Tuesday, August 30, 2011

5 Singapore Independent Documentaries to take us from China to prostitutes to sex


'Post love' on superficial viewing comes across as a tacky exploration of love and lust among the elderly with it's expressionistic and sometimes 'cardboard-like' portrayal of certain situations. But the documentary digs deep and is not afraid to ask the awkward questions. So the sketchy touches really belie a refreshing eye on an issue that's always been around.

Through a series of interviews with various silver-haired folks, we dig into the psyche of their amorous selves or rather what's left of it. While the stereotypes of the old men and their undying lust tended to surface, to humourous effect, the film did reveal what older women felt about finding love which was compelling. (Women are shown to be undeniably more resilient than men, unfortunately for me!) Among others, there is the reality of menopause, and old men seeking pleasures elsewhere when their wives are no longer up to it.

Beyond the tokenistic re-enactment of various familiar situations, this film has more bite than you think. It is not afraid to pose awkward questions to dirty old men and it stretches our visualisation of what could be post-menopausal/retirement/grandparenthood love with impressionistic illustrations of what it is trying to explore- old people in love and sex.

The film could have done one thing more justice though - it's exploration of age through getting two young actors to transform themselves could have been taken beyond the illustrative to the exploratory. It would have been interesting to know how two young people woul feel when put on the fast track to 'menopause'!


If there was one documentary that embodied the spirit of independent filmmaking, it would have been 'JoJo', rightly placed after Post-Love for its dealings with the same turf of 'lust'. JoJo eschews the traditional format of establishing a subject, getting points of views, forming conclusions etc, it goes straight into the epicentre of it all and documents it - the fish tank.

The fish tank for those who are unfamiliar is where you choose your ware. Girls, with number tags pasted on their hips sit under the LED mood enhancing lighting as the 'shop's display' for customers to make their selection. Like commodities, they are literally scrutinised and even fall into different grades and origin-driven classes that determine their price.

Alright, it does not take a genius to make this expose. But it takes lan audacious spirit to plant a camera in a bag and walk straight into a brothel to document the world inside. And if that is not enough, ask the girl for an interview.

While the film did not seem deliberately structured, there was a semblance of narrative progression and even closure to it. These subjects are first viewed with distant curiosity, then one let's us one step closer into her life and it ends with a payoff glimpse of her albeit with a ironic blonde wig that seems to work against her attempt at mimicry.

The title 'Comfort' in this portrait of a taxi driver is aptly humourous. The short film is the filmmaker's ode to his father who is a taxi driver who drives his taxi with a huge dose of pride. Something though not unseen but rare in Singapore. Before we whine about how taxi driver stories are 'done to death', the unscripted, unabashed nature of the taxi driver's banter with the camera draws us in.


While being a day-in-the-life-of journey, the 'touch of comfort' is the straight talking touch of the driver. Of course it helped that driver is the father of the filmmaker which made him 'obligated' in a way to complete the video journey and also be a little more comfortable about hamming it up for the camera. But you also got to give it to the filmmaker for asking the right questions, holding the 'record' at the right moments and editing it to give comic punctuation to what was virtually a monologue by the driver. There was of course one moment when his own vehicle did the talking - the LED mood lighting from underneath, and if u are observant, the LED stars on the car ceiling, like a kind of payoff to the title 'comfort'.

Before the film seems a little too exploitative, the filmmaker delightfully draws the connections between the driver and the people around him as well. Not just the passengers (of whom or was surprisingly captured in an interview), but the people close to his life as well, his daughter and not least of all, the person behind the film, his son. Effectively opening us up to the world beyond the driver's seat, extending the axes of vision for the audience beyond the typical cross- seat mid shot that a car space would only allow. Most importantly, it made the driver look less like an attention seeker who is desperate to entertain.

 'Train ride' the film is like a photographer's collection of lyrical parting shots of a subject, narratively loose but visually pretty. At the core, it is a visual essay to lament the end of the train's useful life in Manzhouli in China, virtually a series of postard-pretty images put together, peppered with soundbite from people within the community. Intimately framed shots aside, the filmmaker also puts his own shadow into the programme by documenting his interaction with the train staff right in the intimate confines of the driver's cabin. Yet, the film seems to be in a strange kind of paradox - you are physically close enough to the characters but never really close enough to the emotional core of the issue. Like a travelogue, the film is pretty but you are really looking at it like a tourist catching a visual steal of a monument only knowing that it's important and you need to get that camera rolling, never mind that it means little to you.


'Roots' hinges on what seems like a random choice of 2 student profiles in China - one is an ethnic Chinese, bred in Canada paying a hometown visit while the other is a Mexican who studying in China.  The film explores identity and no surprises for guessing this if you saw a clue in the title of the film. The subject is trite but the two profiles are interesting. Perhaps the filmmaker is trying to pit two opposites of the concept of culture shock (a reverse culture shock to be exact for the Canadian-bred Chinese.

While the Sean, Chinese boy sprouts nothing off the expected in his interview (relating to his Chinese roots and being proud even though he was bred in Canada), the filmmaker has selectively and wisely documented some 'threshold' moments of putting his cultural affinities to the test, like conversing with the taxi driver and following his family to the graves of his grandparents for Ching Ming (remembering the dead). While blending in with his relatives like part of the family, his bigger physique, almost like a testament to a North American upbringing, spoke as much for his sense of 'alienation' as much as what he verbally said. There was a particular scene at the dinner table where the family, almost too big for the table had to huddle around it and he stood out for his size among his relatives who have lived on a leaner Chinese diet. But of course, his visit was not not staying put at alientation but had a sweet ending to when he finally revisits the objects and things he left behind, including a chair his grandfather used to sit on - a distant memory that still rekindles that warm fuzzy feeling.

The story of the Adrian, the Mexican student presented the flip side of the card, a sense of getting away from one's original culture, dislocating oneself and trying to find a new sense of belonging and identity. A first glance seems to tell me this chapter is about China's progress on wold domination, everyone's moving here to learn Mandarin. But it is also about borders and cultural lines disappearing among peope today. He said with his kids, he wants them to master English, Spanish and Mandarin. It is tough enough handling two languages in Singapore, you begin to wonder if such parental imposition of culture is ever justified. But we are back to the concept of upbringing again and how blind we all are to influences when are young like an empty glass, which in a way makes a loose connection to Sean's cultural assimilation in Canada. So perhaps, if you think about Sean and Adrian deeply, they are not so randomly paired after all, for the filmmaker is really seeking to paint a snapshot of 2 people at busy crossroads.

'The Impossibility of Knowing', by Tan Pin Pin, which was screened as part of the Singapore selection of short films had been reviewed earlier as part of the Singapore Biennale.

Article by Jeremy Sing

Friday, August 26, 2011

24th Singapore International Film Festival

After months of anticipation and a number of hints about how this year would be “different”, the line-up for the 24th Singapore International Film Festival has been announced. It certainly doesn’t disappoint (though after ScreenSingapore, very little would). Festival founder Geoffrey Malone remains the Chairman of the Board of Directors but he’s joined by radio personality Hamish Brown and Hong Leong Holdings Investment Director Quek Kon Hui.


The program for this year’s festival includes 144 feature films split into 16 segments and Singaporean cinema gets a decent nod with a dedicated program. The Silver Screen Awards will return as well. Anticipated celebrity arrivals include Ryan Kwanten, Josh Radnor and possibly Guy Pearce.

The Programme


Opening Film - Red Light Revolution (China)


Singapore Panorama The best Singaporean feature films of 2011
Echoing Love (produced by Edmund Chen), Eclipses (Daniel Hui), Ignore All Detour Signs (Helmi Ali), I Have Loved (Elizabeth Wijaya/Lai Weijie), Sing The Blues (Kenny Ong), The Outsiders (Madhav Mathur), The Gang (Kelvin Sng), Fairytales (Kelvin Sng)


C’est la VieThe dramatic
Me and Orson Welles (USA), Chongqing Blues (China), Breakfast Lunch Dinner (China/Thailand/Singapore), The First Beautiful Thing (Italy), Beyond (Sweden), The Sun Beaten Path (Tibet), Animal Town (South Korea/USA), Minggu Pago Di Victoria Park (HK/Indonesia), The Off Hours (USA), Gesher (Iran), Buddha Mountain (China), Demain Des L’aube (France), Wang’s Ideal (China), Captain Abu Raed (Jordan), Small Town Murder Songs (Canada), Tilt (Bulgaria), Lao Wai (China), beside(s,) happiness (HK), A Screaming Man (France), The Journals of Musan (South Korea), Silent Souls (Russia), Bambara Walalla (Sri Lanka), Floating Lives (Vietnam), La Riziere (China/France), Das Letze Schweigen (Germany), White as Snow(Turkey), Hi-So (Thailand), Cold Weather (USA)


The Best Medicine The ones that will make you laugh
Submarine (UK), Curry Munchers (New Zealand), Abel (USA), Made in China (USA), happythankyoumoreplease (USA), La Tete Ailleurs (France), Man Without a Cell Phone (Israel), Hospitalite (Japan), Bunny and the Bull (UK), On Tour (France), No Eres Tu, Soy Yo (Mexico), Salvation Boulevard (USA), Rolling Home With A Bull (South Korea), Le Nom Des Gens (Italy), Potiche (France


Wham! Bam! Pow!Action, ass-kicking and ammunition that doesn’t run out
The Troll Hunter (Norway), Lights Out (France), A Quiet Life (Italy/France/Germany), Saha (Azerbaijan), Viva Riva! (Democratic Republic of Congo), The Yellow Sea (South Korea), Clash (Vietnam), Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (Finland/Norway), Island (UK), Secret Reunion (South Korea), Elite Squad 2: The Enemy Within (Brazil), Snabba Cash (Sweden)


Reality BitesHot docs
Inside Job (USA), Page One: Inside the New York Times (USA), Autumn Gold (Germany), El Bulli: Cooking in Progress (Germany), Rent Boys (Germany), Little Treasures of Lombok (Netherlands), Strangers No More (USA), Kuche Melli (Iran), Just Like Us (USA), Armadillo (Denmark), Marathon Boy (India), Exit Through the Gift Shop (USA), Donor Unknown (UK), Revenge of the Electric Car (USA), Hell and Back Again (UK/USA), Summer Pasture (China/USA), Pink Saris (UK), Kinyarwanda (USA)


Indie Goes 3DCan it be more than a gimmick?
Pina (Germany), Cave of Forgotten Dreams (USA/Canada/France/Germany/UK) , Little Ghostly Adventures of the Tofu Boy (Japan)


Midnight MadnessBe afraid, be very afraid
Super (USA), The Forbidden Door (Indonesia), Rabies (Israel), The Last Lovecraft: Relic of Cthulhu (USA), Hobo With a Shotgun (Canada/USA), The Selling (USA)


Down the Rabbit HoleI have no idea what’s going on (experimental)
The Tree of Life (USA), Taliya.Date.Com (Israel), Symbol (Japan), Jess + Moss (USA), The Screen Illusion (France), Asakusa Daydreams (Japan), Enter the Void (France), A Useful Life (Uruguay), One Day (Taiwan), Amer (France/Belgium), Rubber (France), Life In A Day (France/Belgium)


AnimationFilms are a joy when every scene takes time to craft
Green Days (South Korea), A Cat in Paris (France), Piercing I (China), Chico and Rita (Spain), Spotlight on Platige Image (Poland)


Seeing Music, Hearing FilmLike Never Say Never, but better
Look at What the Light Did Now (USA), Living With The Tiger (Thailand), Pianomania: In Search of the Perfect Sound (Germany), Dream Factory (South Korea), Tibet in Song (USA), The Other F Word (USA), Talihina Sky: The Story of Kings of Leon (USA), Il Cacciatore di Anatre (Italy)


Beyond TwilightWhen vampires aren’t the stuff of teenage girls’ dreams
Nosferatu (Germany), God of Vampires (USA), Vampire Girl Vs. Frankenstein Girl (Japan), Vampires (Belgium), Tolong! Awek Aku Pontianak (Malaysia), The Truth About Dracula (Germany)


Australian Film FocusThey come from a land down under
Griff the Invisible, The Reef, Matching Jack, A Heartbeat Away, Bran Nue Dae, 33 Postcards


Bertrand Tavernier RetrospectiveThe master of capturing life in France
L’Horloger de Saint-Paul, Un Dimanche A La Campagne, La Vie Et Rien D’autre, Ca Commence Aujord’hui, La Princesse de Montpensier


Everyone’s Gotta Start SomewhereFirst works of famed directors before the acclaim arrived
Everyone’s Gotta Start Somewhere – The Singapore Edition (early works of Boo Junfeng, Liao Jiekai, Jacen Tan, Loo Zhihan, Sherman Ong, Wee Li Lin and Wesley Leon Arazoo), Pi (USA), Sepet (Malaysia), Delicatessen (France), Bound (USA)


Muppets, Music & Magic: Jim Henson’s Legacy Masters of puppets
Muppet History 101, Muppet Fairytales, Muppet Music Moments, Commercials & Experiments

International Shorts Briefly, the best from around the world (Screened at Sinema Old School 17 and 23 September)
Shanghai Love Market (China), The Familiar (Canada), The Wonder Hospital (South Korea), The Father (Australia), Derelict (UK), The Mouse That Soared (USA), Den Draka (Czech Republic), Bian Zi (Taiwan), Paper Hearts (UK), Night Fishing (South Korea), Bread & Kisses (Canada), Shuffle (USA), Into Thin Air (Iran), Pinion (Australia), Savasana (USA), Aman (UK/Iran), Something Left, Something Taken (USA), A Lost and Found Box of Human Sensation (Germany, screened before A Cat in Paris on 23 Sep), Whereabouts (China/Australia, screened before beside(s,) happiness on 20 Sep), Wow Film Festival Australian Shorts (Australia, screened on 16 Sep)


Closing Film - Senna (UK)

The Silver Screen Awards

Asian Feature Film
Best Film
beside(s,) happiness, Secret Reunion, Buddha Mountain, The Journals of Musan, Animal Town, Lao Wai
Best Director
beside(s,) happiness, Buddha Mountain, Chongqing Blues Floating Lives, Red Light Revolution
Best Cinematography
Floating Lives, One Day, I Have Loved, National Alley
Best Performance
Fachri Albar in The Forbidden Door; Kang Dong-won in Secret Reunion; Kim Young-pil in Rolling Home with A Bull, Zhao Jun in Red Light Revolution

Singapore Short Films (screening at Sinema Old School on 21 and 22 September from 9:30pm)
Best Film
Hello, Goodbye (Tay Li-Cheng), Hentak Kaki (James Khoo), Threads (Charmaine Ho), Sisters (Lincoln Chia)
Best Director
Big Feet (Jonathan Cockett/Brad Wilson), Band of Mischief (Kenneth Lee), Hentak Kaki (James Khoo), Sisters (Lincoln Chia)
Best Cinematography
Left Hook (Muhammad Salihin bin Ramli), Window of Dreams (Nooraini Shah Sikkander), Blue Tide (Luo Min), Hello, Goodbye (Tay Li-Cheng), Band of Mischief (Kenneth Lee)
Best Performance
Oon Shu An in Left Hook (Muhammad Salihin bin Ramli), Marc Gabriel Loh in First Breath After Coma (Logavel Balakrishnan), Sunny Pang in 3 Days Grace (Kenny Tan), Benjamin Chow in Band of Mischief (Kenneth Lee)
Finalists
Wild Dogs (Saravanan Sam), Spring (David Ee), Transit (Regina Tan), Play Pretend (Ellery Ngiam), Drawing Memories (Thom Chang/Jerly Chang/Dionisius Kartalaksana/ Yeo Bi Xia), The Red Veil (Chua Seng Yew), Father & Son (Natasha Rathod)

Animation Symposium
Happening on 24 September, big boys like LucasFilm, Blackmagic Design, Double Negative Visual Effects, One Animation and Infinite Frameworks will discuss animation in today's world of cinema in Beyond Limits: Expanding the Digital Horizon.

13 Little Pictures Workshop
From 19-23 September, aspiring filmmakers will collaborate under the watchful eyes of Liao Jiekai, among others, to produce a short film within five days.

Most films will be screened at Shaw Lido, Sinema Old School and The Arts House. For a full list of timings, visit www.siff.sg. Tickets will be available ($10-$30) from Sistic after 2 September.

ShoutOUT! The Jacen Tan collection in a DVD now


Jacen Tan was the first to define 'viral video' among Singapore filmmakers with his internet hit 'Tak Giu' back in 2005. With his casual regular-boy sense of humour, 'Tak Giu' soon won the hearts of many Singaporeans who were new to local independent films. It also led to him being named as one of Singapore’s most exciting young filmmakers by The Straits Times Life!,

'Ballsy' Jacen Tan went to make other films in his own brand of humour that continued to enjoy a cult following. They included 'Zo Gang', 'Zo Peng', 'Zo Hee' and more recently 'Kwa Giu'. He creates scenarios all Singaporeans can relate to such as youths desperately trying to find a place to play football because they are banned from doing so at HDB void decks.

"Many people have been asking me whether my films are available on DVD. I'm excited to finally release this compilation of all my short films, packed with bonus features and unseen footage. I'm also proud to premiere my latest film Kwa Giu. Kwa Giu is my most important film yet, a documentary filmed at the now demolished National Stadium. With the recent announcement of Singapore's return to the Malaysia Cup, there has been massive interest in Singapore football. Kwa Giu will preserve those memories and the nostalgia of the legendary Kallang Roar." says Jacen Tan.

Hosaywood DVD details:
Includes 5 short films – Tak Giu (Kick Ball), Zo Peng (Go Army), Zo Gang (Go Work), Zo Hee (Make Movie), and the new 2011 film Kwa Giu (Watch Football).

Special features: Bloopers & bonus footage, Director’s interview, Director’s Notes, Behind-the-scene photos and more!

The DVD is now available for $16.50 at:

1. Objectifs
56A Arab Street, Singapore 199753
Email info@objectifsfilms.com or call 6293 9782 to get your copy.

2. Sinema Old School
11b Mount Sophia, Old School, #B1-12 Singapore 228466
Email:info@sinema.sg or Tel: 6336 9707

3. The Substation
45, Armenian Street, Singapore 179936
Email: boxoffice@substation.org or Tel: 6337 7800

Will be out in other stores soon. Hosay lah!

 This poster of Kwa Giu was displayed at SINdie's Mise En SIN poster exhibition, held earlier this year and became one of the most voted posters in the online poster voting contest.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Production Talk - 'Seeya In Elektrik Dreamz' by Nelson Yeo


Seeya in Elektrik Dreamz talks about a tale of four people confronting the end of the world. A woman had a fling with an unknown man, just moments before the world ended. She searched endlessly for him. Two orphaned kids found each other in a godforsaken world. A friendship was formed. After his wife left him, a dreamless man went around stealing dreams from corpses.

Based on a post apocalyptic set, Seeya In Elektrik Dreamz portrayed a different and foreign sight to our local lands. A  visually driven story that questions ourselves if time has lost its purpose and would one rather live on an alternative world. 
We now talk to the person behind the creation of the film and have a look inside inside his world. 
******


1.  What embarked you on the journey for Seeya in Elektrik Dreamz? Your Inspiration for the film?

NY: At the beginning, I was in my Bob Dylan fanatical phase, so I had initially written Seeya in Elektrik Dreamz like one of his prose. The title was the first thing that came up. I've only read the first few pages of Do Android Dream of Electric Sheep? So I did my best to interpret the rest of it. Lol. Which was my initial version of Elektrik Dreamz. A few useful ear-catching keywords were throw into our FYP pitch (knowing that the lecturers/judges will be drawn to them). It was very vague at first, but I knew that I was gonna make a science fiction genre film. But I think the gist of it came about when as usual, my lecturer asked to see something more, and not to take the easy way out. So I ended up writing alot of personal experiences into Elektrik Dreamz. The initially story was about a breakup and a longing for someone to return, but enough things happened in my life to make the film alot more than that. It pretty much sums up a phase of my filmmaking journey and my life. The structure of the film was at its core, inspired by Tarkovsky's The Mirror, as I had wanted the film to deal with memories and dreams. You won't really "get" the entire film, but what you draw from it are feelings and emotions. And of course, the films of Terrence Malick in the narrative structure and the voiceover.


2. Was it tough to base a film on a post apocalyptic set?

NY: Not really, it was trying to pull off something that is convincing that is the hard part. Part of the magic of cinema is to create a world in which your audience can believe in. And we aimed towards that. But at the same time, we stripped away all the unnecessaries and only kept to the essential bits. A lot of thought were put into the preproduction to create a convincing world. Intially, I had wanted a more realistic style, but Cindy Khoo, the production designer had managed to come up a steam punk design that gave the film a more fantastical design. Also Feng Kexin's cinematography plays an important part to creating a barren and dying world. Initially, she has storyboarded all the shots in the film, but we kind of improvised and reacted to the surrounding everytime we go on set. So it became more of an instinctual thing. Lol. She managed to capture a lot of brilliant imagery, that plays a really important part in the film since the entire film is kind of an abstraction of images. A lot of credits go to my producer Eileen Loh as well, for gaining us access to a lot of unaccessible locations.


3. You mentioned about it being a visually driven story questioning time losing its purpose and if one would rather be living in an alternate world. Could you tell us more on that?

NY: This is a tough question. Lol. I guess it's a human condition. When things get really bad in life, we always long for something better. Everything, including time, loses its meaning, you wish that someone somewhere else fare a lot better than you.


4. What were some of the difficulties you went through while making the film? 

NY: Of course, the most difficult thing is to convince the crew at first. It's not an easy story to explain or pitch to anyone. Its easier to convey the images to them. Hence, everyone just have to go with a gut feeling. Initially, I had wanted the film to be more freeform and improvisational, but our schedule and this being a FYP and all, didn't allow us to do that. So a lot of it had to be crafted in preproduction. I would really have loved to do this film in a more cinema verite style though! Of course, crafting the film in postproduction is another big hurdle to us, Syazali, our editor has done a wonderful job of cutting the film down to the essentials, crafting a story out of images that doesn't really connect. (Trivia: Syaz told me that this is the only film that he has cut as Syazali, rather than his alter ego, the Source!) Kelvin Teoh, our sound designer from studiohMB had to create the soundscape from scratch, because a lot of our location audio couldn't be used. Kelvin's brilliant sound design is complimented by my long-time friend, Teo Wei Yong's brilliant score, to complete the picture.


5. Would you, rather live in an alternative world then? 

NY: I'm not sure. If I'm gonna miss all the opportunities to meet all the people I know in my life, I rather not. But I would love to create more worlds in my films for people to believe in, after all aren't cinema and art mere reflections of our lives? So it's not really all that different.

6. What do you have planned next?

NY: Hopefully, a superhero film about two superkids. And hopefully it will be a feature... To quote Stan Lee: "Face front! True believers! This is the one you've been waiting for!"... I'm currently in the process of researching and writing it now, so lots of comics reading. The idea spawned from two short stories about two kids with superpowers, I wrote about 2 years ago. It was inspired by my neighbour's kid when I rented an apartment near Jurong. It will be set in Singapore, or maybe an alternate world somewhere... Lol, perhaps an alternate Singapore.


7. Anything else you would like to add?
NY: Like to thank everyone who worked on or supported the film~ T-H-A-N-K-S! I hoped everyone enjoyed working on the film, or even bothered to sit through it!
******

Article by Yvette Ng

Monday, August 22, 2011

Tatsumi Premiere Giveaway!

Win tickets to attend the premiere of Tatsumi!





Sindie will be giving away 5 pairs of tickets to the premiere of Tatsumi, thanks to the very generous people from HP Singapore!

Just answer these 3 questions correctly and send your answers to sindieonly@gmail.com !


Q1. What inspired Eric Khoo to make a tribute film on Yoshihiro Tatsumi?


Q2. To turn his vision into reality, Eric Khoo roped in Singapore media and entertainment company Infinite Frameworks (IFW). What technology was at the heart of IFW’s production process?

Q3. Using HP technology, the IFW production crew worked with Eric Khoo to turn his vision into something that can be enjoyed on the big screen. How many people made up the IFW production crew?

The answers can be found in this link below. Just click it!






Event details
Date
Saturday, 10 September 2011
Time
6.30pm for registration and ticket collection
Venue
Golden Village @ Great World City
Note, the film is rated NC16 (see synopsis below) and contains adult themes and content. Screening commences at 7.15pm, and this will be free seating.
Besides being one of the first people in Singapore to watch Tatsumi, you will get to
  1. · Meet Eric Khoo and Yoshihiro Tatsumi for a photo opportunity
  2. · Receive limited edition movie posters autographed by Eric Khoo and Yoshihiro Tatsumi
  3. · Hear from Eric Khoo and Yoshihiro Tatsumi on the inspiration behind their work”
Email your entries for this giveaway to sindieonly@gmail.com

This giveaway will run from 22 August to 2 September and the winners will be announced on 5 September via email.

Good luck!

Exclusive invitation: HP invites SINdie readers to get behind the scenes of Tatsumi

Get behind the scenes of Tatsumi!
Celebrating the work of a legend


Eric Khoo and the one and only Yoshihiro Tatsumi-sensei!

Directed by Eric Khoo, a 95-minute animated feature exploring the life of the father of Gekiga (dramatic pictures) Yoshihiro Tatsumi premiered at the recent Cannes Film Festival.

Tatsumi, the film is Singapore's first animated feature – and only the 13th in animated movie history – to be invited to the Cannes Official Selection.

This September, the animated film, comes to big screens in Singapore!

To turn his vision into reality, Eric Khoo roped in Singapore media and entertainment company Infinite Frameworks (IFW). IFW used technology like the HP Z200 Workstations and HP DreamColor Monitor to transform Tatsumi’s illustrations into animated form, turning Eric’s vision into something that can be enjoyed on the big screen.

Celebrating the premiere of Tatsumi, HP Singapore is inviting ALL of Sindie's readers and members to attend an exclusive session with Eric Khoo and Phil Mitchell, animation director at Infinite Frameworks, to find out more about what went on behind the scenes of Tatsumi, and speak to them of their experience at Cannes.

Event Details
· Date: 5 September 2011, Monday
· Location: Edelman, Level 9. 111 Somerset Road, #14-03 Singapore 238164
· Time: 7.00pm – 8.30pm
o 7.00pm: Registration and F&B; upon registration you will be presented with a limited edition Tatsumi movie poster
o 7.15pm: An interactive dialogue session with Eric and Phil; get inside these creative minds as they share personal anecdotes on the experience of producing Tatsumi
o 8.00pm: Finger food and drinks to go round! A quick lucky draw – winners walk away with limited edition prizes.


Places are provided on a first come, first served basis, so please register early.

SINdie readers and members who are interested to attend, please register your interest with sindieonly@gmail.com

8th Short Cuts Review


The last instalment of Singapore’s 8th short cuts ended with The Wedding Avenger, The Hole, Rumah Sendiri and Sayang at the National Museum this year. What stood out for me was definitely Michelle Cheong’s The Wedding Avenger and the bringing a hint of emotional pain, Tan Shijie’s The Hole. Here’s a brief review of the short films.

1. The Wedding Avenger
Michelle Cheong | English and Mandarin with English Subtitles | 11mins
Synopsis:
Jade, a bride-to-be having her pre wedding jitters, locks herself up in the toilet and goes through an array of 8-bit arcade game levels on the insecurities she has deep inside her heart.
Review:
The film, with the interesting touch of an arcade worldly feel to it, is portraying Jade’s insecurities about leaving behind her freedom and stepping into a world of commitment and unknown. She’s afraid of turning into something she doesn’t want to –a housewife- is thinking if she going through the wedding because her family wants her to. Going through the series of levels like how one would play an arcade game with all the right sound effects to go with it as well, she meets a shark-like character who companies her for the most parts and then dies to save her from her family’s expectations. The only thing is with the level change, are the words that comes out and stays for like a second and goes off. It might be good to have it stay for a tad longer for the slower reader to finish the sentence.
A personal favourite is definitely where she gets tied up with the shark and faces the family. A framed family portrait appears on the screen revealing bits and pieces of frame puzzles that forms the picture frame when it’s seen face front. A thought bubble from a relative about her fatigue, when mommy is giving her speech was also a slight amusement and that makes it an interesting scene. Quite a good 11 minutes of tickling entertainment.

2. The Hole
Tan Shi Jie | Japanese with English Subtitles | 18mins
Synopsis:
Ever since Dad passed away, Ka-san –mother- and Kenji –son- has been living together. When Kenji grows up, his mother tries to match-make him to his refusal. After a visit to his father’s grave, and after a series of events, he soon realizes his mother’s concerns about him having a family on his own.
Review:
The film opens with Ka-san and young Kenji sitting on a bench in the hospital awaiting news from the doctor. They receive news that the father did not pull through and the scene closes. What struck me was the kind of heavy attachment Kenji has with his mother i.e: sharing the bed as a grown man with his elderly mother and passing her his button that fell off his shirt.  And I could feel Ka-san’s fears of her only son being alone if she should leave him as well one day and Kenji’s anger from the match-making photos given to him for finding a wife, still in denial that his mom might somehow maybe be with him forever.
The trip to Dad’s grave where Ka-san finds a lady who fell down a flight of stairs and is laying unconscious on the floor.  She screams for Kenji and they rush her to the hospital. The scene goes back to the elderly Ka-san and grown up Kenji sitting on a bench in the hospital again awaiting news from the doctor, this time, about the lady they saved. Somehow during this event, Kenji goes back and starts thinking on what if one day his mother leaves him. He goes to the kitchen and opens the envelope bearing pictures of ladies from the match-making agency and sees the button that fell off his shirt on the dining table.
I understand the how The Hole is portraying a strong bond that evolved from daily everyday rituals in a small family or single family depending on each other very much and think it’s has a simple and beautifully done cinematography. Rather professionally done for a student film. It’s speaks out to me on a personal level as well. A good film that speaks to you on family values simply. 
3. Rumah Sendiri
Daniel Hui | Bahasa Indonesia with English Subtitles | 21mins
Synopsis:
A film about the chores of a Balinese housemaid, from the break of dawn till evening.  From drying and keeping the laundry to washing the dog to trimming the grass and it ends of folding laundry and her singing a little tune from her childhood.
Review:
It basically shows how the day goes for a domestic helper in Singapore and how she goes about it. It starts off with her opening up the living room and letting the morning light in, then switches to her keeping laundry and switching over the other ones that might be still damp. Sometimes there are news of maids being treated harshly but this has me confused about the concept of it. Then it goes into her other daily chores like ironing and giving the dog a bath. It shows that it’s a very personal work close to his heart and unfortunately, I am unable to relate to it emotionally. It doesn’t speak to me on how domestic help in Singapore might or might not have been mistreated and are maybe, suffering in silence.  I do, on the other hand, get the idea of how it lets people speak for themselves and that the camera is looking at the person from the filmmaker’s point of view. 

 Article by Yvette Ng


Production Talk - 'The Red Veil' by Chua Seng Yew


Synopsis

The Red Veil tells the story of Netra, a young woman sold into prostitution many years back. Thrown into a world of loss hope and despair, she protects herself by remaining indifferent. On a night set amidst an ongoing wedding procession, Netra is asked to dress up a younger girl, Mandira, who remains oblivious to her surroundings. Mandira, distracted and affected by the festivities, begins speaking of wedding dreams and hopes. Her words and enthusiasm begin eliciting in Netra, feelings and memories that she would rather remain hidden.

"Nothing fixes a thing so intensely in the memory as the wish to forget it", so says Michel de Montaigne on the subject of memory. We begin uncovering, in Netra's memory, a time when hope and innocence was possible and a moment that finally made that impossible. When the past that Netra so forcibly attempts to remove remain so deeply embedded in her consciousness, we realize that for survival, apathy might be the only option to turn to.


What inspired this story?

I didn't write the script, so I can't really answer this. The screenwriter is from India though, so I assume that is why it was set in India.


What were some of the most startling or captivating things for you when you were conducting your research for the film?

My research was mostly relevant to what was within the scopes of the script, mainly Indian weddings ( which you would expect has many different versions, depending on the regions in India ), reading and watching documentaries on what children growing up in such an environment were like.

You will be surprised to know that children living in such places don't see it as adults would. Something is only as wretched as what one could reference it to. I guess that was what the central dynamic focus of the story was - the difference in outlook between our two lead girls.

Despite all the research, the focus was always about the mood and the story. The research was only there for the art direction to help me understand what was going on in the background, so it was easier to help me set the mood of the scene.


How did you go about casting?

Casting was an interesting one. The script actually started off as a Hindi one, so we started off trying to cast for Hindi speaking actresses obviously. ( This is why, if any Indians saw this film, they will tell you the wedding is actually a Hindi one) For a while we were getting only responses from overseas, and being a student film, we obviously didn't have the budget to bring anyone over.

The lead actress, Devi, was a friend of a friend, both of them being in theatre companies in Singapore. The younger girl, Sonya, was recommended to me by Lilin ( she was her actress in "Gone Shopping")


What were some of the greatest challenges you faced when directing this film?

The obvious challenge is the language barrier. The thing I did about that was to have enough rehearsals so my direction on set would be minimized and kept only mood related. I had to keep the blocking and dialogue as structured as possible which was a little tough, as I always preferred more freedom during shoots. Fortunately, the actresses were really good, so I hardly had any problems.


This film opens up a little door to rather dark world, if it was a feature film, what would you have liked to portray?

This short film was made as one that was more mood driven so I guess if it was to be a feature, I would probably make it a character study of sorts, something that would not be so applicable in the short form. To explore the two main characters through the eyes of each other; that would be an interesting one.


Tell us a bit about yourself and what you are currently doing.

Not sure what I can say. I take interest in almost everything, and I guess film allows me to delve into all these different vocations and lives to explore these fascinations. I guess you could say the same about any artform, literature, photography, etc, but filmmaking to me seems to be the visceral of the lot, and I like watchin films as well, so yes, easy choice.

Right now, I just finished a project on Jack Neo's new film as a 2nd Assistant Director and preparing for a trip to Europe with a friend to do a backpacking/travelogue project.

Why are there not enough documentaries in Singapore? 4th Indie Doc Fest explores why


Finally some drama in the presentation at the Substation - don't you love the red lighting? Aishah goes with it so well!

The 4th Singapore Independent Documentary Festival carries a compact but alternative selection of works from Singapore and overseas. If the turnout at the Singapore selection of shorts was anything to go by, it certainly drew a strong target crowd. The Singapore night was almost full house!


It's all about speaking up and making yourself heard - hence the loudhailer


Getting into the theatre


'Sorry I am late. How much have I missed?'

In contrast to the screenings, the forum discussion drew a thinner crowd. On Saturday, a discussion was held to discuss the following topic:
Why are there not enough documentaries in Singapore? Is there a lack of topics to cover? Or are people afraid of getting their words censored? We explore the difficulties and issues faced by filmmakers who are making documentaries, and why filmmakers today resist tackling such a genre.

Nevermind the small size of the forum, the intinate discussion was not short of its fair share of wise nuggets of observations on documentary filmmaking and why it is in the state it is. The panel was made up of the following: Nikki Draper, a lecturer in documentary filmmaking, Prema Menon, a creative producer with Rupture Productions and Abdul Nizam Hamid, a filmmaker.
The TV format

It is observed that many filmmakers make documentaries in a TV sort of format - the 'show both points of view' and wrap it up somehwere in the middleground, giving viewers what they would like on TV or at least local TV - to be informed but not instigated. In addition, there tends to be a penchant for the very safe TV sort of look for documentaries here. Another interesting point raised by Nikki is that there is actually no need to always get an 'expert' subject on the documentary. Ultimately, it's how the views and subjects are all strung together to bring across a certain stand about a topic that makes it a powerful documentary.

Everyone is a documentarian

With YouTube it seems everyone can be a documentarian. Just take the recent general elections and what had been captured and shared on YouTube as an example. There is an abundance of documentary materials especially if the definition of documentaries is broadened in this way. In other words, if any non-fiction type of content can be out into the same category as documentaries, there is no shortage of works in Singapore.

A luxury to be in school

According to Nikki, there are currently 3 schools with documentary filmmaking courses.
Students are also currently a huge source of documentaries. It may not be surprising because as students, they get lots of support from the school. And there is no need to worry about food and bringing back the dough.

Nikki adds that students here have been able to get funding from the government for certain potentially controversial topics. She often tells her students to test the out-of-bound markers and never to censor themselves. Having overcome the self-censorship trap, the next hurdle many face is actually trying to get people to be interested to talk to on camera when the topic is sensitive. She related a piece on National service which sparked off a fierce debate in the student's family. Her parents felt fear.

Working with subjects

Turning the attention to getting subjects to open up, Nizam shared about his experience of striking up a relationship with the cinematographer of P Ramlee before putting the camera on.

The discussion took an turn tangential turn at this point on the potential exploitative nature of certain documentaries and where to draw the line in terms of the responsibilities of filmmakers. Nizam raised the observation that some filmmakers go to a poor country, get the most amazing exposes done on film and then go on to win awards while the slums remain as slums. Should the filmmaker have done something? It is fair to say that filmmakers can't do everything but perhaps he or she could help propel something.

Nikki argues that there is usefulness in talking. She made a documentary in Idaho about gay couples. She featured 4 gay couples and considering it was a town of only 370 people, it was quite risky. At first they were wary about the impact on the lives of the couples with this documentary. But they were happy in the end that there was a chance to speak up about their lives. So there is value in talking.

Parting advice

Prema feels that the power of documentary filmmakers is their act of putting the microscope on certain issues and people. It is important not to sensationalise , not to just say that such and such is bad. Do justice to what you are covering as you might revisit the topic or subjects again.

Nikki looks for stronger opinions and clear stands made in documentaries. Be respectful to your subjects but do not be afraid to ask questions. You may get a positive or negative response or even a shocking response. This is when you should just let the camera do it's job- document the response in its full flavour.


T-shirts designed by director Iara Lee


Casual corridor banter, a post-screening delight

Article by Jeremy Sing

Saturday, August 20, 2011

ShoutOUT!: The 13 Little Pictures Film Lab



The 13 Little Pictures Film Lab (Held in Conjunction with the 24th Singapore International Film Festival) will take place from 19-23 September 2011, is open for application.

The 5-day intensive film lab starts from 1.30 to 7.30pm everyday at the The Puttnam School of Film, LASALLE College of The Arts. Participants must be able to commit to the full duration of the lab.
...
Participation in the film lab is FREE of charge.
Camera equipment and editing facilities will also be provided.

A platform for fellow filmmakers to meet and collaborate with one another, the film lab is intended for a diverse group of aspiring directors, producers, cinematographers, scriptwriters, art directors, editors, sound engineers, music composers and actors.

20 participants will be selected to work with 13 Little Pictures filmmakers, Daniel Hui, Elizabeth Wijaya, Lai Weijie, Lei Yuan Bin, Liao Jiekai, Sherman Ong, Tan Bee Thiam, Wesley Leon Aroozoo and Yeo Siew Hua.

The film lab will consist of hands-on learning workshops, film production exercises, screenings and small group sharing in the creative process of film-making. Work in progress will be presented at the Singapore International Film Festival.

Application materials:
a) application form (Refer to attached link below)
b) one-page motivation letter
c) one-page resume
d) creative portfolio

Please email items (a), (b) and (c) to info@studiothirteen.org and send (d) to the address below.

Studio Thirteen
90 Goodman Road
Block B, #03-10
Goodman Arts Centre
Singapore 439053

Your submission is only completed when all application materials reach them.


The deadline for application is 6th September 2011. Selection results will be announced on 9th September 2011.