Thursday, April 28, 2011
ShoutOUT!: Old Places and HERE DVD Launch
Join us in supporting local filmmaking talents as Objectifs Films launches both Here by Ho Tzu Nyen & Old Places by Royston Tan at Books Kinokuniya come 7th May 2011, Saturday, at 1.30 p.m.
Receiving a warm reception when screened at the 2009 Directors' Fortnight of the Cannes Film Festival, Here, an experimental film and a love story about mental patients set in a fictional hospital is artist and filmmaker Ho Tzu Nyen's first feature film.
Promising filmmaker Royston Tan's Old Places, which was screened on Okto as a special National Day documentary feature in 2010, invites Singaporeans to reminisce yesterday's past today and features the voices of Singaporeans as they recall their memories of disappearing places in Singapore.
Both Ho Tzu Nyen and Royston Tan will be appearing at the DVD launch session.
Details as follows:
7th May 2011 (Saturday)
1.30 p.m. – 2.30 p.m.
Kinokuniya Singapore Main Store, Crossroads
Source:http://www.kinokuniya.com.sg/whatson_events_here-old-places.html
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
SINdie needs people to be in a crazy music video!
SINdie is shooting a music video soon and it's a crazy irreverent twist to an often-heard national song. How timely with all the election fever going on! It is officially Part 2 to a a project we started last year, where we interviewed about 30 leading voices in Singapore films and arts on how they would direct a national song video differently. Click on the video above to see what they said!
We are now taking most of these ideas and putting them into a single music video! Challenging but possible. You be the witness.
For now, we want people who are interested to:
1) act or
2) sing or
3) appear in a music video or
4) contribute props
Simply write to sindieonly@gmail.com or call Jeremy Sing at 91870187.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Review: Red Dragonflies

Red Dragonflies is a one-of-a-kind fusion of past and present, of personal and the social. A sensory delight that ignores the many conventions of cinema, this film was accessible enough to win over the jury at the Jeonju International Film Festival last year where it won the Special Jury Prize, earning raves from them for "its mysterious evocation of Singapore's disappearing history", and yet at parts so dreamily opaque that it may not at once be explicable.
Liao Jiekai, a graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, has made a debut feature that both entrances and confounds in equal capacity. It offers very little by way of old-fashioned plot, even though its synopsis in the press notes gives one the impression of a sprawling epic spanning generations. People who expect gripping drama and non-stop plot twists will be sorely disappointed. In fact, part of the mystery and magic of the film is that it shows and conveys so much even though very little happens in it. I found myself enthralled throughout, not wanting to miss a single moment.
Red Dragonflies tells the story of three children, then three adolescents, and then three young adults. The scenes of the three adolescents - Rachel, Tienwei and Junjie - form the bulk of the film. In these scenes, the three teenagers explore an abandoned railway track, although one of them soon goes missing. Elsewhere, a 26-year-old Rachel returns to Singapore after staying in New York for a couple of years, and soon reconnects with a boy who seemed to carry a torch for her in the past.
The connection between all these characters is tenuous at first, since Liao is careful to imbue the film with a lingering sense of mystery. He eschews the tired visual cues of flashback sequences, and in opting to go with languid editing and subtle juxtaposition to weave in between scenes of the past and present, readily gives you the freedom to draw up the links between the characters of the past and present yourself. In evoking memory and history in film, it is all too easy to go the sepia-hued trippy-nostalgia route, but Liao’s approach is far more tender and affecting, even if causing some confusion at first from the lack of distinction between past and present. His conviction pays off; the tone of the film is that of an elegy, lyrical and poetic, and it successfully captures the fragility of memory - both social and personal.
As the teenage trio makes their idyllic trek through the densely forested areas, their easy rapport – their trek is interspersed with playful jestings and teasing jibes – keeps the rather repetitive scenes constantly interesting (despite not much happening, till one of them gets lost). That they opted to make a trip into the great outdoors is a metaphor in itself; the untamed wilds speaks of the unbridled energy and raging passions of adolescence. There is incredible restrain in the handling of youthful passion here. I liked how Liao decided to forego the existential angst that is usually associated with adolescence, instead focusing on the characters' innocence, maintaining a delicate sensibility throughout the film.
The Rachel, Junjie and Tienwei of the present day are far from their former selves, however. Somewhat jaded, these three have settled into their routines, perhaps searching for something more to their lives. The urban setting of the present day, juxtaposed against the lush, wild, forested setting of the other scenes, is not just a direct commentary on Singapore’s disappearing history, but also a metaphor for squelched dreams and muted desires for the nation, as well as the characters. The trio in the present day does not resort to histrionics to convey their characters' growing pains, but the still, cautious camerawork gives you a sense of their silent anguish.
The performances from the cast are uniformly good, especially for one made out of many untrained actors, but the standout scenes are still the ones with the three teenagers. Their real-life chemistry (producer Bee Thiam said the actors Oon Yee Jeng, Yeo Shang Xuan and Ong Kuan Loong were asked to spend time together as a group before filming commenced) translates well onscreen, and their improvised dialogue is cannily authentic. Their camaraderie is very much the anchor of the trekking scenes, because while gorgeously filmed, my one beef with the film is that there are some dead spots in these sequences - too many shots of them trekking through the forest. If their expedition is symbolic of a journey through Singapore’s past, then this journey is very much uneventful. Fortunately, their brilliant chemistry buoys some of the drier moments, and Ong Yee Jeng’s chirpy Rachel is the heart of the trio as well as those scenes. Yeo plays the outspoken, playful but slightly volatile Tienwei with the right amount of brashness, and Ong Kuan Loong gives the reserved Junjie much-needed tenderness and sensitivity to balance up the energy in the trio, even though I felt the film could have better explored his character and his intense introvertion.
In the end, Red Dragonflies, so unostentatious in its beauty, exerts a hold on you that is impossible to break, only if you give it a chance to do so. A film that both delights and baffles, it will surely polarize audience, but once you get into the world of Red Dragonflies – and it takes a while to do so – you will go with the flow and enjoy every moment of it.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
ShoutOUT!: 2nd Experimental Film Forum
13 experimental videos on the theme - Eternity
Thursday 5 – Sunday 8 May, 7:30pm
The Substation Theatre
Admission: $7 or $5 (concession) available from the Substation box office
Curated by experimental Singapore filmmaker, Victric Thng, and the programme manager for Moving Images, Aishah Abu Bakar.
Production Talk - "Tabula Rasa" by Malcolm Ong
Are you satisfied with how Tabula Rasa turned out? Is there anything you would have done differently?
Any projects in mind?
2SSFA - 'The Fish and The Ring' by Ervinna Cahyadi
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
2SSFA - 'Evie' by Chong Ren Rong
This film was nominated for Best Animation at the recent 2nd Singapore Short Film Awards.
Production Talk - "Bani Ibrahim" by Raihan Harun
Bani Ibrahim or "Children of Abraham" is a tale of morality set against the backdrop of Australian suburbia that condenses the cognitive dissonance experienced by the global Muslim community torn by the rise of violent extremism- personified by the film's protagonist, Dr Hafiz .
Hafiz, a Palestinian-Australian doctor is faced with the dilemma on whether to save the life of his fugitive brother intent on committing a suicide attack.
Monday, April 18, 2011
Mise En SIN Best Poster Voting Contest THE RESULTS!
Our 'Hi-Tech Randomiser' tool has selected 5 lucky winners who will each walk away with a DVD,partially sponsored by Objectifs Films
They are....*DRUM ROLL PLEASE*
(Note: Please Identify yourselves with the usernames you have voted in the FLICKR account you have signed up in)
As mentioned,
The Most Voted Poster also gets a prize. The filmmaker (or he could pass it to his designer!) will win a LIMITED EDITION COLOURSPLASH CHAKRAS LOMO CAMERA!
Once again,Thanks for your love and Continuous support for MISE EN SIN poster exhibition!
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Review: The Ultimate Winner

There is little satisfaction in watching The Ultimate Winner, except in noting the irony of its own title. The film winds up, well, the ultimate winner in the category of downright awful local films released thus far this year.
Li Nanxing wears two hats for this film: director and actor. The movie isn't local TV star Li Nanxing's first foray onto the big screen, but it does mark his virgin stab at directing, and when I say 'stab' here, I mean impaling-you-with-a-blunt-object-over-and-over-again kinda painful. It was, as you can guess, difficult to sit through, and there were so many things wrong with the film that every other scene had me cringing in horror.
Li plays Tian Cai, a gambling prodigy who discovers his gift in his youth. After his father's untimely death at an illegal gambling den, he uses his talent to make a liviing and fend for himself, and this relentless gambling irks his devoted Christian wife Zhi Hui (Rebecca Lim). She is now pregnant, and wants him to nip his vice in the bud before she conceives. Despite truly loving his sweet, long suffering wife, Tian Cai decides he still has to make more money to give his family a better life. With the help of his junket, Honey Ma (Constance Song), he slips into a series of high-stakes games, and the thrill of the big win rekindles his love for the game. He soon rubs shoulders with a wealthy businessman named Champion Lee (Andy Chen), who eventually becomes his nemesis, and things quickly spiral out of control.
Li's turn here as a gambling maestro is very much reminiscent of his role as the King of Gamblers in local drama series The Unbeatables (I - III), except without the charisma or the suaveness. Tian Cai is but a caricature; the character feels like one recycled from a dozen other films/television series exploring gambling or addiction. Li does lend the character some gravitas, but there is no possible way he could transcend the limitations of such a lifeless script. Rebecca Lim also fares decently as the tolerant wife to Tian Cai, capturing her silent anguish, but there is little for her to do in the script besides nagging and berating Tian Cai. The other characters are simply live-size cutouts full of histrionics (cue suicidal attempts, big bawling sessions, scream-fests, and pseudo-menacing glaring) and yet devoid of soul. They are but mere ciphers - their presence only serves to fuel the Christian-evangelical message driving the entire film.
To say that the film's didiacticism is its biggest fault would not be fair, because many great films have dealt with heavy handed moralizing, but to sacrifice everything important in a film, in this case, most notably interesting characters and a coherent plot, is why The Ultimate Winner falls so badly on its own face. Without being sufficiently invested in the characters, especially the lead, one would hardly care what his addiction does to him. Furthermore, a cautionary message against the ills of gambling will only have weight if its glamourous qualities are juxtaposed next to its ability to wreck lives; you have to present its tantalising, seductive nature in order for people to understand the allure of a gambling addiction, however self-destructive it may be. The Ultimate Winner, however, does not even attempt to make gambling look cool - or perhaps it tries, but fails miserably. The players at the high stakes gambling games are dull as dishwater and have zero charisma, and even Champion Lee is all smarm and no charm. The gambling matches had no tension, little mind-f***ing; there was no character and imagination in the directing of the gambling scenes. As if to take away all of the allure in gambling, Li makes sure most of Tian Cai's exploits inevitably end up with his wife berating him.
I wonder if it is the overwhelming Christian voices behind the film that have decided to portray gambling in this light. Cornerstone Pictures is likely a Christian filmmaking company, and Li Nanxing himself a Christian, finding faith a couple of years ago, which helped him deal with his personal demons, so the film, probably being an extension of their beliefs, is moralistic in tone. Midway through the movie, when it was obvious this movie is nothing more than a thinly veiled social message against the dangers of gambling and/or the power of faith/God, I tried to mentally block out all the overwrought scenes and focus on the superficial joys of the movie.
And yet even this did not work out. The film, besides being a huge Christian evangelical machine, is also a major killjoy. Every fun scene is truncated and any worldly joy in the film is quickly nuffed out before it goes into excess: Honey's advances on Tian Cai are rebuffed time after time, never amounting to anything sexual; a car racing scene that was briefly enjoyable ends up with Champion taking a breathalyzer test; Tian Cai's wins are never celebrated by his wife, and his family is never shown to enjoy the fruits of his labour.
So yes, while I was doggedly hoping the movie would capture the glamour of the high life and the thrill of gambling, scaling the heights of wretched excess as a respite from all the emotional histrionics, it ends up depriving me of any form of superficial entertainment. It is an overwrought, incoherent, boring and all together ineffective movie that is more suited to be screened in a church than in the cinema hall.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Production Talk - "Flux" by Nigel Heng
Why did you decide to direct a dance film? Is there a personal significance to the genre?

One more new voice for SINdie - Walter Sim
Walter loves to kick back, live in the moment and enjoy life just the way it should be. Yet these moments do not come often given he has ironically decided to be an aspiring journalist. Being thrown thick into the action most of the time, you can bet that he goes all out to relax when the opportunity arises. Theatre, musicals, cool eateries, coffee joints, shopping, and of course, movies. He likes to believe that his penchant for thinking deep and secondary school experience in drama are sufficient in bestowing him analytical capabilities to comprehend even the most incomprehensible arthouse film. But sadly that often isn’t the case. This multi-linguist (English and Mandarin, with decent Spanish, basic Swedish and French) has been mistaken for a native Japanese on more occasions than he can count. He is game to do almost anything, and has skydived in Switzerland, seen the aurora borealis in Sweden, watched a live soccer match in England, eaten a rat in Taiwan, and been on the G-Max at Clarke Quay on an impulse.
2SSFA - 'Flux' by Nigel Heng
This film was nominated at the 2nd Singapore Short Film Awards for Best Editing, Best Cinematography and Best Experimental film.
2SSFA - 'Wake' by Atsuko Hirayanagi
Or perhaps life is really as heartless as it goes, ebbing and flowing. And the past, easily forgotten no matter how hard one struggles to hold on.
2SSFA - 'Mickey' by Wesley Leon Aroozoo
This film was nominated for Best Art Direction (Wesley Leon Aroozoo, Michelle Cheong) and Best Experimental at the 2ns Singapore Short Film Awards.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
2SSFA - 'Scot Free' by Chia Peizhen
Scot Free has travelled widely, screening to Film Festival audiences in Singapore, Vancouver and Bangkok. This 16-minute French short garnered a triple nomination at the Singapore Short Film Awards, an easily well-deserved feat given its tight-pacing and novel means of telling a relatively clichéd story. The director’s bio explains all—Chia, who recently graduated from Ngee Ann Polytechnic, majored in directing and has a penchant of featuring female empowerment in her films.
Two female French tourists find themselves utterly bored in the stoic urban jungle that is Singapore. Well, what would they expect—romanticism à la Paris all over the world? They complain endlessly about the heat and humidity, whine about the lack of cultural elements and the need to report to their relatives back home with lies of what they have been up to, and cringe their noses at Indian food.
Yet one night an uninvited guest suddenly appears at their hotel room door—a drunkard who stereotypically has to be a German to add to the European mix. Violence ensues, and they somehow murder him. But what matters more, however, is the secondary plot that lies beneath this façade, a subdued lesbian story that is told through exchanged words, gazes, and actions.
“Simple things can be hard to explain at times,” muses one of the protagonists. How true.
This film was nominated for Best Director, Best Fiction and Best Script at the 2nd Singapore Short Film Awards.
2SSFA - 'Too Far North' by Koo Chia Meng
So reads the one-liner synopsis for Koo Chia Meng’s Too Far North, a 5-minute non-fiction film that intersperses Singaporean voiceovers with still shots of the Taipei city landscape, and the occasional time-lapse. The cinematography is exquisite, as Koo exhibits a sensitivity to framing in his maximization of the use of lines in several stunning frames, one of which an aerial shot of a busy Taipei crossroad that was especially impressionistic to this reviewer.
The film’s message is clear and strong without any of the overbearing Total Defence “love your country” overtones that our government bodies seem to be fond of in their collaterals and avdertisements. All in all, this short film was certainly effective in evoking the silver of pride the average cynical Singaporean layperson might have buried deep in the recesses of his heart.
“Only you would know where home is”. Well said.
This film was nomniated for Best Documentary in the 2nd Singapore Short Film Awards.
2SSFA - 'The Forest Spirits' by Ting Szu Kiong
I attended the first nominee sscreening of the 2nd Singapore Short Film Awards expecting films that were of top-notch quality, to say the least. Thus I was actually befuddled over the inclusion of The Forest Spirits, until I found out what the film was nominated for later on.
To say the least, this was definitely the weakest showing of the six films screened for the programme. For it is downright slapstick and tacky. Granted that B-grade films is a respectable genre all on their own—and I would say the best B-grade film would be one that is the most slapstick, the most tacky, the most lame—but this film simply jars from the lineup of what are otherwise pretty outstanding shorts.
Of course there is a need for a crowdpleaser, but this hardly sat in with the Substation crowd.
The Forest Spirits is lame, unfunny, and tries too hard to entertain yet end up leaving audiences confounded over how they spent their last eight minutes of their lives. “What on earth was that?” I thought to myself. Maybe the forest spirits could help me answer that.
Yet my review notes did include one line that was the perfect answer to my initial doubts over the inclusion of this screening: “(The) music is really polished.” Unfortunately, it falls short of winning an award—in fact all the short films nominated for the category fell short—because the judges were looking for sound design that is “more than just putting music into a film” and that “involves a sound scape”. It does make sense—for all the polished technicalities of the music, it only serves to accentuate the scenes onscreen without serving to create a visceral image in the minds of the audience.
This films was nminated for Best Sound (Studio.MB) at the 2nd Singapore Short Film Awards.
Last Chance to vote for your Favourite Film Poster and Win!

2. KWA GIU by Jacen Tan
3. STORIES by James Ho
4. 4:30 by Royston Tan
5. 881 by Royston Tan
6. MASALA MAMA by Michael Kam
7. THRESHOLD by Loo Zihan
8 - 11.
AH KONG by Royston Tan
HUSH BABY by Tan Wei Keong
TAK GIU by Jacen Tan
1. Go to SINdie's Facebook page via this link or type www.facebook.com/SINdieOnly
2. Click on any of the images to go to our Flickr.com account where you can find all the film posters.
3. Browse through the entries and click on "Favorite" to vote.
4. You're done!
Monday, April 11, 2011
New Blood, Thick Blood for SINdie
Mabelyn Ow has been an active contributor to Singapore's burgeoning film industry over the past 15 years. Starting as a production assistant on Army Daze, Mabelyn has gone on to work in various capacities in her career in film and television production. Over the course of her career, she has worked with and produced for some of the most significant and groundbreaking film directors in Singapore, notably Eric Khoo, Royston Tan, Djin Ong Jasmine Ng and Kelvin Tong. In addition, she has also produced documentaries for Discovery Networks Asia and National Geographic Channel. Her latest projects were Royston Tan's 12 Lotus (2008) and his short film Little Note (2009).Aside from film production, Mabelyn's keen interest in our film industry saw her spend a few years volunteering as well as being a part of the Singapore International Film Festival Secretariat. She has now continued her pursuit of nurturing film production in Singapore by joining the Lasalle College of the Arts – The Puttnam School of Film as a part-time lecturer.
Amarendra is a 22 year-old film student from Mumbai City, currently studying for a degree at La Salle College of the Arts. Singapore a strange attraction for him despite the colourful movie industry in India. ‘Amar’ graduated from Junior College in Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Mathematics), then went to pursue a 1-yr diploma in Cinematography. Since his diploma, he has worked in Bollywood productions, TV series and ad films in India either as an Assistant Director or as an assistant cinematographer.
He’s also made a few independent films about social issues. To add another feather to his cap, he also composes and performs his own music. The films he is inspired by most, are films that advocate change and have a strong voice in them. That said, he can’t resist comedy and action genres as well. Enjoy his music here!
ShoutOUT!:Call For Entries:8th Singapore Short Cuts

Call for Entries: 8th Singapore Short Cuts
A Programme of the National Museum of Singapore Cinémathèque
Wednesday 6, Thursday 7, Wednesday 13 and Thursday 14 August 2011
National Museum of Singapore Cinémathèque
Celebrating its 8th season this year, Singapore Short Cuts continues to be one of the most popular and widely anticipated showcases of local short films in Singapore. The program features a diverse selection of Singaporean short films from documentaries to animation and experimental work with post-screening discussions with the filmmakers.
Some of the filmmakers whose films have been featured in Singapore Short Cuts include Victric Thng, Eva Tang, Boo Junfeng, Wee Li Lin, Tan Pin Pin and Eric Khoo. The 8th Singapore Short Cuts is co-organised by the National Museum of Singapore and The Substation.
Short Cuts is co-presented with The Substation and the National Museum of Singapore.
Deadline for Submissions:
20 May 2011
Click here to download an submission form
For more information, please contact:
Warren Sin
Assistant Manager, Programming
National Museum of Singapore
93 Stamford Road
Singapore 178897
Tel: (65) 6332 3957 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (65) 6332 3957 end_of_the_skype_highlighting
Fax: (65) 6332 1420
warren_sin@nhb.gov.sg
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Production Talk - "Wake" by Atsuko Hirayanagi

I'm in the middle of post production for my 2nd year film, so finishing it would be the immediate future plan. Then the next project would be my thesis, then you graduate, then your first feature... I hope it never ends. Hopefully I grow as a filmmaker each time.















