channel. He has also worked on stage for over ten years where he has collaborated with many notable theatre directors. He appeared in the role of King Lear in The King Lear Project at Kunsten Festival Des Arts in Brussels and at the Singapore Arts Festival in 2008 and played Faust in Film Faust for Esplanade Presents Series in 2009. In 2012, K. Rajagopal was a recipient of the New Feature Talent Grant from the Media Development Authority of Singapore.

Written by Dawn Teo

For the full list of January 2017's 10 films under STOP10, click here.

STOP10 Jan 2017: 'Timeless' by K Rajagopal

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Riding on the critical acclaim received for K Rajagopal's debut feature A Yellow Bird, the Singapore Film Society (SFS) has organised a retrospective of all his films to celebrate his journey and contributions to the local film industry.

Rajagopal is no stranger to the scene, with numerous short films under his belt since his journey from 1995 and winning the Special Jury Prize three years in a row at the Singapore International Film Festival Silver Screen Awards from 1995 to 1997. The is the second retrospective of his films since the National Museum did one back in 2010.

Here are the event details:

Date: 14th January 2016
Venue: SCAPE Gallery, Level 5
Time: 2pm to 6pm
Admission:
- If you are an SFS member, you get in for free
- If you are an SFS Reel Card holder, you can get in for free also bring up to 2 guests
- If you are not a member you can sign up as a member for $95.68; or your could buy the SFS Reel Cards at either $95.68 (for 20 shows) or $53.62 (for 6 shows)

For more details and purchase tickets, head down to this link.




Among the short films screened, two of our favourites include The Glare (1996) as well as Timeless (2010). Timeless was a short film commissioned by the National Museum of Singapore for his retrospective in 2010. Told through 4 different time periods, Timeless is a film about the frailty of human connections in which Siva, the main character, appears interacting with the characters in different states of existence but in the same temperament. In each of the situations, including facing a murder in 1875 and the racial riots in 1969, fear consumes him and he walks away. The overarching theme of the film is how little people had change over time, as the cycles of violence and pain are repeated. 

Rajagopal shares, in a phone interview with SINdie, that Timeless was his first attempt at making a short film with a given theme and he was asked to make something about art and history. Casting a spotlight on his own history, the history of the Indian man in Singapore, was natural choice. As for art, he recalls seeing this self-portrait of Francies Bacon at London's Tate Modern and was very attracted to the piece. So he started thinking about how he could put art and history together and put it into a local or his own context. Francis Bacon's self-portraits were themselves actually inspired by a 15th century painting series called The Crucification of Christ. So he drew parallels between the idea of the self-portrait to the history of the Indian man and the history of Singapore itself.



David Lee, Vice-Chairman of the SFS and Managing Director of The Filmic Eye, who put together this programme, shares,"I am intrigued by the fact that there is no dialogue in the entire film, and the inter titles only provides some hints of the meanings of the preceding scene. This style is very similar to that of an early silent film, and I think it is very relevant to his theme of time."

With a rich body of work made over 2 decades, this is one retrospective that you should not miss. Capturing stories that are heartfelt and always about people, there are definitely realisations and lessons to take away from each work.

Read our review of Timeless, written following its world premiere at the National Museum 6 years ago.

About K Rajagopal



As a filmmaker, Rajagopal has won the Singapore International Film Festivalʼs Special Jury Prize for 3 consecutive years with his first three short films I can't sleep tonight (1995), The Glare (1996) and Absence (1997). His commissioned work Timeless (2010) won Best Cinematography and Best Editing at the Singapore Short Film Awards 2011. In 2015, he directed a short film The Flame, which was also part of the SG50 MDA commissioned omnibus film 7 Letters.

He has written and directed several television films for Channel 5 and Okto Channel. He has also worked on stage for over ten years where he has collaborated with many notable theatre directors. He appeared in the role of King Lear in The King Lear Project at Kunsten Festival Des Arts in Brussels and at the Singapore Arts Festival in 2008 and played Faust in Film Faust for Esplanade Presents Series in 2009. In 2012, K. Rajagopal was a recipient of the New Feature Talent Grant from the Media Development Authority of Singapore.

Written by Dawn Teo

For the full list of January 2017's 10 films under STOP10, click here.

STOP10 Jan 2017: 'Tony's Long March' by Ben Slater and Sherman Ong

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To be screened as part of the National Museum of Singapore (NMS)’s Cinematheque Selects for January 2017, Tony’s Long March, a documentary on the late Tony Yeow, directed by Ben Slater and Sherman Ong, explores the journey of an inspiring man who took risks with his film exploits, face extraordinary hard knocks, and always found a way to bounce back with a new film idea.

Film Synopsis 
A “has-been who never was”, the late Tony Yeow was involved in film, television and theatre in Singapore for 45 years. He co-directed and produced Singapore’s first and only kung fu film in the 1970s, was a key crew member for Peter Bogdanovich’s Saint Jack in 1978, and inadvertently kick-started the revival of feature films in Singapore in the 1990s. All of his films were flops or failures, and yet Tony was always dreaming about his next movie. This documentary, an affectionate and moving portrait of Tony Yeow, takes us on a journey through a rich and complex part of Singapore’s cultural history, as it celebrates the extraordinary spirit that kept Tony Yeow going.

Directed by Ben Slater and Sherman Ong
2015 / 39 min / ratings TBA
  
We managed to grab Ben Slater for his thoughts behind the film.

Why Tony Yeow as a film subject?

The long answer is that I met him when I was doing research into my book on Saint Jack, and it was clear he was an extraordinary character with lots of tales to tell. He tried to get me involved in many of his projects and we stayed in touch over the years. When Time Out magazine launched in Singapore I was involved in the film section and I wrote a feature about Tony for them, and realised then how fascinating his life had been, as well as his attitude towards it. I had introduced Tony to the arts group Spell#7 via my various Saint Jack activities, and they had him record a voice for a project they did in  the Singapore Biennale in 2008, and in my capacity as catalogue editor I organised a photo shoot with Tony on the Singapore Flyer, and Sherman was the photographer - so that's how they met. Then in 2009 I was working with Sherman and Spell#7 on a project which was inspired by certain aspects of Tony's life (Ghostwalking), and because I'm not a filmmaker I pitched to Sherman the idea of doing a film of Tony just answering questions and we got an MDA grant and started filming. Tony's struggle greatly appealed to Sherman and the title Tony's Long March was his idea.

How would you describe Tony in three words?

Funny, Hopeful, Striving

Do you have particular messages / hopes for the documentary?

I'm not interested in 'messages', but I hope people will find Tony as inspiring as we did. In a success-obsessed culture stories of defeat and failure are really important, because most of the time that's what we deal with anyway. How you deal with failure says a lot more about your true character than how you deal with success.

Looking back now, has the experience of filming this documentary changed or affected you in any way?

Completing the film was a really important and emotional experience, because we filmed it in 2009 and 2010 over four or five afternoons, and then we stopped. Sherman was busy with his many projects, I became a father for the first time and started a full-time job, and neither of us were entirely convinced we had enough material for a film. Tony would call me once or twice a year to check when we were going to finish it and I had to keep making excuses. From time to time I'd meet Sherman and we'd discuss what to do, but then nothing was every decided. Finally, Tony died in 2015, and when I got that news I immediately contacted Sherman and said, "We have to finish it." And after all those years of stalling, we figured it out. It was something we had to do for Tony and ourselves. 

On a more personal note, what are your hopes for Singaporean cinema?

More diversity in voices and genres. More risks need to be taken. More value needs to be placed on screenwriting and screenwriters. More, more, more!

Tony’s Long March will be screened in double-bill with Lost in La Mancha as part of the Cinematheque Selects event.

Read our commentary article on the late Tony Yeow, following the Singapore International Film Festival's tribute talk on the filmmaker in 2015.

We also posed a question to the programmer of Cinematheque Selects, Warren Sin on the choice of the 2 films to kick off the Selects showcase series.

What was that the reason for their pairing? Or are there additional parallels to be showcased? 

Indeed. We will start the series with Ben Slater and Sherman Ong's Tony's Long March, a much needed portrait of Tony Yeow in the form of a documentary. Everyone is aware of his involvement with the making of Ring of Fury back in 1973 which amounts to quite a bit of anecdotes and stories. But what Tony was doing after Ring of Fury is equally fascinating to say the least! 

Ben and Sherman did a good job balancing the need to tell Tony's story without being intrusive. Letting Tony's character come to the foreground. Such documentation of Singapore's cinematic heritage is unfortunately rare. One can count with one hand how many such documentaries exist, let alone one that document a key figure whose career coincide with the decline of Singapore's film productions. 

As part of Cinematheque Selects, Lost in La Mancha is amongst a few titles picked by the directors, Ben and Sherman. The parallels are pretty obvious. Both films highlight the precarious nature of the creative process in filmmaking and the dogged attempts by the personalities to fly the flag in the name of cinema. Are there more parallels in pairing the two films together? That is the beauty of programming. We offer the possibilities of connections and readings into the programme but from time to time, the audience will make the connections beyond what we've imagined or planned. Something intangible that the audience will take home with. In that sense, we hope to kindle this form of cinephilia amongst of audiences here.

About Cinematheque Selects

Cinémathèque Selects is a monthly double-bill screening that profiles the boldest filmmakers and most inventive productions from Singapore’s past to its present.

Focusing on diverse aspects of film-making, from directing to producing, script writing to cinematography and art direction, the series uncovers lesser-known local productions and features significant films in Singapore’s cinematic landscape.

Each film screening is accompanied by a conversation with the filmmaker and a second film guest that has influenced the filmmaker on a personal and professional level.

Tickets can be purchased in the following link.

Price
Standard Ticket: $11
Concession (20%): $8.80
For student, senior citizen, NSF, National Museum Volunteer, NHB Staff

Written by Ivan Choong

For the full list of January 2017's 10 films under STOP10, click here.

STOP10 Jan 2017: 'Take 2' from mm2 Entertainment, directed by Ivan Ho

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A prison film for CNY? Yes, here is a film about ex-prisoners which can actually make you laugh and gets you in the festive mood, no less. Take 2《遇见贵人》is a comedy about four prisoners who resolve to turn over a new leaf after they finish serving their jail sentences. They are played by Ah Boys To Men star Maxi Lim, veteran getai host Wang Lei, wacky comedian Gadrick Chin and Long Long Time Ago's Ryan Lian. The rest of the cast includes such familiar faces as Mark Lee, Henry Thia, Chen Tian Wen and Dennis Chew.

This film is director Ivan Ho's debut feature as a director. He has previously been a screenwriter for some of Jack Neo's films, including Ah Boys to Men 3: Frogmen and Long Long Time Ago.

Here is our interview with director Ivan Ho, which gives you a glimpse into the making of Take 2:

Take 2was your first time in the director's seat, after co-writing several of Jack Neo's films. How did that come about? Were you eager to take on the director's role?



Perhaps it was because, while director Jack Neo was filming [one of their previous collaborations], I would often spontaneously suggest some of my whimsical ideas. Maybe it was for this reason that Jack felt that I was suitable to direct comedy, and offered me this valuable opportunity.

I believe that once many screenwriters become good at writing, they dream of moving into the director's chair. I am no exception, which is why I especially cherish this directorial work

或许是由于我在梁导的拍摄现场时,常突发奇想的要求梁导临时加入一些天马行空的点子。可能正是因为这个缘故,梁导因此觉得我适合执导喜剧片,才给予我这个宝贵的机会。
编而优则导,相信是所有编剧所梦寐以求的,我也不例外,所以我格外珍惜这次的导演工作。

What did you learn as a director that you might not have encountered while you were a screenwriter? 

As a screenwriter, I only need to focus on the plot structure, characterisations and story development, whereas the director not only needs to keep all of these in mind, he also has to account for the shooting schedules and the entire movie's rhythm and tone. It's very tough, even harder than writing a script from scratch.

本只需要关注构、人物性格以及起承合,而演不但需要留意上述几点外,要兼顾镜头调度以及整部影的奏与基等,其度之高,比起由零开始作的编剧之而无不及。

Were any scenes particularly difficult to shoot?



The action scenes near the end of Take 2 were most difficult, because we had to simultaneously handle the choreography, special effects and acting, and on top of that, there were many people involved. Personally, that was the hardest scene for me to shoot. 

《遇见贵人》完前的,由于同时牵涉到作、电脑特技、感情戏,加上人物众多,是我个人觉得拍摄难度最高的一场戏。

How did the idea for this story come about? Did Jack's previous ex-convict film, One More Chance (2005), have any influence on the story?


The entire idea for the movie came from Jack. He has always felt that ex-convicts are a rarely acknowledged group of people who deserve to be given compassion and opportunities to return into society. That's why he hopes that the movie can bring out a positive message of redemption, and hence induce more in society to pay closer attention to this group of people.

Hence the previous movie One More Chance also centred on the ex-convict theme, but the style of Take 2 is very different. The earlier movie focused more on prison life, whereas Take 2 mainly skips over events within the prison.

整部影的概念来自梁志强导演。梁导一直觉得社会上一批鲜为人知的个群前囚犯,需要社会的关怀以及给予机会,让他们重新融入社会,所以希望电影能带出回头是岸的正能量讯息,并引起社会人士关注这一群人。
虽然之前的《3个好人》也是以出狱者为主题,但是整体故事风格跟《遇见贵人》却是截然不同的。前者对于监狱生活着墨较多,而《遇见贵人》基本上完全没有监狱内的剧情。


On that note, did you consciously try to make your visual/directorial style similar to or different from Jack's?


Although I take Jack as a directorial mentor, my childhood pop culture references differ completely from his. Personally I am a huge manga fan, which is why my humour style varies so much from Jack's.  However, to pay tribute to him, I would ensure that some scenes retain that 'Jack Neo' style, in the hopes that this will give audiences a knowing smile.

In this world, there are so many different humour styles, but in the end their motivation is the same: to make people laugh! That's my own raison d'être!

承梁志强导演,但是我自幼接触到的流行文化却跟他完全不同。我本身是一个漫画的狂热爱好者,所以于幽默情的理手法绝对于梁志强导演。不基于致敬原因,某些景我是刻意的以梁氏理,希望做到能令观众会心一笑。 
天下之大,幽默派别不少,但是归根究底目的只有一个,就是要令人发笑!我的存在理由也正是如此!

Which actor did you most enjoy working with?



In Take 2, the actor I admired most was Wang Lei. As one of Singapore's most popular getai figures, his getai schedule was packed, but he would have to find time in between shooting to rush to host getai events, sacrificing his rest time. Yet Wang Lei would do this without complaint, and remained very down-to-earth, putting his trust and encouragement in me even though I was a rookie director.

Take 2's ending action sequence even features Wang Lei's first time attempting action choreography -- the results will surprise audiences!


《遇见贵人》里,我最佩的演就是:王雷。贵为新加坡歌台一哥,歌台邀约忙碌,却时常得在拍摄空档赶场跑歌台担任主持,牺牲休息时间。但是王雷却毫无怨言,更没摆过架子,也给予了我这名新手导演最大的信心与支持。《遇见贵人》戏末动作场面更能见到王雷首次参与的武打镜头,效果令人惊叹!

How did the actors get along?


The entire cast was like a family, bonded tightly together. Whether during filming or outside of it, they were great friends and compatriots. I've never seen an entire crew get along so harmoniously and cheerfully. It was a pleasure!

《遇见贵人》的演员们都像一家人,凝聚力十分外都是好朋友、好伙伴,我从没见过一个剧组上上下下都相的如此融洽愉快的,是我的福

Which scene should we most look forward to?

As I've mentioned previously, Take 2 ends with an epic and hilarious action scene, which is the first and most intense in Singapore's cinematic history. Topped with several cast members' crazy antics, it has to be the movie's most eye-grabbing scene.

就如我所提及的,《遇见贵人》完前的一大型作搞笑,是新加坡本地影史上首次到的最激烈的面,加上几名演狂搞笑,将是整部影最亮眼的部分之一。



Take 2 will be released on 26 January 2017 in cinemas islandwide, right on time for Chinese New Year!

Follow the happenings and news about Take 2 on the Facebook pages of mm2 Entertainment and JTeam.


Written by Colin Low

For the full list of January 2017's 10 films under STOP10, click here.

STOP10 Jan 2017: 'The Fortune Handbook' (财神爷) from mm2 Entertainment, directed by Kelvin Sng

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To auspiciously start the Chinese New Year with a belly filled rooster crow, we have the upcoming fortune inspired comedy film The Fortune Handbook (Chinesepinyin: cái shén yé) directed by Kelvin Sng. For maximum success and luck, the services of three heavyweight ‘Lee’ shi fus – actors Christopher Lee, Mark Lee and Li Nanxing – have been engaged. With these stars in alignment, it creates the optimum environment to provide the right welcome to usher in the new lunar year with much prosperity and laughter.


The Fortune Handbook is a comedy about a low-level fortune god sent to do good on Earth. His eagerness to get promoted to a true fortune god leads him to Hao Xing, the owner of a traditional Chinese bakery. Hao Xing loves his sister but despises his brother-in-law, Soh Hock. Soh Hock has been plotting to sell Hao Xing’s secret recipe to pay off his gambling debt. His wish comes true though mind control; an ability granted by our lowly fortune god, who has also been granting everyone wishes wilfully without a care, causing pain and suffering. That is until Heaven steps in to prevent a catastrophe.

We managed to grab director Kelvin Sng for a quick chat on making the film and directing three heavyweight 'Lees' in the cast!

There is a rumour that it was a conscious choice to select these three powerhouse Lees’ together? Is that true?

Yes, it was a conscious choice as I was discussing with the producers what would be an ideal cast for a local CNY movie. There were a few ideas here and there, but when we arrived at the 3 Lees after some intense brainstorming, we knew that this will be a winning combination.

The chemistry at press conferences to date have been hilarious and fun! Was it the same on set between all 3 actors? any particular anecdotes as this was Li's first comedic role? 

The set was a mixture of fun and tension, as we knew we were working on a blockbuster movie that everyone would be proud of, yet at the same time, we were also working within a very limited time frame and we were always racing against time. The chemistry between the 3 was unique as they are all very different individuals, yet when they come together, the sparks are apparent. 

Because they are all veterans, they tend to have their own set of ideas as well. This works out well for the film because each of them contributed many ideas on how they would like to portray their characters. We discussed the nuances of each scene as well as the comic timing. Everyone wanted nothing but the best for the film. Overall, it was a fruitful collaboration. 

As for Li Nanxing, he's a very intense actor, and always came very prepared with his own interpretation of the character, even for a comedic role. He has very strong ideas about how he wanted to portray the character. Nonetheless, when I looked at the final cut of the film, everything came together very well and I am thankful for the experience of working with a veteran actor like him.
Did you feel any pressure working with such experienced actors? 

Certainly. The 3 of them had strong ideas about playing their characters and gave many suggestions to me. I would generally take in their suggestions as long as it flows with the overall direction. I must say that the good thing about working with such experienced actors is that they digest what you want from them quickly and it saves a lot of time.

How is this CNY movie different from other CNY movies? What's so special about it?

It features the 3 Lees of course. It is special because it has the comic elements of classic Hong Kong comedies, yet it also contains lots of local flavours and humour, making it a unique combination of both worlds.

Who would you say is the true God of Fortune – Mark Lee, Christopher Lee or Li Nanxing – and why?

In the movie, it's Mark Lee. In real life, none! Hahaha!

What do you hope audiences will feel as they leave the cinema? 

I hope that not only will they have a good time being entertained by the movie and laughing their way out of the cinemas, but also be inspired to do good deeds to everyone around them, because the best gift in the world is the gift of giving.

You are the father of 5 children and you make movies. How do you juggle that!

Hahaha! It's all about discipline and time management. It's certainly not easy but it gets better with practice I guess! I am still learning. 


The Fortune Handbook will be released on 26 January 2017 in cinemas islandwide, right on time for Chinese New Year!

Follow the happenings and news about The Fortune Handbook on the Facebook page of mm2 Entertainment.



Written by Ivan Choong

For the full list of January 2017's 10 films under STOP10, click here.

STOP10: A monthly guide to 10 Singapore films you can catch!

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Film still from Saint Jack

A possible dinner conversation in Singapore.
Person A: Have you watched the recent local film Apprentice?
Person B: No. What is it about?
Person A: Its about the hangman in Singapore. It was really really good.
Person B: Oh, I see. Did Jack Neo direct it?
Person A: ............
Person B: Where to watch ah?
Person A: I think it's over already. It was last screened at this place called the Projector.
Person B: Where is that?

2017 is here and we are going to change all that. We are going to give you a million reasons to watch local, know where and when to watch them, and never be at a loss of what to do during your weekends, especially when it comes to nourishing the heart, mind and soul!

Here’s the deal. We are giving you STOP10, kind-of like a ‘SINdie + Top 10’. It is a list of 10 Singapore films, includes feature and short films, that you could watch every month. And we will tell you where you can watch it. Bookmark this right now next to that Top 50 Buffet List from that famous blogger LadyBoy Platinum Chef. Your weekend and some weekday nights will depend on it. With STOP10, you can keep up with the latest Singapore film screenings and happenings every month in just one list. Never miss out on a new film and be the first to discover new talents. 

For those who have been following SINdie, 10 is a special number also because we are entering our 10th year in existence. Over the past years, we have interviewed countless filmmakers, met some truly amazing personalities and waxed lyrical about several gems that have emerged from the local filmmaking scene. So with the new year, we are back with a brand new look and new meat. STOP10 aside, we also launch our inaugural quarterly magazine today, put together by Alfonse Chiu, which offers some comprehensive reads and deep insights into the filmmaking scene here. This is a main course by itself, DO NOT consume it with other things like The Stray Times. 

You ready for January 2017’s STOP10? Here we go! (in chronological order)

Ways of Seeing
Viddsee, SGFilmChannel
Viddsee, a quintessential platform for watching streamed Asian short films, just launched the SG Film Channel in December 2016. You can look forward to more local films on this channel which is updated regularly. Ways of Seeing is a stop-motion animation (or clay-mation to be more exact) short film by Jerrold Chong, which explores the beauty of sound and the simple joys that our sense of hearing can bring to us. A blind man meets a blind violinist at a train station and they start an earnest conversation about their lives and the how they dealt with the ‘darkness' in their lives. Be mesmerised by its graceful marriage of thoughtful visuals and atmospheric sounds. This film was screened at the 27th Singapore International Film Festival and Jerrold himself has also interned in Charlie Kaufman’s well-acclaimed stop-motion film ‘Anomalisa’.

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Move Out Notice
Viddsee, SGFilmChannel
A snappy, humorous family drama about the relationship between mother and daughter sets a new bar in terms of using post-it pads! A property sales agent single-mother and her daughter have resorted to using cheery post-its as a way of communicating with each other to maintain a harmonious relationship. Correction: the only way of communicating with each other. But this system is tested when the daughter wants to move out to live with her friend and the silence in broken. We love how the film lends a different mood and tempo to the genre of family drama. 

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Unlucky Plaza
DVD, available at Objectifs Centre for Photography and Film, Books Actually, Books Kinokuniya, Takashimaya
With its DVD recently launched in December 2016 at Objectifs, Unlucky Plaza must be watched for the reason that it is quite unlike most other Singapore films. It imagines the unimaginable, a hostage crisis involving a group of hostages and the aggressor armed with only a meat cleaver (so so so different from robbing a bank of $30,000 with no weapon) The hostage situation finds its way into YouTube and suddenly the world learns that Singapore no longer that safe unicorn of a nation it wanted to be. Clearly an ambitious film with a nod to Quentin Tarantino, and its unabashed ambition makes for great entertainment. It also stars some of the best acting talents in Singapore including Dim Sum Dolly Pamela Oei, Judee Tan, Adrian Pang, Shane Mardjuki and Filipino actor Epy Quizon in the lead role. Unlucky Plaza was the opening film of the 25th Singapore International Film Festival and had 2 sold-out screenings.

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Saint Jack
7 Jan, Sat, 5pm, The Plaza, National Library Building

This was the first Hollywood movie shot entirely on-location in Singapore. The authorities banned it in Singapore when it was first released in 1979 as it featured an unsavoury side of Singapore - the sex trade. In fact, the production team had to shoot this film under a different name at that time. The film is about a savvy American pimp, Jack Flowers, and his oscillations between the Chinese triads and his Western customers. The movie title comes from the fact that he is really quite an honourable man who sticks by his principles in a rather dishonourable trade. 

The film’s screening is part of the Asian Film Archive’s State of Motion exhibition pre-tour screening series of 5 old feature films which showcase Singapore in a different guise. The film screening series runs from 6 to 8 Jan. Details on where to watch and how to get tickets are available in this link. We also interviewed writer Ben Slater, who wrote about the film and its production in his book ‘Kinda Hot’.

We are giving away an autographed (by Ben Slater) copy of ‘Saint Jack’ and a free pair of tickets to the State of Motion Bus tour (worth $36). Contest details will be posted on our Facebook page. Look out for the contest post.

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Ring of Fury
7 Jan, Sat, 9pm, The Plaza, National Library Building
If the government had not banned this film in the 70s, it might have sparked a little industry of martial arts films in Singapore, with enough critical mass to rival those out of Hong Kong. Ring of Fury, directed by Tony Yeow and James Sebastian, can claim the title of being the only martial arts films ever to be made in Singapore. According to people who have watched it, the film has a strong edgy, outrageous style, has a couple of funny moments and also a compelling storyline. The tagline says it all - a humble noodle-seller turned pugilist who battles against gangsters led by a boss who wears an iron mask! Peter Chong, the lead carries off the role with much charisma and boy, those fight scenes look so raw and genuine! 

This film is also screened as part of the Asian Film Archive’s State of Motion exhibition pre-tour screening series, which runs from 6 to 8 Jan. Details on where to watch and how to get tickets are available in this link. In it, Ben Slater, who also got very close to the late Tony Yeow, shares some insights into the film and the making of it.

A pair of State of Motion Bus tour (worth $36) tickets will be given away. Contest details will be posted on our Facebook page. Look out for the contest post.

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

The Glare (part of K Rajagopal’s retrospective)
14 Jan, Sat, 2-6pm, SCAPE Gallery (Level 5)
Filmmaker K Rajagopal is twice the age of many of the currently active filmmakers in Singapore but makes some of the most exciting works seen in the circuit. Following the critical acclaim to his debut feature film A Yellow Bird, the Singapore Film Society has put together a one-day only retrospective of his films this month, showcasing all of his works between 1995 and now (including some new films commissioned by the Indian Heritage Centre). 

The Glare is one his early short films about a housewife who escapes into the world of the television programmes she is obsessed with as a respite from her abusive husband. The film marries both realism and fantasy and makes you laugh one second while feeling angsty the next. This film which, won Rajagopal his second Special Jury Prize at the Singapore International Film Festival in 1996, like Hillary Clinton, won the popular vote for the awards in that year and was even mentioned on television in national news then!

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Timeless (part of K Rajagopal’s retrospective)
14 Jan, Sat, 2-6pm, SCAPE Gallery (Level 5)
Also part of the K Rajagopal retrospective on 14 Jan is Timeless, a piece commissioned for an earlier retrospective of his works in 2010 by the National Museum of Singapore. Timeless won Best Cinematography and Best Editing at the 2011 Singapore Short Film Awards. It is a highly conceptual film about art and history in which a man appears in four different time periods, in different states of existence but somewhat in the same frame of mind, repeating his own mistakes made in his earlier incarnations. Kind of like Tilda Swinton in Orlando minus the sex change.

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Tony's Long March
14 Jan, Sat , National Museum of Singapore Gallery Theatre
Tony Yeow made what could be considered Singapore’s first martial arts film, Ring of Fury, in the 70s, during a time when Singapore cinema was in decline. A man with a resonant, deep newscaster voice, he was not your run-off-the-mill filmmaker. He had crazy ideas and even made a film like Tiger’s Whip in 1998, about a Hollywood actor who had a disease which reduced his manhood to a stump and came to Singapore to look for a cure! His never-say-die attitude was legendary, having faced the worst box-office flops anyone could stomach. The Long March is a documentary made about Tony and sad to say, Tony passed away in 2015, before the completion of this documentary. 

This screening is part of a pairing under the National Museum Cinematheque Selects Showcase. It will be screened with Lost in La Mancha. Directors Ben Slater and Sherman Ong of The Long March will be present for a discussion on the film and Tony’s life.

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Take 2
26 Jan, Thu, cinemas islandwide
Take 2 will prove to you that a prison film can bring festive CNY cheer too. Produced by Jack Neo, the film is about 4 ex-prisoners who start life afresh after finishing their sentences. For people who enjoyed his earlier prison film One More Chance (2005), this comes from the same cloth but brighter, funnier, with more surprises and has some amazing action sequences! This film’s cast includes familiar faces like getai veteran Wang Lei, Ah Boys to Men's Maxi Lim and Garrick Chin and Long Long Time Ago’s Ryan Lian. The film is Ivan Ho’s directing debut, having been a screenwriter who co-wrote Ah Boys to Men Three: Frogmen and Long Long Time Ago.

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

The Fortune Handbook
26 Jan, Thu, cinemas islandwide
Here is your chance to see three of the biggest ‘Lees’, Christopher Lee, Mark Lee and Li Nanxing, in local Chinese TV entertainment, hamming it up in a CNY comedy. The Fortune Handbook is about a Fortune God intern (yes, apparently they have a training school in heaven) who is sent to earth to do good in order to be promoted to a full-blown Fortune God. Unfortunately, he messes up the internship by indiscriminately giving normal beings special powers and all hell breaks loose on earth. What a delicious mess!

Read more about the film and how you can watch it here.

Fever Pitch: An Interview with Liao Jiekai

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Liao Jiekai's short film 'The Mist' won the the Best Director Award in the Southeast Asian Short Film category at the recently concluded 27th Singapore International Film Festival. The film, labelled a dance film, hardly has any dance in it. Instead it features two young women in a hazy concoction of silhouettes, voices and memories.

We try to uncover the thinking and concept behind 'The Mist' with director Liao.

What inspired you to develop 'The Mist'?

The Mist was made in Hanoi during a dance film lab organized by Cinemovement, a collective of filmmakers and dancemakers founded by Jeremy Chua and Elysa Wendi. We were in Hanoi to spend an intensive five days together to incubate ideas for dance films, and The Mist was made during the lab, my first foray into the world of dance. 

There is no actual dance movement in the film but perhaps more interesting pacing and the use of repetition as a proxy for dance. Could you explain what you were trying to achieve or experiment with in this film?

I collaborated with dancemakers Bobbi Chen and Sudhee Liao who interpreted my instructions of navigating the line between what can be perceived as dance and what we all understand as an ordinary movement of the body that is not choreographed. This film is also about other boundaries such as that which is visible to us and that which we can only see in our mind. Hence the title The Mist, which I was trying to evoke an image of navigating in unchartered territories.

What were the memories of the girls based on? (e.g. the long tables mentioned in the film)

I gave both Bobbi and Sudhee a specific instruction during one of the shots where one girl was lying on the bed and the other were sitting on the adjacent bed – for the one lying on the bed to recount a memory of a place that only she knew and it can be fictional. The voice over was left at the exact position in synchrony with the image as it was told (although the girl’s face is back-facing the camera and we cannot see her speak, so the dialogue floats onto the image like a layered voice-over); for me the storytelling is part of their performance and I wanted to respect its relationship with the movements the girl are doing with their fingers/hands.

Where was this shot? The house seems interesting.

This was shot on the second floor of a hotel right above the Hanoi Cinematheque where we were based for most of the film lab. It was a very quaint hotel, lots of nice sunlight through these twirling green canopies. I spent some time by myself in the morning before the shoot walking around the hotel and blocking the shots in my mind. The location is certainly a big part of the film, since the characters have to navigate through these corridors and room.

How do you feel about winning the Best Director award for the Southeast Asian Short Film segment at SGIFF?

It is a bit ironic, because I actually did not credit myself as a director in the film (in the credits I wrote “conceived by”), and I feel the same way with many of the more spontaneous/experimental projects I did in the last two years. Maybe I have a problem with categories, I do find it problematic to tell people that this is a dance film too, because words are too narrow and too limiting. I don’t think the work I do is necessarily “directing” in the conventional sense of the word in filmmaking; maybe it feels more like I set up a certain situation and context, and then sat back to become the silent documentarian; which is why I almost always shot these films myself, because it is important that I operate the camera. It is more like painting, after I prepare all the ingredients, I let them pull me along on a ride. Still, I am glad that the jury members decided to honour the film with this award because perhaps the idea of directing always relates to a unique voice; this is important to me and I truly think this is an achievement to be shared with all my collaborators in this project (including my sound post team).

What were some of the most interesting responses you received about the film?

Well, I actually don’t consciously seek out audience responses because I get very self-conscious. Some people mentioned the term ‘poetic’, not a very interesting response I guess. I am more interested if people see dance in this film or not, because I think that is one of the things I hope to do - to provoke people to think about what is dance, what is moving-image, what is choreography, and our relationship with these ideas. About ten years ago when I was in college at the Art Institute of Chicago, I took a module on “performance and moving-image”. A Butoh master visited our class one day to gave us a crash course on Butoh dance; in that class, I learned to be very aware of the way I walk, the way my feet very unconsciously perform the act of “walking” every day. For about an hour, we repeatedly walked from one end of the room to the other at a speed ten times slower than usually. It is not walking slowly, but walking in slow motion. And then we watched each other walk in slow motion. I thought, it was very interesting to think about this in terms of film, how can I also play around with these kind of sensations and experience through the moving-image, and understand the boundaries between choreography and daily movements; I hope people can respond to my work from these point of views.

text - jeremy sing / photography - alfonse chiu



Review: The Road to Mandalay (2016)

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The woman, barely out of girlhood, has anxious eyes. She boards the raft awkwardly, hesitantly. Her fingers, clutching at an old rucksack tightly, whiten from the effort. She turns her face down, though her eyes still shift listlessly from beneath her thick fringe. Even as the oarsman navigates to the opposite bank, her visage remains terse. Even as she alights, the expression stays. She may be free—she just crossed a border—but when the new world looks so much like the old, it feels like nothing changed at all.

With an opening like this, it is no wonder that The Road to Mandalay, the Taipei-based Burmese filmmaker Midi Z’s fourth cinematic outing, is fraught with tensions, both psychological and physical, as the two halves of a young couple struggle to survive themselves in a foreign land.

First meeting at the Thai-Burmese border, where he chivalrously chose to give her the better seat on the Bangkok-bound Jeep that he paid a premium for, Guo (Kai Ko) and Lianqing (Wu Ke-xi) are two strangers whose fates intertwine via the dogged romantic pursuits on Guo’s part.

Despite their shared situation, their differences could not be more pronounced: Guo, ever the provincial man, finds contentment in hard manual labor, and a dream of eventually moving back to Burma to open a shop, while Lianqing craves the urban comforts that a move up the socio-economic ladders can provide, and imagines a future beyond continental South East Asia.

Raided and swindled, Lianqing was one whose experiences being victimized only serve to reinforce her desire to leave a world that she is unfortunately familiar with behind—we watch as she eventually decamps from Guo, and the routine-if-hazardous factory job that he set up for her, for the chance of a more cosmopolitan vocation.

All these come to a head, as a jilted Guo tracks her down for one climatic confrontation that is sure to stay on viewers’ minds.

Played with a reedy tenacity by Z film veteran Wu, it is doubtless that audience will sympathize with the worldly Lianqing more, but the undeniable fact remains that Ko’s portrayal of the simple Guo’s descent into a desperate fury is the performance that steals the show.

Shedding the puppy-love matinée idol presence of his prior works for that of a gently benevolent man dubbed by those who surround him as a ‘simpleton’, Ko evokes a sense of pity and endearments that tugs at the heartstrings much more effectively than Wu’s anxious woman—even as viewers understand the realist underpinnings of her pursuits.


Much has to be said too, of director Z’s progress in filmmaking. With clean visuals and sparse sounds, Z’s restraint in spatial portrayals has both merit and fault—while the heavily aestheticized tableau he painted are beautiful and striking, on occasions they lack the messy, lived-in qualities that would have added nuances to the gritty realism of its central themes.

However, with his excision of the long shots that overstayed their welcomes in his early works and his past tendency for rambling narratives, Midi Zhas also hit jackpot with a trim but fit work that will no doubt become part of the benchmark against which future Asian social dramas will be judged.

Ultimately, The Road to Mandalay is a film that succeeds because it lack—or is at least, less overt in showing—the naked ambitions that often accompany modern social drama to become the bona fide historical document of the moment. With its commitment to an accessible narrative, it takes the time to immerse the audience in an unseen version of reality that is closer to truth, rather than douse them with an onslaught of poverty porn.

The story of Lianqing and Guo may conclude in an hour and fifty minutes, but their situations run parallel to reality forever, and remain a testament to the stubborn tenacity of humans in crisis as they cling to hope.  


As one contemplates the film, one would begin to understand: The road to Mandalay is all washed out, and there is no way home. Where else to call home now but here?

High Riser: An Interview with Min-Wei Ting

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One of the most ambitious Singapore films to have been screened this year at the 27th Singapore International Film Festival, artist Min-Wei Ting’s I’m Coming Up is an uninterrupted visual journey through Singapore’s most representative structure: the HDB Flat.

A ubiquitous feature of the Singaporean landscape, more than 80 per cent of our population dwells in these state-developed blocks. Yet beyond its function and history, an actual physical entity remains that is surrounded and obscured by socio-economic and political narratives.

Whilst there have been various films about life in these buildings—Eric Khoo’s 12 Storeys and Lei Yuan Bin’s 03-Flats come to mind—these inevitably focus on personal stories and state accounts, where the high-rise serves as a backdrop and is never given space to articulate itself.

I’m Coming Up explores the public high-rise as an entity in its own right and looks to capture its unknown self, a space of being that is difficult to grasp. Director Ting is interested in the high-rise as a body unto itself—to be seen, heard, and felt.

The film traverses an endless corridor, the arterial and vernacular feature of public housing architecture in Singapore, to contemplate its lines, colors, and surfaces. The duration of the film corresponds exactly to the actual time required to ascend a 21-storey public housing complex on foot, a protracted gesture that delivers an experience of psychological and physical space in real-time.

Taking some time out to chat with us, Min-Wei Ting elaborates on how he approached the uniqueness of this project, and some stories behind the scenes.

What is your main discipline as an artist? While this project is obviously your exploration of the filmic medium, what kind of projects do you most frequently work on?

​The focus of my practice is the moving image. I tend to avoid saying that I'm a 'filmmaker' because that then places my work within the realm of cinema and exposes it to certain expectations. Besides I didn't study film, I studied with people who worked with film but also painters, sculptors, installation and performance artists. That being said, my work does tend to end up in the theatre but only within specific contexts like festivals and exhibitions. I don't currently work in any other medium but that doesn't mean I won't on another occasion. On the other hand, I think there's plenty to explore with film that has nothing to do with conventional notions of what cinema is. An example is Toh Hun Ping's works in this year's SGIFF under the program, ‘Covets of an Outsider: Showcase of Works by Toh Hun Ping (2004-2009)’.

What subject matters interest you the most?

​That's hard to say. I'm interested in politics, history, culture—pretty broad topics—and within those there are specific subjects I'm drawn to. But not every interest lends itself to ​becoming a project.

Could you explain a bit more about focusing on the high-rise as a body itself, to be observed separately from the human and social aspects of it. Apart from it being a good architectural study, what do you see in these repetitive corridors, stairs, and walls?

I've always been interested in architecture so the design of this particular complex in Jurong drew me in the moment I stepped into it. ​There isn't another public housing block like it in Singapore. I'm almost certain of it. Very quickly, I knew what I wanted to do - to traverse the entire building from bottom to top - a response that was very particular to its design. I couldn't have done this anywhere else. So I wasn't interested in telling the history of the building nor the stories of its inhabitants in the film, I wanted simply to consider its form and what it represents, which leads us to the other part of your question.

The repetition of building features - the corridors, stairs, walls - almost everything in the building, presents a space that's very uniform, orderly and monotonous. The relentless journey through this immense block of flats drives home that feeling. I see the public high-rise as a metaphor for life in Singapore - it's rather homogeneous and conformist with little room for deviation. I know that sounds like an oversimplification but just think about the limits that are placed on how people think and behave here.    

One might say, "How else would you build an apartment block? Of course everything will be the same." And that's true but what I'm speaking about is not just sameness but the vastness of this sameness. I don't think it's farfetched to transpose this reading of public housing onto Singapore as a whole if you consider that the overwhelming majority of this country's population, more than 80%, resides in blocks not too dissimilar to the one in the film.

Speaking of the other Singaporean films that have featured the HDB flat, which ones did you have in mind when you mentioned them? In particular, have you watched 03-Flats? It too is a study of the flat, albeit from a different angle.

​I watched 03-Flats earlier this year at The Projector. Then of course there’s 12 Storeys, but that was almost 20 years ago so I hardly have any memory of that. I also thought of some photographic projects. I can't remember the photographer but I think he or she photographed residents standing right outside their homes. And now there's a Japanese couple here who have been photographing the interior of flats—furniture, decorations, personal possessions—without the occupants.

The thread that winds through these works is the human dimension - if it's not the residents themselves that are featured, it's the traces and touches they leave. This has the effect of personalizing these otherwise utilitarian and sterile buildings. Now we see parents, children, belongings, habits and routines, and one starts to invest emotions and feelings into these spaces. 

With I’m Coming Up, I wanted to reflect on what these spaces mean without the human element. Admittedly, I don't do that completely in the film because you see people's belongings here and there in the corridors but for the most part, the film is devoid of people.

How did your cameraman achieve this feat of walking up the HDB flat with a steady cam, and shooting everything in one take?

​The truth is that we didn't do it in one take. When we began planning the shoot, I wanted to do it in one take and the Steadicam operator was quite confident he could do it as well. But after a few site visits, I think he realized it was going to be near impossible for him to do that. It would have required enormous amounts of concentration and stamina. So we discussed it and settled on doing several floors at a time then merging all the shots in post. Even then, the shoot was still very demanding on him because we were aiming to end at sunrise so the breaks were short - the entire ascent was timed. It was basically stop, wipe off the sweat, have some water, go.


text - jeremy sing / photography - alfonse chiu

A Guide to Stop Aspiring and Just Be

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Being a first-time filmmaker trying to make that first short film is really hard. The birth of one’s filmmaking journey, making a short film is the first time one begins to learn the processes from having an idea or a premise, to actually making a film. It is also when one has least experience, at one’s most vulnerable, and in need of substantially more than a little help.

Fundamentally, ideas are easy, but execution is a whole different ballpark. Everyone has ideas. But to execute them? That, is truly hard. This is what separates an aspiring filmmaker from a filmmaker—the incredible feat of just doing it.

One of the first, not to mention the biggest, stumbling blocks that any aspiring filmmaker would face is funding. I think, one natural reaction would be to look for a short film grant, which our recently remodeled governmental benefactor, the Infocomm Media Development Authority (iMDA) provides. In fact, they recently announced a call-for-proposal for short films grant assistance.

Great! Well, maybe not so.  Once you read the terms and conditions, you start to notice something troubling about it. To be eligible for this grant, you need to have had directed at least one short film that has screened at a reputable international film festival (including Singapore International Film Festival), or locally at Singapore Short Cuts, or to have competed at the National Youth Film Awards.

Essentially, if you have never directed a short film before, you are not eligible. Even if you have been directing other works such as TVCs, a web series or vlogs or you are an experienced Director of Photography, Assistant Director, or Editor who wants their own chance at directing a short film, you are not eligible.

If you think that is somewhat unfair, you are right. Not everyone can find an opportunity to direct, not even in film school and many others, especially younger people, may opt to learn the ropes of production in other roles before taking the responsibility of a director.

Couple the fact that this is really the only grant that it affords to filmmakers for short films as well as the competitiveness of being accepted into film festivals, its exclusiveness leaves out a ton of talented people. We do not have such a myriad of other organizations that gives you grants the way the government does and this highlights what a huge problem that is too.

That being said, I have to be relatively fair and honest. I do think that from the perspective of the iMDA, it helps them close the door on some risks and ensures a more consistent level of quality of filmmaking that they want to encourage. Not every promising idea leads to a successful film.

But the fact of the matter is if we are not inclusive in helping aspiring filmmakers achieve their goals, we will inevitably lose them, either from discouraging them to the harsh practicalities of living in Singapore, or by losing them to other countries with better potential for support. Ultimately, we stem our society’s potential for artistic and cultural sophistication and growth, whilst others accelerate ahead.

Overall then, it seems like a very discouraging issue for aspiring filmmakers right from the start. However, my advice is if you want to direct,

If you are unable to get funding from iMDA, whether you are eligible or not, and you give up, I am sorry to say this is the wrong job for you.  The beginning years and decades for many filmmakers is living with constant rejection. You need a great deal of determination, audacity and even blissful ignorance when mounting a project as complex as filmmaking.  But it is in the application, attitude and the desire to create something unique, all the while preserving an insatiable appetite for improvement that can be seen in great filmmakers.

Furthermore, we are living in an unprecedented age whereby the democratization of technology has liberated many people to be able to make films on their own terms. You have advanced audio-video recording devices on your phone. You might not be able to do certain things that well funded projects can, but then that is also when you apply creativity and innovation, which is what being in the creative industry is all about.

You will never find the right assistance falling from the sky that will be perfect just for you that is consequence free. Nothing in life is going to be handed to you in a straight easy line. But don’t stagnate. Do something. Do anything. Keep moving and you will get where you want to be.


All you have to do is commit your entire life to something, which will result in one of two outcomes. Either you will succeed, or you will keep trying, which is in and of itself its own form of success. So whilst there needs to be an improvement in helping first time filmmakers in terms of assistance, young filmmakers still can take the opportunity to help themselves.

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Rifyal Giffari is a filmmaker who will eventually grow up and get a ‘real job’. He was an awkward feral child raised in cinemas and libraries before being reprogrammed in school. He graduated from Nanyang Technological University’s School of Art, Design and Media in Digital Filmmaking and has a deep sympathy for others who did. He recently participated in the Film Leaders Incubator (FLY) ASEAN-ROK in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. That was fun.

Introducing ... SINdie Magazine

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It's been a long ten years for SINdie. From a small blog to one of the most beloved presence in independent film culture, SINdie has come a long way, and for its tenth year in running, we are gonna be giving to you something special: the SINdie Magazine.

Serving as the digital print edition of SINdie, this Magazine contains some of the best film writing you will find in the website and more. Ranging from feature interviews to essays brimming with insights and personality, SINdie Magazine is your one stop shop to satisfy your cravings for quality film journalism and criticism with beautiful layouts and photographs!

So, what are you waiting for? Read SINdie Magazine now here.

Tombstone Blues: An Interview with Bradley Liew

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It is easy to get caught up with Bradley Liew’s enthusiasm. When he talks, you listen. He has this schoolboy excitement that sucks you in and gets you smiling without noticing—whether it is analyzing the result of some incidental people-watching or talking the pitfalls of screenwriting, it is relentlessly fascinating processing the ways heprocesses the world.

It is even easier to not realize just how young he is: at age 27, Bradley’s has had been through the film festival grinder, and came out all the brighter for it. With his stunning debut, Singing in Graveyards, premiering in the Venice International Film Critics’ Week to rave reviews, it is clear that here is a young director on his way to finding a voice that will be remembered.

Ahead of the Singapore premiere of Singing in Graveyards, Alfonse Chiu talks to Bradley about personal histories, and giving a film about identities its own inimitable flair.

What was your family like as you were growing up?

My father was a seaman—which meant he would be away for months on end—while my mother was a housewife, so I grew up in a kitchen of women. My entire childhood as I remembered was in the kitchen, with my mother, my aunts, and the other women of the family. Art was never something pushed: my mother would ask me whether I wanted to take up painting, and I would say ‘Yes’ and do some painting, but the whole family was never really artistic per se. I do recall, however, that my father had a collection of about a thousand films on VHS, Laser Discs, VCDs and DVDs. Every time he returned from the ship, we would go to this DVD place and pick around ten films to watch for the period he was back. This was in the days when DVD was insanely popular. In a way, I guess it was my father that cultivated my interest in film.

Have you always felt that you have a propensity for making art?

Painting was never an obsession to me; it was just something I did on the weekend to pass the time. It was not until high school that, for some reason, I found myself in theatre, directing plays. That was actually very strange looking back, because in a Malaysian secondary school, it was not what one would normally do outside of curriculum—one was expected to do athletics or music or more studies, not drama. Our school was fortunate enough to have a group of English teachers that did theatre, who got us young ones all curious and excited over it. The pieces we did were written by us ourselves and we’d stay back after school to practice for competition events. Through the year, there would be something like a football league, but for theater, if you may; it was all very strange but wonderful. I directed around two to three plays in high school, and then I started making really bad short films.

In your high school years, or?

Yes, I actually started then. A while back, I met some friends from high school and we talked about the first film we ever made. It was a class project that we shot on a Betacam. We had to do a storytelling project and we made a horror film in my house. That was the first short film I ever did, and it was hilarious! We got the whole class together, and we casted the shyest guy in class as the killer. We had good fun, but…..the footage was lost!

I started making short films more seriously when I went to college. What really drove me was that I could not relate to Malaysian independent films at the time. Back then for me, going to the cinema meant you would see either mainstream Malaysian cinema, or Hollywood, or independent new wave cinema that I couldn't relate to because it was in Mandarin. Maybe it was due to my background growing up: I am ethnically Chinese but I could not speak Mandarin. At that time, I knew more Malay than I know Mandarin. Now, I know more Tagalog than I know Mandarin. Looking back now, I know that you don’t need to master a language to relate to films. But that is because I was very lucky to have been able to be exposed to different kinds of cinema world cinema. Now I can really appreciate those films. Back then, I had a terrible attention span.

I guess making films for me at that time was a search for identity. Trail and error. More error than success.

How would you describe film culture in Malaysia and how it has changed?

I am not sure if it has changed so much. I just saw the latest box office takings and it proves that we still go to the cinemas. Back then, it was more hit-and-miss than anything. One would just go to the cinema and watch a Malaysian film and hope for the best. I think the first independent Malaysian film I watched was Yeo Joon Han’s Sell Out, which was a musical that also went to Venice Critics Week. It was intentionally badly sung, a what-if of if everyday people decide to make a musical. It was hilarious.

When I was starting out, it was hard to find support because there’s no overflowing film community as we have a small number of independent filmmakers. Now I think the numbers are increasing and the old guard of the Malaysian New Wave have been opening up, starting incubator programs for the next generation which is fantastic. I guess the issue now is really the exposure of the young filmmakers. They need to be exposed to world cinema. To see the other kinds of styles and films and realize that the possibilities are vast. Not to copy but to be inspired.

It is really interesting that you asked me earlier about style, visual style and direction; I think the fact that I found it difficult to connect to local films—visually or otherwise—influenced my making of Singing in Graveyards, because now that I know what I can’t do, it helps refining what it is that I want do, which is to show human nature that is above the boundary of location. People are saying that Singing in Graveyards does not look Malaysian or Filipino at all, and it has its own unique and distinct voice, for which I am very grateful.

How do you feel that themes and focuses have changed throughout the years in Malaysian cinema and in your own works?

What I really liked about the Malaysian new wave cinema was that they are very personal and character driven—there are always feelings that they want to convey. It is not so much about the plot, but intense sense of nostalgia that they want to bring across that makes one feel something. That is how we express our culture—feelings are the flesh of culture, and the bones are human connections.

What has changed in my work I feel is the shift of focus from visual style to more on the honesty of what I want to say. Back then, I was so concerned with how to mount the shot. How to shoot it? What camera movement? Today, these questions are still important but it takes a back seat to- what is the intention of this scene? What do we want to say by moving the camera? What are we trying to convey to the audience?

How have short films evolved these past few years in both Malaysia and the Philippines?

I don’t know much about the history of Filipino short films. But the shorts I’ve seen are quite amazing with huge amounts being made every year. There is this sense of freedom and artistic expression that is not present in Malaysia, probably due to the fact that they have no censorship in the Philippines. The same artistic expressions and scope of things is not present here in Malaysia maybe because of the self-censorship of the filmmakers themselves. They assume that they shouldn’t or can’t talk about “sensitive issues” so they don’t even bother even at script stage.

Perhaps another factor is the rise of YouTube and YouTube shorts in Malaysia. Sometimes these films all feel similar, carbon copies in terms of subject matter and visual style. But this could be because they’re doing it are doing it as a career, creating online content, making money from YouTube subscriptions and views. So these guys know what works and what the audience want. There’s no problem with that but there’s a pressure to churn out films every week to please your subscribers. I personally believe that we need to take our time, to really think about what we want to make and say with our films.

Maybe a solution could be an established Malaysian international film festival that is free of censorship. I think that's the key; you need to show and expose the people to world cinema.

Having won the SEA film lab in 2014 with Singing in Graveyards, was it something that you have incubated since long before the film lab, or an idea that happened to gain substance during it?

The idea occurred to me a year and a half before the lab. When I first went to Manila, the first film set I worked on was Pepe Diokno's Above the Clouds, which played at SGIFF in 2014, and starred Pepe Smith. He was the first Filipino actor I met, except he wasn't really an actor. He was a singer who acted.

I originally knew him as just an old man on set, and as I got to know him, one day he told me: "Brad, I have never written a love song." I asked him what he meant by that, and he just said that as long as his music makes people happy, he does not need to write a love song. This got me thinking about his life, and whether he has ever really fallen in love.

That turned out to be the seed of the film, the idea of this rock star that never wrote a love song. And it progressed many, many different drafts from there; but the lab was especially important as we really hit a dead end with the story, because it was so incredibly clichéd at that time. Talk about a rock star trying to make a comeback, and you would immediately think Aronofsky's The Wrestler. We could not find a good resolution or even a unique angle, because we were so fixated on this idea of a rock star that has never written a love song.

I would not say that the lab opened up a million ideas, but what it really did was to get us to start talking about the film. Lab mentors Fran Borgia and Tan Chui Mui were great at that. By winning, it reassured us that we had something really special, not something to throw away, and acknowledgment that now we needed to push on and find the key to unlock the door to next part of the script.

How did you unlock that next door and how long did it take?

Another year and a half! So the entire process took about three and a half years since the initial ideas.

After the lab, I was really excited as I was accepted to the Berlinale Talents. I thought I would go and hear amazing talks by master directors, get inspired and immediately finish the script. It didn’t happen. It was naïve and foolish to think that. For one reason or another I could not get inspired. The talks did not spark anything. I had more inspirations just being on a train in Berlin, just hanging out with my family—I have an aunt and a cousin there—gave me a greater sense of freedom. For some reason, nothing clicked there. I was really frustrated with myself.

Later that year, I got into the Locarno Filmmakers Academy, and that was a very important workshop for me. It taught me to think more as an artist rather than a person trying to write a film. Just to relax and start breathing. Free your mind, you know. But it still did not help with the script but it recharged me mentally.

It was not until one random night in Manila, when my producer Bianca and I were just discussing the different layers of the film that we hit a goldmine of possibilities: What if he was an impersonator? What if he was not really human? What if he was just this creature in the forest that gave up his immortality to be a rock star in the 70s? We were adding all these crazy elements to a script that was just bones…then suddenly, you get this really obese script, and it is fantastic, and you love it so so much.

Then, two months before went into production, Pepe Smith had a stroke.

It affected his speech and his energy. He not could shoot beyond six to eight hours a day. He would just fall asleep from exhaustion. You could also see that he had problems with recalling dialogue due to this fatigue. That was the biggest issue. We had to cut and slice this obese script down to whatever Pepe could handle that day. From there, more layers were removed until all that was left in the end was just his soul on the pages.

Turns out, after three and a half year writing this perfect script, the key to making it work was just our willingness to go on set and adapt to Pepe and the environment around us. To be organic and not try to impose our ideas on him.

What decisions went into the casting of the other actors like Lav Diaz and Mercedes Cabral?

Everyone casted in the film was intentional.

While Pepe’s character spent his whole life trying to be someone else, Mercedes’s character plays a struggling actress who physically resembles a famous R- rated actress. To get the meaning of this particular casting, one needs to know who Mercedes Cabral is in real life: she is a wonderful and talented actress who has done a lot of international award winning films, but is known as the actress who is always naked on screen. It is disheartening to know that one can appear in so many acclaimed films, and still be recognized for something as inconsequential as nudity. Thus, by casting her as an anti-Pepe, someone who is trying to avoid that limelight of being infamous and to be taken seriously as an actress, it was our way of satirizing a culture that is hypocritical in its appraisal of actresses.

While for Lav Diaz, we just wanted to cast him as an Anti-Lav Diaz; to get him to play this greedy, hustling manager that he definitely is not in real life. Everyone in this film plays his or her total opposites in reality, like Bernardo Bernardo, who played this straight old pervert, when he is really this gay old pervert (laughs). It was partly social commentary and partly just us having fun with all the inside jokes.

Did you draw from any personal histories when you made Singing in Graveyards?

Many scenes of how Pepe tries to connect with people, or rather, is disconnected from people, were constructed from my memories with my own grandfather.

The scene where Pepe goes to his son’s house and his grandson does not want to talk to him, where his son ignores him, while he is just there trying to fit into this family that wants no part of him—that was one. I mean, you gave life to them and that is supposed to mean something. You have this blood connection and you are supposed to have this immediate link, but you do not, and it is all because of the attitude of the young for the old.


In a way, the many scenes of neglect in this film were reflections of me watching how my own grandfather was neglected, and of me neglecting him in the same situation. It is hard to describe, but when one spends time with one’s grandfather, one would realize that all they talk about is the past. They do not have much of a future, and yet they still try to progress to connect with you—it is sad how we are often so caught up in our futures that we overlook our histories.




Festive Seasons: An Interview with Zhang Wenjie

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For those who have been keeping a close eye on the Singapore International Film Festival (currently SGIFF, formerly SIFF), it has had a long and colorful history to say the least. From the inaugural edition that ran a year late, to its two-year hiatus after some very public and very embarrassing public complaints targeted at its 24th edition in 2011, it is not unfair to say that SGIFF has faced adversities that would have sent younger and less resilient organizations running for the door. Now into its 27th edition, SGIFF is bigger, brighter, and tougher than ever—with 161 films in 13 sections over 2 weeks, new projects, and new initiatives to nurture the growth of filmmakers in the region. The festival remains a powerhouse in Asia, and a crucial stopover for anyone with a genuine interest in good films that have never been seen before.

Alfonse Chiu catches up with SGIFF’s Programme Director, Zhang Wenjie, for a quick chat about where the Festival is and where it would be in times to come.

How do you feel that the joining the mantle of the Singapore Media Festival has affected the original visions and duties of the festival, given that it has transitioned from something indie and a little more underground into something affiliated with an actual governmental agency?

I feel that the heart of the festival for independent cinema and freedom of expression still stands: We hold strong to our policy of not showing any film that is censored, because we believe that a film should be shown in its entirety or not at all. That is the essence of the festival, and it will never change. 

Coming back to the question, the festival is still an independent organization with its own board of directors, so we are not actually under a department of the government or anything. Like what you have said, this Singapore Media Festival is a name to pull together several film events and media events; to cluster them around the same dates so that there is some synergy, such that things can feed off from each other. That was the idea behind it.

When we first returned in 2014, we had the idea to be part of this, and to shift the date of our festival from April to the year-end period. We agreed after much contemplation, for the sole reason that we feel that we should work together. We can be independent from each other, but things that drive the industry forward and give opportunities and prominence to the craft are crucial to everyone. It is important to find ways to work together.

I feel that for international film festivals, there needs to be a certain sort of infrastructure at a basic level, and collaborations with the government. We may not agree on the same things, but if a government and its country's international film festival cannot see eye to eye, it would be a huge problem—everything would be gridlocked, and nothing would be able to move. 

As such, by coming back, it is kind of our way to help find ways for both sides to see that they can work towards a common good.

In what ways do you feel a film festival’s scale can affect its role in the grander scheme of things?

To me, the role of a film festival depends heavily on whether it has a clear intention, a clear mission, and a clear purpose. 

While it is true that the size of a film festival often determines what role it will generally play, it is not everything. For the big ones like Cannes or Venice, the whole size and scale of them are more often than not the only thing that people see and think about, but an interesting fact remains—that for some of the filmmakers, especially some of those more senior ones, they actually enjoy smaller festivals, because then they have the time to meet everyone. For example, let's say that you are at a small festival that only shows films from the Eighties: compared to attending the big ones, this time you actually get a chance to meet everyone and really connect to them during the festival over a mutual love of Eighties’ cheesy cinema. If you attend a festival like that, the friendships you form during it often last forever. 

One of my favorite festivals that I have been to was actually one of the smallest film festivals in record history. The international guests consisted three people; it only happened once, and it couldn’t happen again because to run and organize a film festival in that location is very, very difficult. The closing party was actually a dinner party where the festival director's mother cooked for everyone, and it was so wonderful—friends were made that I still keep in touch with.

I would say it is not the size, but what the festival is trying to do and how well it is doing it that makes it more important. A small festival that focuses on groundbreaking documentaries could make a big impact if the festival is consistent in its efforts over a period of time. I mean, you can have yourself a so-called big festival, but if it is only interested in getting the big names and the red carpet and the Hollywood stars, it is ultimately hollow, because you lack the substance to sustain it meaningfully.

While a festival might be small and cozy and have that strong emotional value, do you feel that it sometimes ends up as an ivory tower? Since they feature the public nominally, they often end up echo chambers of self-congratulatory artists, and not have any development for the scene and the culture.

While I do agree, that problem ultimately comes back to the basics: mission and intention and the way the festival was organized. You can have a small festival that deals with very experimental works, but if you are professional and do it for the art, and are really genuine about sharing these works without snobbery beyond your own circles and niche with those who have not encountered this before, then it could and should be an absolutely terrific experience.

In Thailand, there is this film archive that runs a regular programme showing experimental films to children: they are really young, age ranging from eight to ten, and you know they have no preconceptions, and to them these films were just something to see. The organizer told me that it was such an eye-opener and a really good learning experience to have done this with children because they see and catch on to so many things in the films that adults miss out, and their ideas and ways of seeing taught her a lot about what experimental films could be and achieve. 

So, I guess, it really depends on having that sincere spirit of sharing. While one can always—like what you said—have oneself an ivory tower to rub shoulders with one’s fellow intellectuals, and it could work, but it will always be that kind of festival. 

Intentions, not size, dictate the tone and results of a festival more than anything else.

How do you feel that the intentions of SGIFF have evolved throughout the ages, given the periods of tumultuous changes that it went through?

The Festival must always be relevant to the society and the time it exists within. 

It is not something that we do in a vacuum where we think of what to do and then do it; it is only through a lot of conversations with people much like yourself that we get a sense of what needs to be done, and what the Festival can do to push certain things forward. That's how we react. We may shape the Festival to bring it forward, but the ultimate view that the festival is a platform to celebrate independent filmmaking and have an independent mind and opinion about your art and your film remains with us. 

The most pertinent changes we went through were probably regarding sponsorship. If you look back at history, finding sponsors was—and still is—crucial, because the Festival does not generate much income, and it cost money to run the festival and support the staff that will work the year round to organize it.



Does that relate to the Festival's status as a nonprofit?

Correct. No matter our ideals, we need to face the reality of things: we are not a business—we do not have a tangible product. Unlike establishments like boutiques and restaurants, where the products are there and then, it is not in the nature and capabilities of a film festival to conduct that form of commerce.

Sure, we may sell tickets, but the fact remains that even if we sell out every single film, we still make a loss. That is because we are always bringing in the filmmakers, the casts, the production teams, for a screening of maybe two hundred people, for what is the cost prize of paying for venue, logistics, management. So, it is unavoidable that this is a loss-making pursuit. 

The reason why so many art institutions and organizations need grants is because they cannot exist without the money. To think that the revenue from selling tickets to galleries and exhibitions could pay for all the exhibits and programmes is laughable; most of the time, it is barely adequate to cover most organizations’ operation costs, let alone acquiring the historical and artistic artifacts they showcase. 

For the Festival, we face the same issues too. Throughout the last few years, we hoped that we have become more aware about how to work with the sponsors better: to let them see what the festival is about, and to get them to believe what the festival is about, such that certain elements that work for us could work for them too. For example, we could open up Special Presentations—which many festivals, like Busan and Toronto, have—dedicated to high profile films, which allow for a certain kind of red carpet, and then certain kinds of stars will come and generate a certain level of press attention. 

So, is it safe to say that despite its underground roots, the Festival itself has acquired a certain form of polish, even if it is just to survive?

You are right, however, we did try to do it in a way that is still true to the heart of the Festival. The Special Presentation screenings like ‘Mrs K’, ‘Three Sassy Sisters’, and ‘The Road to Mandalay’ are actually amongst the best films in the festival. The reasons why they were chosen go far beyond us just wanting to bring in the stars: they were works of art that deserved the attention. 

In a way, we are still fine-tuning the best way to do it and still stay true to the spirit of the films. This is actually very interesting, because when we first came back in 2014, we were very unused to that sense of melding celebrities with high art—I did not even have a jacket, and had to borrow one; I did not know how to react to Juliet Binoche’s presence, precisely because we have never done anything like that before, and it was a totally new learning experience for all of us. 

Things were literally crazy at the time: Zhang Ziyi was there, the cameras were on steroids, and we did not know what the hell was going on. However, in spite of all that, it had been a truly amazing experience—when I spoke to Juliet Binoche, it was incredibly heartening to know that despite the fact that she is a mega star, she is also a real person who loves her art and is as dedicated as to her craft as any artist worth their salt should be. She is a true artist, and she is a beautiful human being.

Coming back to the sponsors, it is understandable that they tend to need to have bigger names because that's what they are familiar with and what they see as certain mileage for their brands and their sponsorship. Hence, for us to find that balance between the well known and the well crafted is important to the integrity of the Festival in ways more than just artistic.

Do you think that the Festival has a duty to educate the public in terms of its films, or that the films should speak for themselves and the audience should appreciate the films by their own merits as opposed to through their curatorship?

As the saying goes, “you can lead a horse to water, but you cannot make it drink.” My take is that it is the responsibility of a festival film programmer to be the bridge between the artwork and the audience. 

Make no bones about it, there need to be tremendous respect from both sides. The audience needs to understand that a festival programmer has their own curatorial processes, and that each act of selection represents a labor of love, while the programmer need to understand that different audience members will have different ideas about the film; some may absolutely despise it, while others may actually love it as well. 

That may actually be one of the biggest joy of the programmer, to watch the audience watch the film and realize that one has found people that too thought to themselves, “Hey, I think this film is amazing.”

Have you ever found yourself disappointed by the ways an audience found a film that you yourself liked?

While I can't force the audience to watch a film, it is still my job as a programmer to present the film in the best possible way, which means I need to moderate how I present the film to the audience, how the film is written about in the programme booklet, and how the film is publicized. 

To bring something wholly unknown to an audience requires presenting it in the best possible way, and there are many means of communicating that: you could, for example, groups films together in certain sections; write about the films with different styles; or even by curating the stills that go on to illustrate the texts. 

I feel that film-writing should be very readable fundamentally. Everyone has read writings where they can see how transparently some writers were trying to make themselves look good by writing very fancily to show that, “Hey, I'm smart. I'm an interesting writer. Read me!” and that is very off-putting.

I find that the toughest form of writing is to write clearly and simply and still say something. To communicate subtlety clearly and concisely is a very hard job to do, which is why you have to know your film really well: you have to research and understand the art at a very basal level. It is the job of the programmer to say this in the cleanest way possible. 

However, this does not mean dumbing down the content—you can still talk about big complex ideas—but you do need to talk about it in a manner that someone who does not know of this work will consume it and conclude that this is something worthy of their attention, rather than something to be left to the insular cultural elites. 

To those who practice the obtuse as intellectual self-indulgence: Yes, you might get to show off your writing skills, but what is the point? That's my philosophy, and I believe that anyone who has a mind to comprehend and eyes to see can enjoy a film. I feel quite strongly about this—film watching is a democracy, and there is no higher or lower audience. 

I am sure that if she has an open heart and an open mind, even any regular old cleaning lady can be moved if you show her a Hou Hsiao-Hsien film, because it is just great cinema that transcends everything.

Now that it is moving on into its third decade, what hopes does the Festival have?

Actually, I think it is just to continue. This is because what it means to be able to continue is that we are still doing a relevant job; that what we do has meaning and relevance to the local and the SEA film community and industry; and to allow newer generations of people who came through the Festival to believe in the Festival in a way that those of us who saw the original could not, and find a purpose to continue the spirit of the Festival for. 

That, I think would be the greatest hope, to have something worth fighting for, and never ever back down.

Singapore in a Thousand Guises: A Conversation with Toh Hun Ping

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As urban expansion continues to eat into old, enduring spaces, films offer greater value in terms of immortalising some of these spaces. Visual artist Toh Hun Ping has emerged as a strident voice in promoting our understanding of these lost spaces. Over the years, as a visual artist, Hun Ping has developed a stable of video works and short films that involve various forms of image manipulation. He is one of the most innovative and inventive contemporary video artists in Singapore and his works have been screened at international experimental film festivals including Bangkok and Paris. 

The Singapore Film Locations Archive (sgfilmlocations.com) is an extensive online resource documenting all the films that have been shot on-location in Singapore, either entirely or partially, from the turn of the 20th century to the 1990s.He recently had a retrospective of his video and short film works showcased at the 27th International Film Festival. 


Ahead of his talk ‘A Thousand S’pores’ on 10 Jan at the National Library Building Plaza, SINdie spoke to Hun Ping to uncover the extent of his knowledge about locations and places here in Singapore, as they have been represented in various films.

You have an exhaustive list of films in your archive. How did you go about compiling it? How long did you take? Did you get the support of organisations in this effort?

I began this research into Singapore's history of film production about five years ago. Early in the research, I read Jan and Yvonne Ng Uhde's 'Latent Images' and Raphael Millet's 'Singapore Cinema', and they both come with filmographies, of what was produced in, shot in or had referred to Singapore. I started from there, especially Raphael's list, which is already rather exhaustive.

I added to the list by doing my own research -- scouring the internet and film archives' online catalogue (eg. Hong Kong Film Archive), browsing old local newspapers, reading books and essays on Singapore cinema, Southeast Asian cinema, Asian cinema, world cinema, looking for traces of "Singapore" in film. I limited the scope to films released in the 20th century, ie. 1900 to 1999.

I did almost everything independently, though I received SG50/iremembersg funding from NLB to do the Singapore Film Locations Archive (SFLA) website. Before that, I run 'SG Film Hunter', a personal blog on Singapore film locations.

Along the way, I got to know Ben Slater, Warren Sin (NMS), Jan and Yvonne, people at Asian Film Archive, Wong Han Min & Su Zhangkai (both are movie memorabilia collectors). They shared what they knew with me.

Have you watched most of these films?

The filmography in my SFLA website includes both existing and lost films. I have watched a majority of the films that are still existing. Watched everything that are in my video collection.

Are some of the older films (first half of the century) available for viewing or did you just get your information off written records?

Yes, some are available for viewing. Eg. 'Bring 'Em Back Alive' (1932), Samarang (1933), Booloo (1938), Tay Garnett's Tradewinds (1938) are on DVD or available for download from the Internet. I shared screengrabs of the films in my website and wrote about their filming locations in Singapore. Some of the WWII Japanese propaganda are also on DVD. Aselection of the early local Malay films produced by Shaw Brothers before 1950 were on VCD.


For films which are lost or not available for easy access (eg. films at BFI), I got the information off the archives' catalogue, old local newspapers, old movie trade magazines, and books/essays written about them. As far as possible, I provide the source of the information in my website, under 'Further Reading' in each of the posts.

Why the fascination with sg locations in film?

I was practicing as a video artist/experimental filmmaker before I got into this research. Had wanted to make a new video work about my parents in their youth. The narrative concerns the making of a film set in Singapore 1950s to '70s, with the filmmaker scouting for acting talent and locations, ie. a film within a film. I thought of appropriating old films for the parts where the filmmaker goes location-scouting, so I began collecting old films made in Singapore.

As the collection expanded and the more I watched, the more I found the films fascinating in themselves. Also came to realise that not much is known about them. I thus diverted from what I was doing originally (making my video piece), to do research, write and attempt to fill in the gaps of this history (Singapore film history and history of places in Singapore through film).


What are some of the most fascinating film locations that have already disappeared?

The kampongs and the former coastline of Singapore. Lost to urban redevelopment and land reclamation.

Massive transformation on the coastlines of Singapore. Kampong Siglap (now a condo), Kampong Padang Terbakar (now a golf course and Changi Business Park), Kampong Tanjong Kling (now Jurong Shipyard), Kampong Koo Chye (once a "floating village", now Boon Keng HDB estate). From watching the films, you realise that kampongs do not all look alike (and they are not "slums" as some would like to claim), many have distinct terrains, landscape settings, and architectural characteristics (eg. ornamentation).

It was just fifty to thirty years ago when they still existed. Now all gone without a trace. Little documentation as well. Many films from the golden age of Malay cinema were shot in these places.

Which film have you watched that, in your opinion, offers the most surprising and shocking impression of Singapore? And why?

I'm tempted to write 'Saint Jack', but it has been and is getting the attention and exposure it deserves, so I should mention some less known but noteworthy titles.

'God or Dog' (1997) by Hugo Ng. It's subversive, dirty and thrilling all at once. 

'Jiran Sekampong' (1966) by Hussain Haniff. Amir Muhammad has compared this with '12 Storeys'. I haven't got my hands on a English-subtitled version, so I merely watched the film with a rough idea of the narrative. Set in a hilly Malay kampong, there's a scene of a voyeur peeping at his neighbour through his binoculars and then walking over to rape her on her bed, followed by a match cut to the victim's boyfriend prostrating, performing the sholat. That left a deep impression. The audacity to do that; mixing voyeurism, exploitation, gender relations, power and religion all in the space surrounding a cut.

Why were the five films selected for state of motion out of your extensive list on your website?

It was a collective decision between Kent Chan, Kay Wee and myself. Last year for State of Motion, we did the locations of Cathay-Keris local Malay films. For this year, Kay Wee wanted to explore foreign productions shot on location in Singapore. I came up with a list of titles for them to choose from, some better known than the rest.

'Saint Jack' is a must pick; it would be a major draw. 'In Search of the Unreturned Soldiers in Malaysia' was not one of the better known titles in Shohei Imamura's oeuvre, so I thought why not. Not many knew about 'The Wild Eye', but it's a good film (it's reflexive and well-crafted) and deserves more attention. 'Ricochet' is in because of David Bowie and his passing last year (the politics behind the making of the film is intriguing for us as well). Kent Chan suggested 'Ring of Fury' and we thought it's high time the audience here watch this once-banned-for-23 years film again, especially bringing it on for the younger folks among us (the last screening was more than ten years ago, I think). Though it's a local film, but the image of Singapore it portrays is unfamiliar, uncanny and strange. Hence the theme for this year's edition - 'Through Stranger Eyes' (Kent came up with it).

The HDB flat is the most ubiquitous 'character' in contemporary Singapore films. Which films do you think have presented HDB flats in the most interesting way?

I don't suppose I'm ready to answer this question because I've not watched and examined closely enough of films shot in HDB flats. Merely more familiar with the titles made in and before 1999. I watched Abdul Nizam's 'Koridor' at the SGIFF recently. The final episode 'Episod Terakhir' is rather a critical take on HDB-living and neighbourly relations in Singapore public housing. A very much overlooked series of films.

What other existing locations in Singapore do you think will be interesting to feature in films?

I'd choose Pulau Sekudu (Frog Island), a rocky islet off Chek Jawa, Pulau Ubin. It was a popular film location used by local filmmakers from 1950s to '70s. 'Hang Tuah' was shot there. So was 'Hang Jebat' and even 'Ring of Fury'. 


If the film narrative calls for a scene where the protagonist ponders over his existence or contemplates revenge (there are boulders facing the sea to sit on), or a location for a battle or fight scene in natural, maze-like settings, Pulau Sekudu it is. 


Or the crumbling Haw Par Beach Villa on Coney Island. 'Wit's End' (1969) was shot there. I dare filmmakers to make a movie there, where the walls are cracking, floors are falling apart and the mangroves surrounding the villa on the verge of devouring it.


Can you share a teaser about what you are going to do discuss in your upcoming talk?

It's titled "a thousand s'pores". It would be a romp through the slew of "Singapores" -- (mis-)representations, allusions, real or imagined -- that I've tried to tracked down (I'm still in the midst of discovering) from the history of cinema.

Interview by Jeremy Sing

Back for a second year, the Asian Film Archive's State of Motion (SOM) Tour bring participants on a bus tour to locations featured in 5 vintage films that have featured Singapore. Commissioned art works are featured at each of the locations. 

Get your SOM17 guided bus tour tickets now at som17tours.peatix.comand visit www.stateofmotion.sg for more details!

Shoutout!: The 2017 Singapore-Palestinian Film Festival

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Still from 'The Time that Remains'

Peer into Palestine through film. Often seen as a hotbed of strife and fighting in the news, films hold up a different mirror to every realities in this place. Founded in 2016, the Singapore-Palestinian Film Festival provides a viable platform for Palestinian film makers and artists to tell their stories and alternate narratives to a Singapore audience. The festival is organised by Adela Foo. Supported by the Middle East Institute (NUS).

This festival features a group of female car racers, Palestinian Hip Hop rappers, nuns who face off with Israeli settlers, 18 cows, a village demonstration as well as a semi-biography. The festival takes place at The Projector from 19 to 22 January 2017. You can book your tickets in this link.

English Title: Speed Sisters
Language (and subtitles, if any): Arabic with English subtitles
Directed By: Amber Fares
One-liner synopsis: The Speed Sisters are the first all-women race car driving team in the Middle East. They’re bold. They’re fearless. And they’re tearing up tracks all over Palestine

English Title: Slingshot Hip Hop
Language (and subtitles, if any): Arabic with English subtitles
Directed By: Jackie Salloum
One-liner synopsis: Palestinian rappers use music to resist Israel.

English Title: Ave Maria
Language (and subtitles, if any): Arabic/Hebrew with English subtitles
Directed By: Basil Khalil
One-liner synopsis: Nuns of the Sisters of Mercy convent in the West Bank have their routine disrupted when a family of religious Israeli settlers crash their car into the convent's wall.


English Title: The Wanted 18
Language (and subtitles, if any): Arabic/Hebrew with English subtitles
Directed By: Amer Shomali and Paul Cowan
One-liner synopsis: The film gives voice to the activists who participated in the dairy, their families and friends, and the people whose lives were changed by it.

English Title: 5 Broken Cameras
Language (and subtitles, if any): Arabic with English subtitles
Directed By: Emad Burnet and Guy Davidi
One-liner synopsis: In 2005 when the demonstrations against the wall started, Emad got his first camera and started to film the happenings in the village. 


English Title: The Time that Remains
Language (and subtitles, if any): Arabic with English subtitles
Directed By: Elia Suleiman 
One-liner synopsis: The Time That Remains is a 2009 semi-biographical drama film written and directed by Palestinian director Elia Suleiman.

FAKE NEWS: Fan Ping Ping (范拼拼) to star in Hollywood remake of Singapore hit 'Lulu the Movie'

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Singapore movie based on the popular TV character 'Lulu' from Channel 5' s 'The Snooze' has hit the jackpot by raking up $10 million in box office earnings over a span of 4 weeks and Hollywood producers have bought over the rights to remake the movie.

Touted as the 'Borat' of Singapore, 'Lulu the Movie' follows the adventures and misadventures of PRC lady Lulu as she struggles to survive and find her pot of gold in Singapore.  With an excellent grasp of Chinese accented English, director Mee Siam Chong has won fans over the years through the TV series, contributing to the movie's startling box office sales.

Acclaimed comedy actor/producer Stiff Martin who bought the rights to remake the movie discovered it when he was in Singapore for the Singapore premiere of Pink Panda 3.

He said,"I will be honest. Back home, every town with a Chinese takeaway will flock to watch a movie like this. It is funny and Lulu is lovable!"

"However I am not going to leave it like this. We will make it bigger and better. That's why we are casting international star Fan Ping Ping in the lead role. And we are also giving it a new name. The movie will be called 'A very Loud Chinese Woman Who Carries Dior.’ We believe American audiences will connect with that."

Over the last month, actress Fan Ping Ping, has been taking lessons from Mee Siam Chong to learn to speak in that signature accent. She has also done a tour of over 20 English language schools in Shanghai and Beijing which according to Mee Siam Chong was a crucial part of the training.

"I am wery sankful tooo actris Mee Siam Chong for her waluable lessong on hao too speeka Englishi. Before dis my Englishi iss ewen worse than dis. Now I can speak in complate sengtences and ewen learnt new proper English woor lie Feyshioneesta and Kiasu," said actress Fan Ping Ping.

Mee Siam Chong commented," I am excited to see "A Very Loud Chinese Woman" on the big screen in the US. This movie will demystify Chinese people to the Americans beyond their appearances in big numbers at your nearest Prada or Gucci stores."

Meanwhile, the producers have signed a collaboration agreement with Singapore Biotechnology company B-Star to develop armpit hair growing technology. According to Mee Siam Chong, who is consultant to this production, ample bodily hair in nether regions like the armpits are defining features of the character Lulu. As she has disclosed in a public interview years ago, Fan Ping Ping has hair loss issues affecting certain parts of her body. If developed, it will help complete the movie's portrait of this extraordinary woman.

Given the negative way it has depicted the mainland Chinese, 'Lulu the Movie' has stirred up its fair share of controversy over the last few weeks, especially with Chinese netizens and even the Chinese government. In what seemed like a retaliatory move against the movie, the Chinese government confiscated nine Orange Utans that were making its way to Singapore for display in the Singapore Zoo via Hong Kong. Given the current tension between China and the US over President-elect Donald Trump's phone call to Taiwanese President Tsai Ing Wen, political analysts speculate that 'A Very Loud Chinese Woman' is likely to worsen relationships between the two countries.

In response to this, the producers commented,"On the contrary, we think this movie will improve bilateral relations as this is an uplifting story of a mainland Chinese dreaming and making it big the US. In fact she gets to kick the butt of some nasty American men who messed around with her. How about that for revenge!”


Fan Ping Ping (as Lulu) had this add,”Lulu no maker engnemy wiss anywang, Lulu love ewelybody! Especiallee ifa you live ing bigga housi. Many many 美國人live ing bigga housi. Bigger dan 新加坡. Lulu like! I am sure you will liker Lulu. More than Bai Ling.”

KNN News

SINdie X Objectifs presents Production Talk 'LIVE', 11 Feb (Sat) 6PM

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SINdie is teaming up with Objectifs to present you Production Talk 'LIVE'!

Find out what 4 of Singapore’s most exciting up-and-coming directors are up to in this ‘live’ intimate interview session! Each filmmaker will share more about their current works-in-progress through dialogues and images and this will be followed by an 'AMA' (Ask-me-Anything) with the audience.

This pilot event is held in conjunction with Objectifs’ ‘Watch Local 2017’ series from 7 – 11 February. This session precedes the screening of Ler Jiyuan’s ‘The Love Machine’ at 7.30pm.

Event Details
Date: 11 Feb 2017
Time: 6-7pm
Venue: Objectifs Chapel Gallery
Admission is free.
Light refreshments will be provided.
Like us on Facebook @sindie.sg to get more updates!
Follow us on our Instagram @sindie.sg too.

And here are the 4 filmmakers!

 

Ray Pang

Ray Pang is a Singaporean film director who graduated with a Bachelor in Film & Television from Swinburne University of Technology, Australia. “BREAK”, his 2011 film received a Gold Remi Award at the 44th WorldFest-Houston Film Festival, the prestigious Orson Welles Award at the California Film Awards and Award of Excellence from Los Angeles Movie Awards.

Ray’s short film “The Team” (2011) won Overall Best Film and Best Editing at the Cine65 short film competition. The film was also screened in Japan’s Short Shorts Film Festival Asia 2012.

His short film “Closer to Me” (2012) won awards at the Asean International Film Festival, Festival Asia TV & FILM on Journey and Finalist at the Louis Vuitton Journey Awards.

Ray’s films received a director’s spotlight under the “Asian Typhoon” Program at the 8th Sapporo Short Fest.

More on Ray: www.raypang.com.sg

Jerrold Chong

Director/animator Jerrold Chong graduated with a BFA in Animation at California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). An avid lover of cinema, he is fascinated by the power of animated cinema as abstract visual metaphor and is driven by a desire to tell sincere stories that examines the depths of everyday life and the complexities of the human experience.

His films have screened at numerous international film festivals, including the Singapore International Film Festival (SGIFF), Encounters Short Film and Animation Festival in Bristol, Animatricks Animation Festival in Helsinski, Short Shorts Film Festival in Tokyo and Bucheon International Animation Festival in Korea. He participated in the Doc’s Kingdom International Seminar on Documentary Film in Azores, Portugal in 2013 and in 2015, his film “Nascent” was awarded the Best Animation Award at Singapore Short Film Awards (SSFA). He also participated in the SGIFF Southeast Asian Film Lab in 2016, with the project “Ten Dollars”. He hopes to write and direct a feature film in the future.

More on Jerrold: www.jerrold.chong.com

Daniel Yam

Daniel Yam is an award winning short film director who loves to take his audience on a journey to discover humanity. Often heart warming and sentimental, his works champion the human spirit. Daniel’s works have been seen by over 280 million viewers worldwide. His short films have been screened at various schools, churches, hospitals, broadcasting stations, film festivals and online social platforms. One of Daniel's short film GIFT has won the hearts of over 25 million viewers worldwide. The film is now on 10 subtitled languages and has has won awards at numerous international film festivals.

His short film for Singapore's Housing Development Board (HDB) "PROMISE"​ and the sequel "Promise II"​ was commended by Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on his Facebook. It has touched and moved thousands of audience. Another short film "RIPPLE" has inspired many with the powerful and stirring storyline. It was shared by millions and garnered more than 250 million views worldwide on multiple platforms. Daniel is one of the 4 directors in the feature film 4Love.

Daniel is now working on his second feature film, Wonder Boy, directing together with Dick Lee, Singapore’s best-known personalities in the music scene. Daniel was a key speaker at Content 360, Asia's premier event on content marketing for marketers and agencies of the savviest brands and leading experts. He has been in the media industry for more than a decade. He takes pleasure in working with clients from both the public and private sectors to tell stories that connect with the audience emotionally. When Daniel is invited to work on a project - to him it is like being given a magical key - a privilege and opportunity to open the hearts of his audience and unite them with a worthy cause. He serves the world with his work by gently reminding us with the potential of the human spirit.

More on Daniel: http://danielyam.wixsite.com/showreel

Kan Lume

Kan Lumé’s debut feature film The Art of Flirting won Best ASEAN Feature at Malaysian Video Awards 2005. Second feature Solos won the Best Newcomer Award at Torino G&L Film Festival. Third film Dreams from the Third World received the MovieMax Award at Cinema Digital Seoul 2008. Liberta picked up Special Mention at Cinema Digital Seoul 2012 and the NETPAC Award at Tripoli Film Festival 2013. The Naked DJ earned Kan his second NETPAC award for Best Asian Film at Jogja-Netpac Asian Film Festival 2014.

ShoutOUT! Live Streaming from the International Film Festival Rotterdam @The Projector

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The Projector is teaming up with the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) to bring IFFR LIVE to Singapore on 29 January (Sunday).

IFFR Live is a first of its kind series of film events held simultaneously in cinemas and on selected VOD platforms throughout Europe and beyond during International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR).

Through a live stream audiences everywhere can see the filmmaker and cast in Rotterdam, participate in a live Q&A via #livecinema on social media, enjoy music performances and more.

The choice of film screened for this event at The Projector is Noces (A Wedding). There will be an actual screening of the film at the Projector cinema, followed by a live simulcast Q&A with the cast and director. 

Date: 29 January 2017
Time: 11pm Singapore time (Rotterdam time: 4pm) 
Venue: The Projector


About the film:

The strong bond between Zahira and her parents is tested when an arranged marriage with a Pakistani man is set up as tradition decrees. She faces a heart-rending dilemma. Convincing portrait of the conundrums facing second generation immigrants that unfolds like a Greek tragedy in contemporary Brussels.

About the director:

Stephan Streker (1964, Belgium) worked as a photographer, film critic and sports reporter before moving onto filmmaking. He made his directorial debut in 1993 with the short film Shadow Boxing. Since then, he has made two more short films and three feature-length films. Le monde nous appartient (2013) was nominated for a Belgian Magritte Award for Best Picture. Noces (2016) is his third feature.

State Of Motion 2017: Looking At Singapore Through Film

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State Of Motion 2017: Through Stranger Eyes (SOM) is back as part of the annual Singapore Art Week, led by film researcher Toh Hun Ping and curator Kent Chan. Exploring how Singapore is portrayed internationally as well as locally in film, the events hopes to cultivate more interest and give more significance to different parts of Singapore by adding to its national narrative. 

The five films picked for this year's edition are Ricochet (1984), Saint Jack (1979), The Wild Eye (1967), Ring Of Fury (1973) and In Search of the Unreturned Soldiers in Malaysia (1971).  


Participants will have a glimpse of all five films, a bus tour to different locations featured on the screen and experience art works that respond to the films and the site. Bending space and time, participants are invited to look at Singapore through a different lens, beyond the every day, and dig deeper into our history. How do different groups of people view monuments erected in Singapore? Are there places that held more importance in the past compared to the now? 

The constant questioning and immersive artworks will accompany you through the entire journey. SINdie has the privilege of attending the tour, and experiencing ourselves what the SOM team has prepared.


  This is what the film screenings will be held, and how it looks like from the outside. Very simple bars and lights to guide the pathway for participants. There are interviews, artifacts and some posters to look at in relation to the films.

 The makeshift screen, Palimpest (2017) by Randy Chan works as a cinema. This is the starting point of the tour and speaks volumes about the site it is in (National Library Building Plaza). Made up of mainly sheets and wooden sticks, it is an impressive sculpture that holds its own dialogue even when no film screenings are happening. 

 Amanda Lee Koe's work responds to Saint Jack, and is held in a KTV lounge. Immersive, creative and lots of fun, it is a discovery of images and writings shown on the walls. It is one of our favourites for choice of location and how the work presents itself. To top it off, participants will view her music video No One Wants To Dance (2017).



Melantun Records (梦澜吞唱片)(2017) by Ujikaji is a music shop hidden in a shopping mall corner. Inspired by Ricochet, the film that follows David Bowie's 1983 concert right here in Singapore. Entering the space, we find ourselves navigating through records, music we have never heard of before as well familiar names. It is a curious environment to be in, where generations and the art of music making is timeless. 

State Of Motion 2017: SOM is still running until February 5th, with panel discussions, film screenings and more. Check out their website for more information.  

You may browse the rest of our photographs on the tour at our Facebook page

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Photography credit: Darren 'Merovign' Tan 
Written by: Teo Dawn

Singapore Noir: Sam Loh Talks Fame and Flesh

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If there is an enfant terrible of Singapore cinema, it must be Sam Loh. From the debut that he withdrew in protest of the MDA’s cuts to the midnight screening at film festivals that sold out, he is no stranger to notoriety—he was at one time, both branded pornographer and visionary, and often by the same people.

It is sometimes hard to reconcile the differences between one’s expectations of the man capable of dreaming up works like Lang Tong and Siew Lup, sister works in depravity but also grace, and the easygoing, soft-spoken man one has in front of them. However, do not be fooled by the gentle countenance; one only needs to look in his eyes to see the gleeful gleams that seem to hide the very merry visage of the Marquis de Sade himself.

It only seems fitting that the first issue of SINdie, a publication that has always thrived on an underground whim and a barely restraint sense of mischief, should cast a maestro who shares its outlook as the first cover guy. Here, creative director Alfonse Chiu interviews Sam Loh as he talks film, flesh, and the future of Singapore cinema.

What is your opinion of Singapore films nowadays?

I feel Singapore films now are too sterile. They are too clean, too nice, which reflect who we are as a people just about nicely, but are not terribly exciting to watch. It is pretty much due to this situation that I try to make films that are as entertaining as possible.

I feel that a good example for Singaporean films to follow would be Korean films. Korean films do not reflect the society, but they all have this sense of hyperrealism that gives everything a cinematic quality—the motions, the lights, the sounds. They are portrayals of events neither mundane nor banal; these films are escapism at its best.

To me, films are avenues for people to leave their usual, boring lives behind wherever, which is why I tend to shy away from making films that reflect the realities of life, because what is the fun in showing what everyone lives in everyday? If you watch my films, you will notice that I never shoot any HDBs. I stay as far away as possible from what I call HDB dramas.

To be fair though, the HDB is not at fault here, but where HDBs are involved in films, there are always clichés in plots and shots that are wholly unnecessary. Nowadays, you always see filmmakers go for that slow-mo pan-shot of a HDB landscape, and the ways so many people are just sitting around, mulling over nothing—everything is just so boring, and not reflective of Singapore, I feel.

Singaporeans are not like that. Though, of course, we may be boring and sterile at times, we are not stuck in that mode forever, unlike what some filmmakers would like you to believe.

More, I saw that even students all do the exact same thing, when they want to make a student film. There have not been any noticeable differences in the student films I have seen, in terms of how they represent Singapore, in a long time.

There will always be this very nicely framed shot of an HDB flat, with people sitting in the corners being lonely. There are so many of these out there, it is not even funny anymore. It is a great shock to realize that even our short films are the same now—it makes one want to ask aloud: “What is happening? Can't they just tell a normal story?”

What is your journey as a director like?

I started as a commercial director, way back in the 1990’s. Then, in 1998 I stopped working and went to New York University Tisch School of the Art to study film in an intensive workshop that lasted for a few months, which culminated in a short film or thesis film.

As I was already working, I did not exactly have the luxury of time and money to complete the three-year course. By the time I returned from New York, having made a short film already, I moved away from commercials and dove straight into narrative works. It was a huge transition that I underwent career wise—I broke away from doing commercials completely and did drama.

That was the start of my filmmaking journey.  

Now I shoot TV drama predominantly, and I think that shooting TV dramas is the best training ground for any director to know the whole process of filmmaking from start to finish. One learns how to work with a team, work within a time limit, and work with actors. TV also offers you the chance to work more and gain more practical experiences than any fulltime independent feature director.

If you look at the greats of filmmaking, they all started with TV. Now, with the rise of Netflix, everyone is going back to TV.  A lot of people look down on it but I do not see it that way, one learns constantly and innumerably.

When did your interest in film solidify?

As a child, my childhood was quite normal, though I never quite liked doing normal things. Since young, I felt that film should be radically different from reality; I thought that it is something for the audience to watch, and so we should do things that deviate from what is normal, because everyone knows normal, everyone lives normal. There are two sides to everyone, and I would rather explore the dark side that not everyone dares to acknowledge, than the normal side. There are a lot fewer films that reflect the dark side of humanity than films that reflect a more conventional side.

Making commercials also reinforced my love for film. At its core, advertisements are really just very short story telling. So, owing to the time limit, we would need to get right to the crux of the scenario and bring out the flavor of the scene. This hones one’s aesthetic sense, as well as the ability to make sense of a story in a very accessible way.

Getting back to your question, while I have always been a visual person, it is after my experiences at NYU that I decided to really leave commercial and do narrative drama seriously. The day the production wrapped for the first drama I did after I returned from study, I could not sleep the entire night. I got the feeling that this was the moment that spelled out film as my life calling. It is the best feeling a young filmmaker could feel—to have that palpable excitement keep you up because you just know that it was what you were looking for all these years, something that you found could truly connect to.


Can you describe your artistry?

As I have mentioned, I am a very visual person. When I write scripts, I plot in terms of visuals—the way I describe the scenes in my treatments are almost like novels. I would sculpt my mental images the way a novelist would describe them to you in terms of the little nuances, like what you notice as you enter the room, the scents that permeate the air, the subtle movements from somewhere.

I do not like to write dialogues.  They are boring to me; dialogues will come naturally when the scene is set. It is the best if one can do a scene without dialogues. It is not that spoken words take away from the impacts of the visuals—they help to deliver information in a timely manner—but one shouldn't be at the mercy of words. Much like the early days of silent movies, when they have no dialogues and are all narratives at its purest form, my idea of a best film would be one where the audience can understand everything without needing you to tell them anything.

More, I try not to construct plots with too many characters in them. When one is crafting a story, things other than the bare essentials should not cloud one’s perceptions. Maintaining focus on the core narrative is crucial—if I set up a scenario around three characters, the focus ultimately will be on these three characters.

The key is to not be distracted. Events need to revolve around these central characters. If need be, the narrative must be pared down, because having too many characters are just noises distracting from the main melody. Just have a main crew with a clear motivation, and a clear journey, and audiences will be able to follow and appreciate your film more, rather than get confused over too many subplots and twists.

What is your favorite film?

There is this old Italian classic, Bicycle Thieves, by Vittorio De Sica which I like very much. It is not a silent film but it is very good nonetheless—it was the only film where I cried at the ending. It was a restored version that I watched in a cinema that showed restored classics in New York, and everybody was queuing around the block in winter just to watch it.

To me, the last scene was so powerful, or maybe it was because I was lonely at the time. There was no dialogue; the police caught the father, and the son witnessed it. It is hard to describe, but the way the subtleties conveyed all the emotions of those two was just divine.

What was your biggest obstacle as a filmmaker?

Censorship. While rating systems help, they should be more relaxed regarding certain films, so that they have greater chances of finding an audience. Given a rating like R21, there should not be any censorship: an audience that old can decide for themselves what they want to watch; I mean, they went through national service, they literally held guns and were trained to kill. There is this weird disparity between expectations of these youths as adults, and treating them like children. What gives?

Especially since now that everything is on the Internet unfiltered, there are worst that they can access than what is in the cinema. So, I have no idea what is the trouble with allowing legal adults to select what they want to consume. Already, it is so hard trying to market an R21 film; there are so many limitations! We cannot promote the film in housing estates; we cannot have banners or posters in public space. Even for showings in a theatre like Shaw Lido, only the box office can display the poster. With such restrictions in place, it is even harder to make money from R21 films. I feel that the regulations must be done on a case by case basis, because it is simply not fair to impose such arbitrary guidelines on works that can differ in so many ways, like intent or subject matter.

How do you justify the sex and violence in your works?

They are integral to the story; there is a reason why the characters did what they did, mine are not blatant violence and porn kind of movies. The women in my films are strong female characters who are complex, and who just happen to lean towards the dark side. They just tend to cross into that dark side to do heinous things. For me at least, I would consider those to be the interesting things one watch a film for, to witness someone leave the beaten path and not be limited by anything in society.


How do you find the balance between commercial interest and your artistic integrity?

When I went to Herman Yau's masterclass the other day, the first thing he said was 'make sex and violence, and people will come and see' which made me feel that I might be on the right track.

Above all, I want to make something that is very entertaining, because I do not want people to just go into the cinema and spend and hour or two and twelve dollars to watch a very boring film.

Filmmakers need to understand that they do not make films just for themselves.

The act of filmmaking itself is to look for an appreciative audience, if there is no one watching but you, what is the point? In the words of George Lucas, filmmakers are all entertainers, and are no better than any buskers on the streets performing to get a dime. I thought that made a lot of sense.

As filmmakers, we need people to appreciate our work, to like our work. I thought that it is this balance between commercial interest and art that makes filmmaking as a discipline so beautiful. That is why I never look down on the material aspect of filmmaking; I feel that we as independent filmmakers should not be limited to making art films only.

While there is nothing wrong in making art films for the sake of art, whether one finds an audience is another thing entirely. I was looking at the queue for the Siew Lup screening during SGIFF that sold out, and I saw a lot of new audience—not the usual festival crowd—but audience that actually buy the ticket to watch the film. They looked like the general public, and to me, that was everything because new audiences mean that you are doing something right.

I would rather have this kind of audience than the elitist art crowd who consume films that were made for the sake of awards.


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