Showing posts with label Thang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thang. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Fans give local series thumbs down

HCM CITY — An increasing number of locally made series are being aired on national TV networks, but audiences are displeased with the quality of the offerings and the broadcast schedules.

Many viewers, mostly youth, have complained about the quality of the TV series Full House and Doctor Brothers, remakes of Korean hits by domestic companies BHD and VietcomFilm.

"The Vietnamese versions are not interesting although several well-known artists were for the productions," said Tran Thi Mai, a second-year student at HCM City University.

"With more and more TV series produced each year, studios face a shortage of interesting scripts. Many studios have bought the copyright for several series from other countries," Do Thanh Hai, director of Viet Nam Film Company, said.

"Several series have many similarities," said Phan Chau, a second-year student at HCM City's University of Social Science and Humanities.

"We've seen dark schemes and revenge in Doi Mat (Confrontation) and Niem Dau Chon Giau (Hidden Pain)," he said. "We also don't like to see the same faces in series after series."

"We see Dinh Hieu and Ngoc Lan in Cong Mat Troi (The Sun Gate) and we're seeing them again in Cuoc Goi Luc Khong Gio (The Phone Call at Midnight)," Chau said.

Several film studios in Ha Noi and HCM City have made at least five historical TV series about King Ly Thai To, the founder of the city Thang Long-Ha Noi, to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary of the founding of the nation's capital.

The 30-episode series Thai Su Tran Thu Do (The Great Tutor Tran Thu Do) and Ly Cong Uan – Duong Toi Thanh Thang Long (Ly Cong Uan-The Road to Thang Long Capital) were among the series that began filming in 2009.

Viet Nam Televsion (VTV) announced the series would be aired during the millennium celebration.

"We're waiting for these series since producers have said they will have interesting content," 12th grader Nguyen Thi Hoa said. "However, until now, nobody knows when both the series will be aired."

The filming of Tran Thu Do was estimated to cost around VND50 billion (US$2.5 million), while Ly Cong Uan cost VND100 billion.

Ly Cong Uan was shot in many locations in Viet Nam and China. The showing of the series was postponed after concerns were raised that they contained many scenes that made it look like a Chinese production.
"We can't launch it during the millennium celebration, especially because it's controversial," producers said.

The producers of the Great Tutor Tran Thu Do have not explained why the series was not shown last year.

Last week, the 40-episode Ve Dat Thang Long (Arriving in Thang Long) began showing on HTV 9 to greet the Ha Noi millennium celebrations.

"After several months' delay, we can now see one of the first historical series about King Ly Thai To made to greet the millennium," Minh Nga, a film fan, said.

The series describes historic events taking place in the country and the capital Hoa Lu before and after Ly Cong Uan was enthroned as the first king of the Ly dynasty. — VNS

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Thursday, December 30, 2010

HTV to screen new series

HCM CITY— HCM City Television this week will begin broadcasting a new TV series about King Ly Thai To, born Ly Cong Uan, the founder of the city Thang Long (now Ha Noi).

The 40-episode Ve Dat Thang Long (Arriving in Thang Long), which began filming four months ago, is one of the city's projects that are celebrating the 1,000th anniversary of the founding of the nation's capital.

Each episode describes historic events taking place in the country and the capital Hoa Lu before and after Ly Cong Uan was enthroned as the first king of the Ly dynasty.

In 1010, King Ly Thai To made an important decision to move the capital from Hoa Lu in present Ninh Binh Province to Thang Long.

The script for the TV series, which is directed by Tran Ngoc Phuong, is written by well-known author Pham Thuy Nhan.

Taking part in the series produced by HTV in co-operation with M&T Pictures are 80 artists of HCM City with well-known artist Ly Hung playing Ly Cong Uan.

Arriving in Thang Long which will air on HTV 9 at 8.30pm fromThursday to Sunday every week, beginning on January 1.

Capital to open music centre

HA NOI — The Ha Noi Musicians Association is planning to launch a Centre for Music Development in June 2011 to support composers in developing and publicising new works, said association chairman Ho Quang Binh.

The establishment of the centre was approved by the association's 10th Congress.

Cham site found in Quang Ngai

QUANG NGAI — The remnants of a Cham Temple dating back to the 10th century have been discovered in Mo Duc District in the central province of Quang Ngai.

The temple, named Dinh Ba So (Mother of Cham Land) by local residents, contains stone linga and yoni believed to be the first found in Quang Ngai, said Nguyen Dang Vu, director of the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

Writers to discuss war themes

HCM CITY — Writers Da Ngan and Wayne Karlin, one Vietnamese and one American, will hold a talk about the themes of war at Hoa Sen College in HCM City today, with visiting American students from George Mason University to participate.

Ngan will discuss different aspects of the war and its aftermath in Ngan's novel Gia Dinh Be Mon (An Insignificant Family). While in Viet Nam, the American students are expected to visit the family of martyr Hoang Ngoc Dam, depicted as one of the main characters in Karlin's novel Wandering Souls.

HCM City to host audio-visual expo

HA NOI — The Recording Industry Association of Viet Nam will host an audio-visual expo in HCM City from December 31 to January 2. Gathering 14 companies from around the country, the fair will display over 5,000 products, including CDs and DVDs at discounted prices.

Pop singers and cai luong (reformed opera) performers are scheduled to appear to encourage customers to buy authorised, non-pirated products.

Capital cracks down on superstition

HA NOI — The Ha Noi Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism has ordered communities in the capital city to set up steering committees and organising boards to manage and control superstitious activities at traditional festivals as well as the burning of paper offerings at relic sites.

The department has also asked localities to ensure security, traffic safe and food hygiene at cultural events. — VNS

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Culture Vulture

Singer Nhat Kim Anh was granted the Best Actress award at the Viet Nam International Film Festival for her role in Long Thanh Cam Gia Ca (The Fate of a Songstress in Thang Long). She talked with Minh Thu about her award.

How did you feel when the Best Actress prize was announced?

Singer Nhat Kim Anh was granted the Best Actress award at the Viet Nam International Film Festival for her role in Long Thanh Cam Gia Ca (The Fate of a Songstress in Thang Long). She talked with Minh Thu about her award.
I couldn't believe my ears, because I knew the title would only go to one excellent actress, and I assumed it belonged to Fiona Sit from Hong Kong. When the speaker repeated my name and the people surrounding me began to offer their congratulations, only then did I realise I had won the prize.

I was dumbstruck and really nervous on stage. My heart was racing and I couldn't breathe properly.

I'm a singer and have only taken part in a few films. I thought that the film would receive some recognition at the festival, but never dreamed that I'd win a prize.

I'm quite modest about the award though, just because I won it, doesn't mean I'm an excellent actress, I've still got to work at improving my performances.

Can you share some memories about the film shoot?

The film was made over three months in eight provinces. I had a scene bathing in a very cold weather with heavy rain. It was freezing! When the director shouted "cut", people covered me up with piles of blankets as I was shivering due to the cold.

Once in the northern province of Bac Giang, we were shooting in a windy location, and while taking our lunch break, a gust of wind blew our food away.

You're a thoroughly modern beauty, how did you go about portraying Cam, a young songstress from the 18th-century feudal period?

Some people weren't convinced by director Dao Ba Son's choice of me for the role of Cam, but he saw Cam in me. She and I have many things in common. First, we are both singers, and we had to live far from our families from an early age. Even though I speak with a southern accent, my way of speaking still bears some northern features because I was born in the central province of Thanh Hoa.

I read the script many times, and was moved and then totally convinced by Cam. My greatest worry was whether I could bring myself to only cry from one eye as Cam does. I practised many days in front of the mirror with a timer, so as I could concentrate my emotions and cry within the required timeframe.

At first I cried with both eyes, but after three days, I started practising to repress my feelings, and then could push myself to only cry with the right eye because it is more sensitive than the left.

When watching film, the audience will see Cam's tears slowly running from one eye as she explains that she allows "one eye to cry, one eye to see the life". If we had used eye drops, my eyes could not have replicated that effect and would have become red.

What are your views on your role?

Cam was a beautiful and skilful songstress in Thang Long. She met poet Nguyen Du and they empathised and respected each other in terms of their talents for playing instruments and constructing verse. Sadly they didn't have a happy ending.

I think I successfully portrayed her through different periods in her life, when she was 16, 26 and 40 years old, with different appearance and emotions.

I undertook painstaking preparations to portray the role, including learning chau van (spiritual music) and playing the dan nguyet (moon-shaped four-string instrument).

In your opinion, what was the secret to the success of the film?

Well, the film was based on the poetry of Nguyen Du, a great poet, so it's pure Vietnamese, and contains the beauty of traditional culture, literature, customs and the people's lifestyles. The film reflects images representing Viet Nam's countryside.

Have you got any more film roles planned?

Next year I will finish my role in Ve Dat Thang Long (Return to Thang Long). Then I will invest my time in music. My fourth album named Nang La (Strange Sunlight) will be released soon. The prize marks a new era in my life. I hope that I'll have the opportunity to act in other films.

I don't want to divide myself into two parts but will gather my strength in terms of one goal. I won't record an album and take part in a film at the same time. The previous album wasn't successful because I was too focused on acting. I have to learn from that mistake. — VNS

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Thursday, October 14, 2010

Culture Vulture

Prof Vu Khieu is the author of many works on the capital, such as Bach Khoa Thu Ha Noi (Ha Noi Encyclopaedia) and Tong Tap Nghin Nam Van Hien Thang Long (One Thousand Years of Civilisation in Thang Long), which took him decades to complete. At the age of 95, he is still writing. He talks with Culture Vulture.

Would you say something about your research on Ha Noi?

In the last 10 years, I focused on researching the old capital. I was co-author of the four-volume Tong Tap Nghin Nam Van Hien Thang Long, Lich su Khoa Hoc Xa Hoi Va Nhan Van (History and Social Science and Humanities), in 18 volumes and I wrote many funeral orations, epitaphs and parallel sentences in tens of temples worshipping martyrs throughout the country.

Among them, Tong Tap Nghin Nam Van Hien Thang Long, a collection of writings by 1,200 authors and collaborators compiled with assistance of Prof Vu Tuyen Hoang, won a special content prize at Viet Nam Book Awards 2009 announced by the Viet Nam Publishing Association.

That's the way I pay tribute to those who paid the ultimate sacrifice for the country.

You are still researching and writing. How can you keep going?

When I was 80, my health was getting bad. I spent about eight hours a day studying Confucianism, the ideas of Confucius and Mencius.

Ten years ago, when I was 85, I decided to have a rest. I thought I would write poetry, play chess and have fun with my friends. Then the Party and the State conferred on me the title of Hero of Labour of the doi moi (renewal) period.

I wondered then how can a hero have a rest? So I determined to come back to work and promised myself that from then until the last breathe, I would not waste a day.

Last month, I celebrated my 95th birthday. If I can live till 100, as I would like, I will have another five years to work.

Nowadays, when I can't sleep I often read Buddhist scriptures to understand more about Mahayana Buddhism. Compassionate thought of Buddhism is a humane philosophy. I learn much from it.

What do you intend to do in the future?

I have been writing notes about Ha Noi for as long as I can remember. Now I am putting them into a book of 2,400 pages for the capital's anniversary, to be released when I am satisfied with the quality and when my heart orders. — VNS

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Friday, October 1, 2010

Thang Long-Hanoi’s millennium celebration opens

A solemn ceremony was held at the Ly Thai To Flower Garden on Friday morning to kick off 10 days of celebrations for the Millennium of Thang Long-Hanoi.

Opening the ceremony, National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Phu Trong, together with Party, State and Hanoi municipal leaders offered incense before the Statue of King Ly Thai To, who had a strategic and sound decision to remove the country’s capital city from Hoa Lu in the northern province of Ninh Binh to Dai La (now Hanoi), opening up a long-term development direction for following generations.

Addressing the event, Secretary of the Hanoi Party Committee Pham Quang Nghi stressed that the historical transfer of the capital from Hoa Lu surrounded by one mountain after another to the centre of the Red River Delta formed an extraordinary step forward for the nation, reaffirming the will to build the national independence and unification and ushering in a new era for the Dai Viet. Thang Long-Hanoi’s thousand-year history has been constantly cultivated by heroic exploits.

“Generations of Vietnamese living in the Ho Chi Minh era, owners of our majestic land and an independent and free country, will surely advance without any misgivings to the future, a future of more beautiful Vietnam so much desired by President Ho Chi Minh,” he said.

At the ceremony, General Director of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Irina Bokova presented a certificate recognizing the Thang Long Royal Citadel as a World Cultural Heritage to the Hanoi leaders.

While showing her admiration at Vietnam, one of the few countries in the world that still preserves lively memories of the capital transfer 1,000 years ago, Irina Bokova also recommended that Vietnam should take responsibility for the humankind through promoting the heritage to future generations.

The jubilant atmosphere of the grand celebrations has been seen in each street, each lane and each face of the capital. All roads leading to the Ly Thai To Flower Garden, where the opening ceremony took place, are decorated by flags, banners and flowers. Hanoi is putting on itself a new colorful dress to celebrate its 1,000th birthday.

Jeanne Huynh, an overseas Vietnamese in France, couldn’t hide her feeling when returning to the homeland to attend the great event of the capital and the country. She said she was proud of being a Vietnamese.

Vietnam’s successful hosting of many international events and the recognition of the Thang Long Royal Citadel as a World Culture Heritage have proven the country’s increasingly improved position, she said.

Jeanne Huynh also expressed her belief that in the next 10-15 years, Vietnam can stand on a par with developed countries in the world.

For the UK Ambassador to Vietnam, Mark Kent, the 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi is an event of special significance for him as he is going to end his three-year term of office in Hanoi.

Mark Kent said he was honored to live and work in the 1,000-year-old city of Hanoi. He added that he will join a number of activities during the anniversary, including a race for peace around Hoan Kiem Lake on October 3.

The millennium celebrations of Thang Long-Hanoi will be held within ten days with numerous artistic and cultural activities throughout the capital city.

Highlights of the celebrations will be a meeting and a parade at the Ba Dinh Square as well as a cultural and art gala night at the My Dinh National Stadium on October 10.

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Sunday, September 26, 2010

Ao dai to be honored at Hanoi’s grand anniversary

A magnificent ao dai (Vietnamese traditional long dress) exhibition will take place in Hanoi on the evening of October 1, kicking off the festival of the grand millennial anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.

Collections of ao dai from northern, central and southern regions of Vietnam will be performed by both professional and amateur models.

The 45-minute performance, which will be broadcast live on television, will be followed by a 15-minute light and fireworks displays.

As part of activities to mark the 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi, the People’s Committee of the northern province of Bac Ninh and the Vietnam Buddhist Sangha will inaugurate the great Buddha statute on the Phat Tich mountain peak Saturday.

The statue, which 27m in height and weighs 3,000 tones, is one of the biggest stone statues in Southeast Asia.

The provincial library of Thanh Hoa province Thursday announced a collection of Sino-Vietnamese written documents introducing people who have a close connection to the history of Thang Long-Hanoi.

The library inaugurated a reading room that offers 500 books on Thang Long-Hanoi.

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Sunday, September 12, 2010

Hanoi ready for millennium anniversary in October

thang long hanoi
The 1,000th founding anniversary of Thang Long – Hanoi will be marked by music and other cultural events from October 1 to 10
Photo: Tuoi Tre

A series of important works to dress up and decorate Hanoi is basically complete with just 30 days left until the millennium anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi takes place.

The capital city has to date completed 33 major projects, making Hanoi greener, cleaner and more beautiful, according to Ngo Thi Thanh Hang, Vice Chairwoman of the Hanoi Municipal People’s Committee and deputy head of the National Steering Committee on the anniversary.

Prominent among the completed works are the Hanoi Museum, the Saint Giong statue, the Presidents Ho Chi Minh and Ton Duc Thang statues, the Hoa Binh (Peace) park, the Hanoi-Amsterdam Gifted High School, Beltway 3, Thang Long boulevard, the giant embroidered picture entitled “Coi Xua” (Old Origins) and the ceramic road along the Red River.

Besides, following the UNESCO’s recognition of the 82 doctor laureate steles under the Le-Mac dynasties in Van Mieu (Temple of Literature), the Thang Long Imperial Citadel has been recently recognized as a world cultural heritage by the UNESCO, she said.
"They are invaluable presents on the threshold of the millennium anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi," said Hang.

The 10-day festival will bring together many politicians, cultural activists and scientists around the world as well as foreign visitors and overseas Vietnamese.

A solemn ceremony will open the festival in the morning of October 1 at the Ly Thai To Garden. The festival will include a meeting and parade on October 10 at the Ba Dinh Square.

As many as 38 foreign and 20 local art troupes have to date registered to perform during the festival, Hang said.

Thousands of antiques have been selected for exhibition, helping visitors understand the world cultural heritages in Hanoi, she added.

The city has almost completed works on decorating and lighting streets as well as attractive lighting systems around lakes and stadiums and on bridges spanning the Red River.

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Monday, September 6, 2010

Puppets get anniversary spirit

Puppet love: Artists from the Viet Nam Puppetry Theatre enact how Thang Long, now Ha Noi, was established.. — VNA/VNS Photo Nhat Anh

Puppet love: Artists from the Viet Nam Puppetry Theatre enact how Thang Long, now Ha Noi, was established.. — VNA/VNS Photo Nhat Anh

HA NOI — Hon Khi Thang Long, or the Sprit of Thang Long, was the theme of the second International Puppetry Festival at Ha Noi Opera House on Saturday night.

Writer Le Thi My Ha directed the show, which reflects the history, culture and traditions of the Thang Long Royal Citadel.

Based on the spirit of the ancient Viet people and performed by artists from the Viet Nam Puppetry Theatre, it uses a dragon to show how Thang Long, now Ha Noi, was established.

Four women played traditional instruments to reflect Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter.

Vietnamese artists performed Con Vit Xau Xi (The Ugly Duckling) based on Dane Hans Christian Andersen's children's stories.

Puppeteers from 12 countries have joined five of Viet Nam's puppet troupes for the six-day festival that will continue until Thursday.

Performances will continued at the Hong Ha Theatre, 51 Duong Thanh Street; the Viet Nam Puppet Theatre, Truong Chinh Street; the Thang Long Puppet Theatre, Dinh Tien Hoang Street and Cinema 17, Ly Nam De Street.

The festival is held every two years and the troupe adjudged the best will win US$1,000. — VNS

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