Showing posts with label International Film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Film. Show all posts

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Vietnam wins two prizes at film festival

The Vietnam International Film Festival wrapped up Thursday night at the National Convention Center in Hanoi, with Vietnamese films winning the Best Documentary and Best Actress prizes.

Nguyen Thi Kim Hai’s “Always Beside You,” the story of a mother who cares for her three-year-old son who has leukemia, was named the Best Documentary.

Nhat Kim Anh was the Best Actress for her performance in “The Fate of a Songstress in Thang Long.”
Australian director and jury member Phillip Noyce described the film as “Extremely beautiful [and] revealed parts of Vietnamese history that we as outsiders were not aware.”

Hong Kong’s Fiona Sit shared the award with Anh for her performance in “Break Up Club.”

Malaysia’s A Niu was named the Best Actor for his role in “Kacang Puppy Love” while.

“Sandcastle” made by first-time Boo Junfeng of Singapore made a huge impact, winning the Best Feature Film, Best Director, and NETPAC Jury Awards.

“Boo’s film doesn’t look like a first film, it is so self-assured,” US entertainment trade publication Hollywood Reporter quoted Venice Film Festival director Marco Mueller as saying at the festival.

The closing ceremony was attended by 2,000 people, including movie stars and filmmakers from Vietnam and abroad.

Lai Van Sinh, the head of the Vietnam Cinema Department and the festival’s chief organizer, said: “The first VNIFF has made a good impression on international audiences. Besides, it has helped bring cinema closer to the public.”

Large audience

Vietnamese films attracted large crowds at the five-day event.

All 14 Vietnamese feature films shown at the Vietnam International Film Festival that concluded Thursday were sellouts despite being screened four times every day, according to the organizers.

“Always Beside You”, “Adrift”, “The Legend Is Alive”, “Living In Fear”, “The Rebel”, “Hanoi- Hanoi”, “The fate of a songstress in Thang Long”, “The Lieutenant”, “Pao’s Story”, “The Buffalo Boy”, “Don’t Burn”, “The White Silk Dress”, “Moon At The Bottom Of The Well” and “Temple Of Literature” were screened at Platinum Cineplex, Megastar cinemas, and the National Screening Center.

To meet the demand, organizers put up 40-70 temporary seats at the venues.

Related Articles

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Culture Vulture

Acclaimed Australian filmmaker Phillip Noyce, 60, is in Viet Nam to chair the jury board of the first Viet Nam International Film Festival. He sat down with Culture Vulture on the sidelines of the event.

You came to Viet Nam to film The Quiet American. Now you return as chairman of the jury board of the first Viet Nam International Film Festival. How does that feel?

A decade has passed by since I came to Viet Nam to make The Quiet American. For me, it's a wonderful experience and honour to be here once again. Meeting old friends like director Dang Nhat Minh and actress Do Hai Yen who enthusiastically helped me to produce the film is a privilege, a big present.

During my days in Ha Noi, I will have a chance to get acquainted with other directors and filmmakers to share ideas, exchange experiences and confirm our common passion for the Seventh Art which has the power of a bridge and helps overcome barriers of language and culture. It connects people through the charm of the silver screen.

Viet Nam has two films in the Best Feature Film category, and many new entries which are arranged in Viet Nam Premier Showcase and Viet Nam Cinema Today. Have you been patient enough to watch all of the Vietnamese films screening at the festival?

The jury's screening schedule for official competition is full now, but I promise that I will try to watch Vietnamese films until I collapse.

I'm looking forward to enjoying new Vietnamese films made in 2010, films competing in international film festivals, and current impressive films on at Vietnamese cinemas. Seeing these films will help me realise the changes and development in the Vietnamese movie industry.

I have tried kept a close eye on your cinema over the last decade. I would like to help develop your cinema but have few chances to see it. The only Vietnamese film I've seen is Pao's Story. The other film being promoted in Australia that I saw was Inferno, directed by Vietnamese-born Victor Vu.

I live and work in Australia and the US, where I have only a few opportunities to see Vietnamese films. That's the reason I'm present at this festival. There was a big gap between the movie and audiences when I directed The Quiet American. Now, there are now more and more young directors, and larger audiences, who buy the tickets.

As chairman of the jury board, what can you tell us about the criteria for selecting the best films?

Films geared towards social issues and people will be promising candidates for the top prize. The jury board also highly appreciates films with new, interesting, creative and amazing angles. The members of the jury met each other for the first time at the festival, but it's expected that we will have the same feeling and idea to grant prizes for worthy entries.

I want to tell a story about when I joined the jury at the Sydney International Film Festival in 1994. I remember that among thousands of films presented, there were hundreds nominated, and due to the large amount of films, I paid attention to films made by famous directors. However, I was surprised by Dang Nhat Minh, a Vietnamese director who wasn't famous at the time. His film Tro Ve (The Return) impressed me.

Film festivals are opportunities to discover new talents. I hope that I will find other directors like Minh at this festival.

Southeast Asian cinema is being showcased at this festival. What do you think about the focus on regional films?

It is very interesting to see films and gain a deeper knowledge of movie industries in Southeast Asia. I want to learn about the region's culture, which is expressed by the region's filmmakers, through the film festival.

The movie industries of different nations have different visions of the world. We may ask how the films are made, what the filmmakers' interests are. I think there will be films which reveal their own culture and country's historical stories, although sometimes it isn't easy to understand their messages. But the film's values come from the inside – how do you feel after watching it?

When the festival ends, do you have any other plans in Viet Nam?

I will stay in Ha Noi for two days after the festival to join lectures and seminars with young filmmakers. Then I have another two days working in HCM City. At the seminars, I will share my experience in making films such as Salt and The Quiet American. I'm ready for questions relating to these films. Through the meetings, I expect that I will do something to help Vietnamese filmmakers connect with foreign film industries. I also want to exchange and talk with the younger generation who have a passion for films and willingness to devote themselves to the film industry. Young filmmakers are a very important force for the future of the nation's cinema. — VNS

Related Articles

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Japanese features, anime to screen

Toon time: The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, one of two animation movies to be shown at the festival. — Photo courtesy Tokikake Film Partners

Toon time: The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, one of two animation movies to be shown at the festival. — Photo courtesy Tokikake Film Partners

HA NOI — Japanese director Nobuhiro Doi's latest film Hanamizuki is one of ten films scheduled to show in competition at the first Viet Nam International Film Festival, which runs until Thursday in Ha Noi.

Hanamizuki is a romantic drama which tells the story of high school student Sae Hirasawa, played by Yui Aragaki, who lives a simple life with her mother in a peaceful northern fishing town but dreams of a life overseas.

She meets two special men in her life. One is another high school boy who she falls in love with. They encourage each other to pursue their dreams, even as their dreams pull them apart. The other man is an upperclassman who shares her same dreams.

Doi, with the support of the Japan Foundation Centre for Cultural Exchange, will arrive today to attend the festival and conduct question and answer sessions about the film.

Born April 11, 1964 in Hiroshima Prefecture, Doi began as director for the hit TBS television series Good Luck!! in 2003 and Orange Days in 2004 until striking it big with the US$48 million box office hit Be With You the same year, his directorial film debut.

Hanamizuki was released in Japan in August and is his third feature film.
My Darling Is a Foreigner, the directorial debut by Kazuaki Ue, will also compete for the festival's top prize.

Eatrip by Yuri Nomura, and Mental by Kazuhiro Soda will compete in the documentary and short film categories, respectively. Mental won the Best Documentary Award at the Pusan International Film Festival and the Dubai International Film Festival in 2008.

Japanese animation will also make a showing at the festival with Summer Wars (2009) and The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (2006), both directed by Mamoru Hosoda. Both films have received numerous awards not only in Japan but throughout the world, including the Best Animation Award at the Japan Academy Awards in 2007 (The Girl Who Leapt Through Time) and in 2010 (Summer Wars).

Please see the What's On section on page 27 for the festival calendar. — VNS

Related Articles

Saturday, October 16, 2010

"Floating Lives" deeply moves Korean audiences

"Canh Dong Bat Tan” (Floating Lives) has brought audiences of the 15th Pusan International Film Festival to tears in a room filled with the weight of human despair and the beauty of resilient emotions.

It competed in the New Currents category at the film festival which wrapped up today in Pusan port city, South Korea.

South Korean audiences saw the film before Vietnamese can do as of October 22. Silence fell in two projection rooms with nearly 800 seats in Lotte movie-theater as the Monochord’s lament came to a halt. The silent sound of tears was only broken by a heavy round of applause.

Adapted from Nguyen Thi Ngoc Tu’s novel, "Boundless Rice Field", the movie directed by Nguyen Phan Quang Binh centers around a family living in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta and a man’s search for romantic redemption.

Father Vo (Dustin Nguyen), daughter Nuong (Lan Ngoc) and son Dien (Vo Thanh Hoa) live nomadically on a boat after the father burned their house down in retaliation for his wife's infidelity.

They drift from one rice field to the next, rearing ducks and doing occasional handy jobs. When Suong (Do Thi Hai Yen), a hooker, joins the family to evade an angry mob, Nuong and Dien welcome her as a surrogate mother and object of pubescent fantasy, while a volatile relationship develops between Vo and her.

Young director Nguyen Phan Quang Binh reaches his audiences most deep-seeded emotions as he digs down through his characters’ cruelty, loss and despair to the most fundamental need and desire for love.

The waterways not only hold and lead the family’s boat, but also symbolize the characters sifting, drifting and endless fluid emotions while also embodying the graceful flow of Binh’s visual storytelling.

The actors deliver an outstanding performance. Nuong conveys not only her suffering but also her strength in containing it and mastering it while living on the edge of that painful abyss seen only through her piercing look. She is able to elicit strong emotions and bring her audiences to earnest tears without long and elaborate dialogues, but with the sheer strength of her acting.

Hai Yen (Suong) surpasses all expectations and proved her critics wrong as she aces a role many had deemed unsuitable for her talent. Her performance makes the onscreen Suong come to life more powerfully than even the carefully described one in the book. Her careful balancing of emotions, with love and compassion on one end and despair on the other, bursts out of the screen with unmatched vigor.

Dustin Nguyen (Vo), plays the most challenging role, as his rage builds up throughout the movie fueled by the pain and shame caused by his wife betrayal.

His is a very articulated acting tale of pain and interior torments ordered through daily acts of cruelty.

The carefully arranged and paired soundtrack talks directly to the audience’s hearts. The sad and lonely sound of the traditional Monochord and the melodies composed by Vietnamese Quoc Trung emerge as direct testimonials from the true soul of the Mekong Delta.

Nguyen Ngoc Tu’s "Boundless Rice Field" was published in the South Korean version in 2007.

All 12 films competing in the New Currents category at Pusan International Film Festival reflect contemporary issues like poverty, war, overpopulation and loss of traditional values. The movies include “The journal of Musan” (South Korea), “Eternity” (Thailand), “Strawberry Cliff” (Hong Kong), My Spectacular (China), The Quarter of Scarecrows (Iraq) and Ways of the Sea (Philippines).

Tickets to “Floating Lives” were sold out one week before the screening, according to organizers.

Related Articles

Friday, October 15, 2010

Hanoi to host first Vietnam International Film Festival

68 films from 23 countries will be featured at the first-ever Vietnam International Film Festival (VNIFF) which will be held at Megastar Cinemas, the National Screening Center and the BHD (Vietnam Media Corp.) Cinema Complex in Hanoi October 17-21.

As a country in focus, France’s cinema will be represented by a selection of award-winning features including Pascal Chaumeil’s “Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky” and documentary films “Babies” by Thomas Balmès and “Oceans” by Jacques Cluzaud.

Honored guests Thomas Balmès, Jacques Cluzaud, Pascal Chaumeil and Anna Mouglalis – leading female character of “Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky” will present at the event.

“Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky” tells about the rumored affair between Fashion Queen Coco Chanel and Russian composer and pianist Igor Stravinsky around the time legendary Chanel No. 5 perfume was created. This film was chosen as the closing film at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival in 2009.

Central to the film is the song “The Rite of Spring” symbolizing both Stravinsky’s revolutionary musical ambitions and Chanel’s revolutionary fashion exploits.

Chanel, mesmerized by the musician’s scandalous premiere in 1913, invited him to stay in her Garches villa seven years later when as a penniless émigré (refugee) he retouched “The Rite of Spring” for a Paris revival.

Chinese film also carved itself a nice niche as French director Fabrien Gaillarg’s Chinese film “Lao Wai” will compete in the Best Film category while Chinese female director Hu Mei will introduce the 2010 biographical movie “Confucius” which stirred controversy in China.

Two famous Chinese actors Ngo Ngan To and Truong Gia Huy will also attend this year’s festival on October 19. To co-stars in the action film “Triple Tap”, with Hong Kong actor Co Thien Lac.

Ten feature films from eight countries in the East Asia and Southeast Asia will compete in the In Competition category.

VNIFF chairman Lai Van Sinh, said: “Vietnam is hosting the International Film Festival for the first time, so it will focus on East Asia and Southeast Asia as world cinema’s new potential areas of interest.”

Many films competing in the Feature Film category will be screened in the region, or even the world, for the first time. They include “Sandcastle” by Singaporean Boo Junfeng, “Lao Wai” by French Fabien Gaollard, “Red Shoes” by Philippine Raul Jorolan, “The Dreamer” by Indonesian Riri Riza, “Ice Kaeang Puppy Love” by Japanese Nobuhiro Doi, “Big Boy” by Thailand Monthon Arayangkoon, “Breaking Up Club” by Hong Kong Barbara Wong, and “Long Thanh Cam Gia ca” by Vietnamese Dao Ba Son and “Lieutenant” by Vietnamese Ha Son.

“We want to start out small but steady to make sure to do things at the right pace,” said Ngo Thi Bich Hanh, vice president of sales & acquisitions at Vietnam Media.

The festival – co-organized by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Vietnam Cinema Department and Vietnam Media Corporation – will showcase films in seven categories: Competition, Shorts and Documentaries, World Cinema Today, Vietnamese Cinema Today, Country in Focus, Surprising, and Tributes.

Eight prizes will be awarded in the following categories: Best Film, Best Documentary, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Actor, the Netpac Prize, and the Media Award and Best Short Film.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Vietnam to hold first global film festival

lhp
The first ever Vietnamese International Film Festival will take place in Hanoi on October 17
Photo: Tuoi Tre

The first ever Vietnamese International Film Festival will take place in Hanoi on October 17 to mark the 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.

Le Ngoc Minh, the deputy head of Vietnam’s Cinematography Department under the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, announced the festival Tuesday.

He underlined that the festival will honors Asian movies and promote cultural exchanges and cooperation between international and regional filmmakers by screening the latest films by talented directors from across Southeast Asia.

There will be a total of eight prizes awarded, including best feature film, best short film, best documentary, best director, best actor and actress and a prize of the Network of the Promotion of Asian Cinema, plus a media prize.

During the five-day event, several seminars on the country’s film industry, an exhibition of photos, an open air film screening and a chance to meet with actors and filmmakers will also be held. 

Related Articles