Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Local filmmakers compete in int’l short film contest

Fast Food Film, Pepe, Blue, Left at the Cow, Young Media, and The K6 Gang competed in the 48-hour film festival that ran from Friday to Sunday.

The local filmmakers competed with hundreds of filmmakers from more than 20 countries to win cash and a chance to be featured in the prestigious Short Film Corner at Cannes as well as the Las Vegas NAB show from April 9th – 14th this year.

At this year’s competition, held by 48-hour Film Project, the public will vote for their favorite films.

Of the Vietnamese films, Fast Food Film’s “A superhero’s choice” about a superhero trying to save the planet to win a girl’s heart with its straightforward story-telling was the most popular.

Others are more experimental. DOOO from Left at the Cow, for instance, features one character who sits and talks in front of the camera throughout the film. Young Media’s “That’s the way it is” about the dire consequences of environment and forest destruction and The 6 Gang’s “Looking for water” are two other interesting takes on environment protection.

Further information is available at http://www.48gogreen.com/

h

Fast Food filmakers
 

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Thursday, February 17, 2011

Clutch of new movies on the way

Thrilling times: A poster for Lenh Xoa So (Death Sentence) which will open nationwide in April.

Thrilling times: A poster for Lenh Xoa So (Death Sentence) which will open nationwide in April.

HCM CITY — Film studios are working on a raft of new projects, including comedy, action, and horror films, that are slated for release this year.

Things are all set for Thien Ngan (Galaxy), Viet Nam Studio (BHD), and Early Riser Media Group to begin shooting an action-comedy movie about a switch between a rural man and the leader of a crime gang at the end of this month.

Long Ruoi (Fly Long), the eponymous title named for the gang boss, will be directed by Vietnamese-American Charlie Nguyen.

A poor cook from the countryside, Teo, looks so much like the Sai Gon gang boss that the latter's men force him to act as their leader who is in hospital after a fight with rivals.

Teo has to constantly ward off conspiracies to assassinate him.

Nguyen said he and his crew are working to create a "new style" for the film since many films have been made earlier in this genre.

The film features Thai Hoa, who plays Teo and Long Ruoi. Hoa came to prominence last year after playing a gay man in another Galaxy Studio film De Mai Tinh (It's Up to Mai).

Long Ruoi is expected to be released on National Day, September 2, a Galaxy spokesperson said.

Hoang Tran Film is making an action flick about gangsters, Lenh Xoa So (Death Sentence). It will have plenty of thrilling fight sequences featuring traditional Vietnamese martial arts, its director Do Quang Minh said.

It features overseas Vietnamese martial arts star Tran Minh Hoang, who won many European taekwondo and Thai boxing championships, who is also the producer and martial arts director.

A former member of a criminal gang, Hoang, turns a new leaf and quits his old ways but has to contend with the "death sentence" passed by the gang's leader.

Filming finished at the end of January and BHD will release it in April.

Galaxy Studio is making a supernatural thriller Rh108 which is being directed by Bui Thac Chuyen, who is also one of its scriptwriters along with Bui Kim Quy, winner of the top prize at the 2004 National Short Film Festival.

The film is about Chieu Duong, a 16-year-old girl who has the mental make-up of a six-year-old following a traumatic incident during her childhood.

However, the incident has given her strange powers – she has the ability to read people's minds and foretell terrible disasters.

Nguyen Thuy Duong, daughter of veteran actress Mai Phuong – famous for her role in the 1983 film Son Ca Trong Thanh Pho (Nightingale in the City) – will play the role of her namesake.

"Duong's face and body language match the character's, while she also passed the screen test," the director said.

Duong said though it was difficult to fit in the filming with her school schedule, Chieu Duong's role was worth the challenge.

She earlier acted in two TV series, May Rau Lam Vo (A Man-Wife) and Con Duong Phia Truoc (The Road Ahead).

Galaxy expects to release the film for Halloween in October. — VNS

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Poignant Chinese AIDS film moves Berlin festival

A heart-wrenching documentary about AIDS sufferers in China and the discrimination they face in their daily lives has won a rapturous reception at the Berlin film festival.

Based on interviews and emails with a wide range of HIV positive people, director Zhao Liang said he hoped the film, Zai Yi Qi ("Together"), could change attitudes in China, where at least 740,000 suffer from the AIDS virus.

Zhao used Internet chat groups to track down many of his subjects, the vast majority of whom refused to show their face for fear of "letting their family down". Several declined to appear on camera at all.

The stories moved many in the audience to tears.

One 30-year-old drug user, known only as "Duckweed", explained how when she found out she had the virus, she planned to kill herself and her four-year-old son, also infected.

"I couldn't see the point of living any more, so I bought some rat poison and put it in our rice. My boy wanted to eat the rice straightaway," she said sobbing.

"But then I thought, 'how can I let him leave the world after only a few years of life?' I changed my mind, I threw the rice away."

Another interviewee plays a recording of his mother's reaction when he tells her he plans to appear in the documentary.

"How can you do this to the family? You're such a disappointment," she tells him. "This should not be exposed."

The three main characters are Hu Zetao, an 11-year-old boy, Liu Luping, his carer and Xia, a stand-in actor. All three worked on the set of a previous Chinese film about AIDS, "'Til Death Do Us Part," by director Gu Changwei.

In this "film-within-a-film", Zhao shows how the discrimination against the HIV positive people on the set turns over time into compassion and affection.

At first, one elderly crew member, unaware there were HIV positive people on set, says: "Anyone with this sickness knows he should never say anything because otherwise people will keep their distance. I would keep my distance."

Another set member, upon learning his friend is HIV positive, suddenly cannot bring himself to look at him, prompting the jibe: "Don't worry, you can't get it from being stared at."

Zhao also takes the audience to Hu's home, where he lives with his father and stepmother after his mother died of AIDS.

His family, unaware of how the virus can be transmitted, will not allow him to put his chopsticks in the dinner pot like everyone else and he has his own washing utensils.

"The film tries to counter the discrimination and stigma that many AIDS sufferers still face in China," Zhao told the audience after receiving a tumultuous reception.

"Before making this film, I knew very little about this disease and the goal is to make more Chinese people understand better how AIDS is transmitted and how it affects sufferers," he added.

aids 2

Experts say there is still a major gap in public knowledge about the virus in China, where it has overtaken rabies and tuberculosis as the country's leading cause of death among infectious diseases.

According to a recent poll of 6,000 people, nearly half thought it could be transmitted by mosquito and almost one in five believed they could catch it if an infected person sneezed on them.

The poll also suggested that the stigma attached to AIDS was still rife, with around one-third saying that infected people "deserved" their condition because of drug use or their "promiscuous" sexual activities.

In one of the film's lighter moments, Hu explains his own unique way of dealing with discrimination.

"The neighbors in the village are scared of me. They keep their distance. So what I do is to seek out the ones that keep their distance most and run after them shouting 'I'm going to catch you and infect you'.

"Then they run really fast."

Though emotional in parts, the film is ultimately about the hope the sufferers have in a brighter future and their bravery in struggling against a wave of discrimination, on top of their debilitating condition.

Zhao said three of his subjects had decided to show their faces after all, in the hope it could boost understanding.

Xia, one of these, said: "If my face can help promote tolerance, then there is no need to cover it."

The film is screening out of competition at the Berlin film festival, which runs until February 20.

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Friday, February 11, 2011

Local films shine during Tet

Vietnamse flavour: A scene from Bong Ma Hoc Duong, one of the Vietnamese-made films shown in cinemas during the Tet holiday. — VNS Photo

Vietnamse flavour: A scene from Bong Ma Hoc Duong, one of the Vietnamese-made films shown in cinemas during the Tet holiday. — VNS Photo

HCM CITY — Despite stiff competition from entertainment centres, Vietnamese-made films attracted big crowds at cinemas in HCM City and Ha Noi during the Tet (Lunar New Year) holiday.

One of the blockbusters, Bong Ma Hoc Duong (Ghost at School), drew thousands of young moviegoers to Galaxy, Megastar and BHD Maximart cinemas.

Audiences queued up in front of the cinemas' ticket kiosks for the chance to watch the country's first 3-D film featuring an amusing story of an online author haunted by three ghosts.

The horror comedy attracted dozens of young pop stars and fashion models including Wanbi Tuan Anh, Truong Quynh Anh and Dinh Ngoc Diep.

Attracting more than 300,000 filmgoers, the US$1 million-film Bong Ma Hoc Duong grossed VND22 billion ($1.1 million) after 12 days of release in only HCM City and Ha Noi.

"We believe our film will set a record in ticket sales this Tet," said Phan To Hong Hai, a member of Thien Ngan Studios' managing board, the film's producer.

District 5's Megastar HungVuong cinema attracted 10,000 people a day, an increase of 20 per cent over the same period last year.

Thien Ngan's competitor, BHD Company, also believes in the financial success of its production, the comedy film Co Dau Dai Chien (War of the Brides).

The producer said the film's Vietnamese-American director Victor Vu had brought something new to fans.

Co Dau Dai Chien revolves around the love of a group of young people living in urban areas, portrayed by Huy Khanh, Phi Thanh Van and Van Trang.

It attracted 230,000 audiences in 10 days, earning VND14.2 billion in ticket sales. The numbers are expected to be higher in coming days.

The private film company Phuoc Sang's Thien Su... 99 (The Cherub... 99) features a love story, offering comedy and exciting action.

The film contains a large cast of well-known artists, including young singers Khong Tu Quynh and Ngo Kien Huy. Like its competitors, Phuoc Sang also spent a large sum on filming.

"Comedies will be big hits with youngsters looking for more lighthearted entertainment," said Phuoc Sang, the film's director.

The film is being screened at cinemas across the country, and has thus far earned a profit of VND9 billion.

In HCM City, thousands of families have also flocked to theatres as well as cinemas.

Cat Phuong of the HCM City Small Drama Theatre said that mostly big drama troupes and theatres, including Phu Nhuan and Hoang Thai Thanh, staged more comedic plays during Tet and Valentine's Day.

The theatre's two plays, Chua Yeu Sao Hieu Duoc (Can't Understand Without Love) and Cuc Yeu (Fall in Love), feature performances of young artists, including Hoang Anh and Diem Chau.

"We will continue to stage comedies in the upcoming weeks instead of showing serious productions as we had originally planned," said a representative of Hoang Thai Thanh Drama Stage.

All the tickets for the theatre's three plays have been sold out for two months.

Phuong also predicts that comedies will continue to draw audiences to the theatre until International Women's Day on March 8. — VNS

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Saturday, February 5, 2011

Overseas Vietnamese are subjects of film series

The latest stories about the lives of Vietnamese expatriates will be retold in a multi-episode documentary film by the Ho Chi Minh City Television Film Studio, with plans to broadcast the programme on the city’s TV channel HTV7 early this year.

“The diversity of the overseas Vietnamese (OV) community living around the world has encouraged us to make the film series, and we hope they will act as a bridge to connect all Vietnamese people worldwide,” the film’s general director Ly Quang Trung said.

“Nguoi Viet xa xu” (Vietnamese Expatriates) is the film studio’s longest chronicle film and includes 240 episodes. Production started four years ago.

Six working groups, each with seven members, travelled to many countries in the world where Vietnamese people are living to record their daily life, including their activities to maintain traditional customs, as well their wishes to make contributions to the homeland.

“Each country where Vietnamese people are living will tell an exciting story about the culture and history of the Vietnamese community,” Trung said.

Despite difficulties in climate and working conditions, film makers have tried their best to bring the film to public in the hope that the series will act as a bridge to connect local people and Vietnamese expatriates, Trung further said.

Apart from the multi-episode film on OV, Vietnamese television stations, such as Ho Chi Minh City television HTV and VTV4 channel of Vietnam Television have made a number of programmes retelling the lives of Vietnamese around the world.

There are about four million Vietnamese people living and studying in 100 countries and territories worldwide who are considered as an indispensable part of the nation

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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Beautiful faces to light up screens during Tet

Three eagerly awaited Tet releases -- “Thien su 99”, “Bong ma hoc duong,” and “Co dau dai chien” -- all star hot actors and actresses.

“Bóng ma học đường,” the first Vietnamese 3D film, produced by Thien Ngan Movie JSC and directed by Le BaoTrung, delves into issues faced by teens with relation to family, love, and school violence.

The horror-comic flick narrates the story of horror writer Nam Linh played by renowned comedian Hoai Linh.

After killing himself, Linh becomes an old ghost under a ghost lord who also controls a group of super-bad teenage ghosts. Elly Tran plays a teen ghost who always bullies Linh.

Linh is ordered by the ghost lord to kill his son if he wants to save his soul. In the process of grappling with this cruel dilemma, Linh discovers the issues facing children, including his son.

This film also seeks to shed light on the causes of school violence, a burning topic last year after many video clips of fights between teenage girls were posted online.

Elly Tran appears in a bikini along with other beautiful ghosts played by Ngoc Diep and Quynh Anh. The Vietnamese-Chinese beauty is well known to netizens for boasting about her bust and hip measurements.

 Elly Tran

The film also stars Hoang Son, Wanbi Tuan Anh, Truong Quynh Anh, Thien Minh, Dinh Ngoc Diep, and Tim.

The film will be released nationwide January 26.

‘Thiên sứ 99’

“Thiên sứ 99” (Heavenly messenger 99), produced by Phuoc Sang Company, is a humorous and gentle love story of Thien Minh, the son of a Love Goddess, who is banished to the earth to look for a love arrow that he lost.

Thien Minh must obtain 99 love expressions from girls to regain the arrow and his power. When he is about to complete his mission, he recognizes he is in love.

thien su 99

Will he return to heaven or stay back?

Thien Minh is played by hottie Huynh Anh.

Critics have, however, panned his acting as awkward, the film as lacking humor, and Diem My’s dialogues for not being smooth.

The film also stars singers Ngo Kien Huy and Khong Tu Quynh.

The critics also said the screenplay is sloppy and the photography modest. But Phuoc Sang believes its film, released nationwide January 21, will be successful.

‘Cô dâu đại chiến’

“Cô dâu đại chiến” (Bride in a big fight) is a laugh-a-minute about a love story between five girls and a guy named Thai played by Huy Khanh.

Thai is the only son of a rich family and leads a fast life. He flirts with four girls with different personalities and backgrounds at the same time.

All of them eventually fall in love with him and seek various ways to express their love, leading to a series of funny happenings.

co dau dai chien

One day Thai falls in love with a gentle, beautiful girl named Linh, played by Ngoc Diep. Linh is a painter. She believes in Thai’s love and he decides to say goodbye to his other girlfriends and marry Linh.

On their wedding day, Thai’s four former lovers appear with weapons in their hands. A fight breaks out among the girls, causing chaos.

Critics and many artists think this is the best film to be released during Tet. The film also features several attractive actors and actresses.

Related Articles

Beautiful faces to light up screens during Tet

Three eagerly awaited Tet releases -- “Thien su 99”, “Bong ma hoc duong,” and “Co dau dai chien” -- all star hot actors and actresses.

“Bóng ma học đường,” the first Vietnamese 3D film, produced by Thien Ngan Movie JSC and directed by Le BaoTrung, delves into issues faced by teens with relation to family, love, and school violence.

The horror-comic flick narrates the story of horror writer Nam Linh played by renowned comedian Hoai Linh.

After killing himself, Linh becomes an old ghost under a ghost lord who also controls a group of super-bad teenage ghosts. Elly Tran plays a teen ghost who always bullies Linh.

Linh is ordered by the ghost lord to kill his son if he wants to save his soul. In the process of grappling with this cruel dilemma, Linh discovers the issues facing children, including his son.

This film also seeks to shed light on the causes of school violence, a burning topic last year after many video clips of fights between teenage girls were posted online.

Elly Tran appears in a bikini along with other beautiful ghosts played by Ngoc Diep and Quynh Anh. The Vietnamese-Chinese beauty is well known to netizens for boasting about her bust and hip measurements.

 Elly Tran

The film also stars Hoang Son, Wanbi Tuan Anh, Truong Quynh Anh, Thien Minh, Dinh Ngoc Diep, and Tim.

The film will be released nationwide January 26.

‘Thiên sứ 99’

“Thiên sứ 99” (Heavenly messenger 99), produced by Phuoc Sang Company, is a humorous and gentle love story of Thien Minh, the son of a Love Goddess, who is banished to the earth to look for a love arrow that he lost.

Thien Minh must obtain 99 love expressions from girls to regain the arrow and his power. When he is about to complete his mission, he recognizes he is in love.

thien su 99

Will he return to heaven or stay back?

Thien Minh is played by hottie Huynh Anh.

Critics have, however, panned his acting as awkward, the film as lacking humor, and Diem My’s dialogues for not being smooth.

The film also stars singers Ngo Kien Huy and Khong Tu Quynh.

The critics also said the screenplay is sloppy and the photography modest. But Phuoc Sang believes its film, released nationwide January 21, will be successful.

‘Cô dâu đại chiến’

“Cô dâu đại chiến” (Bride in a big fight) is a laugh-a-minute about a love story between five girls and a guy named Thai played by Huy Khanh.

Thai is the only son of a rich family and leads a fast life. He flirts with four girls with different personalities and backgrounds at the same time.

All of them eventually fall in love with him and seek various ways to express their love, leading to a series of funny happenings.

co dau dai chien

One day Thai falls in love with a gentle, beautiful girl named Linh, played by Ngoc Diep. Linh is a painter. She believes in Thai’s love and he decides to say goodbye to his other girlfriends and marry Linh.

On their wedding day, Thai’s four former lovers appear with weapons in their hands. A fight breaks out among the girls, causing chaos.

Critics and many artists think this is the best film to be released during Tet. The film also features several attractive actors and actresses.

Related Articles

'King's Speech' crowned head of Oscar nominees

British historical drama "The King's Speech" has been crowned the Oscar frontrunner, earning 12 nominations for the multibillion-dollar film industry's top honors.

The understated royal film starring Colin Firth as a stammering King George VI beat rivals including "True Grit" and Facebook film "The Social Network," in nods for the 83rd annual Academy Awards to be held February 27.

"True Grit," the Coen brothers' take on the classic Western, garnered 10 nominations while eight each went to hi-tech thriller "Inception" and "The Social Network," which had been tipped as Oscar favorite.

"Your head spins when you hear the news," Firth told the Today Show after the nominations were announced, joking that his career had gone into orbit since he was first nominated for best actor Oscar last year.

"It's almost like I was fired out of a cannon this time last year and I'm still orbiting Pluto,' he joked, adding: "It's quite extraordinary."

Firth's rivals on the shortlist for the best actor Oscar are Javier Bardem for "Biutiful," Jesse Eisenberg in "The Social Network," James Franco in "127 Hours," and Jeff Bridges in "True Grit."

The British actor, who lost out to Bridges for best actor last year, joked when asked whether he would have to kneecap the "True Grit" star to prevent the same thing happening.

"Something has to be done," he quipped.

Best actress nods went to Annette Bening in "The Kids Are All Right," Nicole Kidman in "Rabbit Hole," Jennifer Lawrence in "Winter's Bone," Natalie Portman in "Black Swan" and Michelle Williams in "Blue Valentine."

"The King's Speech" won Oscar nods for best film, three acting categories, as well as for directing, editing, musical score, art direction, cinematography, costume design, sound mixing and original screenplay.

Firth, who won a Golden Globe earlier this month for his performance in the British movie, is widely tipped for a best actor at the Oscars show next month, the climax of Hollywood's annual awards season.

And Helena Bonham Carter, who plays his royal wife, was nominated for best supporting actress, while Geoffrey Rush, who plays the speech therapist who helps the king, was also nominated, for best supporting actor.

"That's the best thing about it, to be going together, to have the royal flush thats the most gratifying," Firth told the Today Show.

Rush added: "As an Australian, I'm as excited to be recognized and honored by the Academy as my character must have been when his London speech therapy business flourished when the future King of England happened to pop by."

The British movie's Oscars nomination success was welcomed by the Stuttering Foundation, saying the film "has brought overwhelmingly positive attention to the plight of people who stutter.

"'The King's Speech' gives the stuttering community a hero who inspires and a movie that promotes understanding and acceptance of the complexities of stuttering," said its president, Jane Fraser.

Facebook blockbuster "The Social Network" had been tipped to earn the most Oscar nominations, after winning four awards at the Golden Globes on January 16.

But industry observers had noted that the British royal movie could do better at the Oscars because it is better suited to the tastes of the 6,000-plus members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

The British movie also got a small boost over the weekend when it won best picture award at the Producers Guild of America awards.

The Oscar nominations were announced by last year's supporting-actress winner Mo'Nique, joined by the Academy president Tom Sherak.

The 10 films nominated for best picture Oscar were: "Black Swan," "The Fighter," "Inception," "The Kids Are All Right," "The King's Speech," "127 Hours," "The Social Network," "Toy Story 3," "True Grit," and "Winter's Bone."

Nominated for best animated film -- an increasingly high-profile award as technology helps create stunning blockbuster family movies -- were "How to Train Your Dragon," "The Illusionist" and "Toy Story 3."

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

"Social Network" electrifies Golden Globes

Facebook film "The Social Network" won four Golden Globe Awards on Sunday, including best drama, making it a front-runner in Hollywood's Oscar race after sweeping several honors from critics and industry groups in recent weeks.

"Social Network" also won the best director award for David Fincher, best screenplay for writer Aaron Sorkin and best musical score, written by Nine Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.

The film recounts the story of the founding of social networking site Facebook, an international phenomenon with 500 million users that was started in a college dormitory by founder, billionaire Mark Zuckerberg.

The Facebook founder did not cooperate with the movie's makers, and the film is a piece of fiction. Nevertheless, producer Scott Rudin and Sorkin pointed out that Zuckerberg's creation has been a phenomenon that has changed the way the world communicates.

"I want to thank everyone at Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg for his willingness to use his life and work as a metaphor for communication and the way we relate to each other."

Another big Golden Globe winner was "The Kids Are All Right," which featured two lesbian parents whose children search for their sperm donor father. "Kids" also picked up the award for best actress in a film comedy for its star Annette Bening, who portrayed one of the mothers in the film.

British actor Colin Firth was named best actor in a film drama for his portrayal of stuttering King George VI in "The King's Speech," while Natalie Portman took home the Golden Globe trophy for best actress in a drama with "Black Swan."

 globe 2

Actress Natalie Portman poses with her award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama for 'Black Swan,' backstage at the 68th annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California, January 16, 2011

Backstage, Firth was asked about his chances for an Oscar in the same role, but all the actor said he could do was get through his big night on Sunday.

Tips on Oscar race

The Golden Globe Awards, which are given out by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, are one of the major Hollywood shows leading to the film industry's most-prized honours, the Oscars, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Many film industry watchers look at the winners of Golden Globes and other honors for clues as to which films, performers, directors and writers might win Oscars. This year, "Social Network" has swept many early honours and added the Golden Globe to its cache of trophies.

In other Golden Globe movie honours, Paul Giamatti won the prize for best actor in a comedy film for his role as a caustic man in "Barney's Version."

Boxing drama "The Fighter" picked up two Golden Globes for Christian Bale as supporting actor portraying a drug-addicted fighter and for Melissa Leo as supporting actress playing the mother of Christian Bale's character.

"Toy Story 3" was named best animated movie for what director Lee Unkrich called ""an animated movie that beat with a human heart." And Denmark's "In a Better World" was named best foreign language film.

Host, comedian Ricky Gervais, got the show off to a start by poking fun at movies like "The Tourist" and actor Charlie Sheen, who in recent weeks has been reported partying wildly, causing concern at the CBS television network that airs his comedy, "Two and a Half Men."

Gervais also referenced a scandal that has rocked the HFPA this year. A former publicist sued the group claiming its members received favors in exchange for nominations from movie studios.

Before the show, glamorous actresses in colorful dresses and shimmering jewels paraded down the red carpet. Natalie Portman, wore a light pink Viktor and Rolf dress with a red flower across the front, and Nicole Kidman donned a cream-colored, off-the-shoulder dress by Prada.

Michael Douglas, fresh from treatment for throat cancer, and his wife Catherine Zeta-Jones turned out for the show. Douglas presented the trophy for best film drama and received a standing ovation.

"There's just got to be an easier way to get a standing ovation," he said. "Thank you all very much. Needless to say, I'm very, very, very happy to be here tonight.

Unlike the Oscars, Golden Globe voters also honor TV programs and actors. HBO crime series "Boardwalk Empire" was named best TV drama. Its star, Steve Buscemi, won best actor in a TV drama.

Musical "Glee" picked up three honors: best TV comedy, best supporting actor for Chris Colfer who plays a gay high school student and for Jane Lynch, a scheming cheerleading coach.

"Carlos" was named best made-for-TV movie. Al Pacino took the Golden Globe for best actor in a TV movie or mini-series for "You Don't Know Jack," and Claire Danes won best actress in a TV movie or mini-series with "Temple Grandin."

"Social Network" electrifies Golden Globes

Facebook film "The Social Network" won four Golden Globe Awards on Sunday, including best drama, making it a front-runner in Hollywood's Oscar race after sweeping several honors from critics and industry groups in recent weeks.

"Social Network" also won the best director award for David Fincher, best screenplay for writer Aaron Sorkin and best musical score, written by Nine Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.

The film recounts the story of the founding of social networking site Facebook, an international phenomenon with 500 million users that was started in a college dormitory by founder, billionaire Mark Zuckerberg.

The Facebook founder did not cooperate with the movie's makers, and the film is a piece of fiction. Nevertheless, producer Scott Rudin and Sorkin pointed out that Zuckerberg's creation has been a phenomenon that has changed the way the world communicates.

"I want to thank everyone at Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg for his willingness to use his life and work as a metaphor for communication and the way we relate to each other."

Another big Golden Globe winner was "The Kids Are All Right," which featured two lesbian parents whose children search for their sperm donor father. "Kids" also picked up the award for best actress in a film comedy for its star Annette Bening, who portrayed one of the mothers in the film.

British actor Colin Firth was named best actor in a film drama for his portrayal of stuttering King George VI in "The King's Speech," while Natalie Portman took home the Golden Globe trophy for best actress in a drama with "Black Swan."

 globe 2

Actress Natalie Portman poses with her award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama for 'Black Swan,' backstage at the 68th annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, California, January 16, 2011

Backstage, Firth was asked about his chances for an Oscar in the same role, but all the actor said he could do was get through his big night on Sunday.

Tips on Oscar race

The Golden Globe Awards, which are given out by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, are one of the major Hollywood shows leading to the film industry's most-prized honours, the Oscars, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Many film industry watchers look at the winners of Golden Globes and other honors for clues as to which films, performers, directors and writers might win Oscars. This year, "Social Network" has swept many early honours and added the Golden Globe to its cache of trophies.

In other Golden Globe movie honours, Paul Giamatti won the prize for best actor in a comedy film for his role as a caustic man in "Barney's Version."

Boxing drama "The Fighter" picked up two Golden Globes for Christian Bale as supporting actor portraying a drug-addicted fighter and for Melissa Leo as supporting actress playing the mother of Christian Bale's character.

"Toy Story 3" was named best animated movie for what director Lee Unkrich called ""an animated movie that beat with a human heart." And Denmark's "In a Better World" was named best foreign language film.

Host, comedian Ricky Gervais, got the show off to a start by poking fun at movies like "The Tourist" and actor Charlie Sheen, who in recent weeks has been reported partying wildly, causing concern at the CBS television network that airs his comedy, "Two and a Half Men."

Gervais also referenced a scandal that has rocked the HFPA this year. A former publicist sued the group claiming its members received favors in exchange for nominations from movie studios.

Before the show, glamorous actresses in colorful dresses and shimmering jewels paraded down the red carpet. Natalie Portman, wore a light pink Viktor and Rolf dress with a red flower across the front, and Nicole Kidman donned a cream-colored, off-the-shoulder dress by Prada.

Michael Douglas, fresh from treatment for throat cancer, and his wife Catherine Zeta-Jones turned out for the show. Douglas presented the trophy for best film drama and received a standing ovation.

"There's just got to be an easier way to get a standing ovation," he said. "Thank you all very much. Needless to say, I'm very, very, very happy to be here tonight.

Unlike the Oscars, Golden Globe voters also honor TV programs and actors. HBO crime series "Boardwalk Empire" was named best TV drama. Its star, Steve Buscemi, won best actor in a TV drama.

Musical "Glee" picked up three honors: best TV comedy, best supporting actor for Chris Colfer who plays a gay high school student and for Jane Lynch, a scheming cheerleading coach.

"Carlos" was named best made-for-TV movie. Al Pacino took the Golden Globe for best actor in a TV movie or mini-series for "You Don't Know Jack," and Claire Danes won best actress in a TV movie or mini-series with "Temple Grandin."

Friday, January 14, 2011

Viet Nam's first 3-D flick among new Tet releases

by Thu Anh

Jumping off: The poster of Bong Ma Hoc Duong, the country's first 3D-film, produced by Thien Ngan Studios. — VNS Photo

Jumping off: The poster of Bong Ma Hoc Duong, the country's first 3D-film, produced by Thien Ngan Studios. — VNS Photo

HCM CITY — As usual, a slew of films are ready for release during the Tet (Lunar New Year) holidays, including Viet Nam's first 3-D flick, and studios are hoping to part young moviegoers and their money.

Thien Ngan (Galaxy) Studios, one of the country's biggest, believes its 3-D movie Bong Ma Hoc Duong (Ghost at School) will be a hit and a step forward for the entire industry.

To make sure nothing goes wrong, it spent a packet on hiring Hollywood cinematographer Joel Spezeski.

"Our film's post-production was done in Hong Kong," its director Le Bao Trung, who learnt 3-D film-making in Hong Kong before beginning the project, said.

Promising lively sound and light effects throughout, he hoped the film will encourage more Vietnamese filmmakers to make 3-D films.

Ghost at School is a comic horror film about an online thriller writer who is haunted by a bunch of young people's ghosts.

The US$1 million production stars dozens of young pop stars and fashion models like Wanbi Tuan Anh, Truong Quynh Anh, and Dinh Ngoc Diep.

But its explicit scenes have already become a lightning rod for criticism by critics and educators who are anxious about the effects on young audiences after viewing its trailer online.

"I don't think Bong Ma Hoc Duong with its sexy scenes is suitable for teenaged audiences who will go to the cinema without their parents during Tet," Nguyen Minh Nga, a teacher and psychologist in HCM City, said.

Film-makers should take more responsibility for their works because "movies offer not only entertainment but also education."

But the producers dismiss the fears, insisting their film is safe for young viewers.

"Through our film, we hope young audiences, particularly teenagers, learn about bravery, honour, and responsibility," Dinh Thi Thanh Huong, a member of Thien Ngan's managing board, said.

She also believed critics will change their views after seeing the film.

Ghost at School releases in cinemas a week before Tet which falls on February 3 this year.

BHD Company and its partner, Saiga Films, commissioned Vietnamese-American Victor Vu to direct the comedy Co Dau Dai Chien (War of the Brides).

Vu, who studied film-making at Loyola Marymount University in the US, has made a kungfu comedy a la Jackie Chan.

Phuoc Sang Films' Thien Su... 99 (The Cherub... 99) is a romantic film that also has comedy and action.

The film features several famous artists, including upcoming singers Khong Tu Quynh and Ngo Kien Huy. — VNS

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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Student film about baby burials wins contest

Four finalists in the fiction category at the award ceremony - Photo: Thanh Hang
A film inspired by a story about burial services for aborted fetuses won the “Magic of the Heart” student short film contest in HCMC that was announced on Saturday.

 The documentary film “Rest in peace, my baby!” by the team from REC, a student media club, won the first prize in the documentary category. The runner-up was “He” by Tran Minh Nhat, a student from the Radio and Television Broadcasting College II.

Nguyen Le Quyen, an REC member, said their film “Rest in peace, my baby!” was inspired by an old article about a man who conducted burial services for still born or aborted babies in Nha Trang.

“We had to struggle with so many problems to make the film. Sometimes we thought that maybe those babies didn’t want us to make a film about them. Yet we managed to finish it, because we had promised Phuc, the character in our film, to spread the message to the public to stop abortions.” The festival gave prizes for the second runner-up, the most-viewed film, and a special prize for best experimental film. The prizes were cash and scholarships to study multimedia at FPT Arena that hosted the competition.

To watch the films, visit www.youtube.com/user/lienhoanphim.

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Green film makers get 48 hours in contest

International eco film competition, 48 Go Green, is calling for registration in Vietnam. The competition is an avant-garde festival that gives film-makers the opportunity to express themselves and speak up against the ecological destruction taking place on the planet.

The competition will kick off online at 7 pm local time, February 18.  Entrants will then have 48 hours to make a narrative short film, including writing, shooting, and editing, to submit before 7.30 pm local time, February 20.

At the start each team will be assigned a random theme about the environment, potable water, forests, wildlife, the earth, the next generation, energy, the sea or the planet. The organizer will nominate a character, prop and a line which must appear in the film.

The winner will go to Cannes International Film Festival, accompanied by a US$5,000 cash prize. The 16 top films of 48 Go Green could be selected to screen at the NAB Show in Las Vegas from April 9-14, 2011.

48 Hour Film Project launched its first competition in Vietnam last October and November.

For more information, visit www.48gogreen.com.

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Green film makers get 48 hours in contest

International eco film competition, 48 Go Green, is calling for registration in Vietnam. The competition is an avant-garde festival that gives film-makers the opportunity to express themselves and speak up against the ecological destruction taking place on the planet.

The competition will kick off online at 7 pm local time, February 18.  Entrants will then have 48 hours to make a narrative short film, including writing, shooting, and editing, to submit before 7.30 pm local time, February 20.

At the start each team will be assigned a random theme about the environment, potable water, forests, wildlife, the earth, the next generation, energy, the sea or the planet. The organizer will nominate a character, prop and a line which must appear in the film.

The winner will go to Cannes International Film Festival, accompanied by a US$5,000 cash prize. The 16 top films of 48 Go Green could be selected to screen at the NAB Show in Las Vegas from April 9-14, 2011.

48 Hour Film Project launched its first competition in Vietnam last October and November.

For more information, visit www.48gogreen.com.

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Friday, December 31, 2010

Anti-hunting film wins green movie award

HA NOI — A film featuring the illegal hunting of wild animals won a special prize at the fourth Environmental Film Festival held in Ha Noi on Wednesday.

Le Hoai Phuong received VND30 million and the Viet Nam Green Award for his documentary Toi Ac Rung Xanh (Crime in the Forest).

The film depicts hunting activities of wild animals in Binh Thuan Province.

The film's topics and visual effects have left a strong impression on the jury and audiences.

To make the film, Phuong and his staff spent three years following and working with illegal hunters, who agreed to the filming but asked the director to conceal their faces.

"Phuong's work condemns people who destroy forests and hunt wild animals. His film's message calls on people to protect and keep the world and environment safe from disease," said Bui Dinh Hac, veteran film director.

The VND20 million first prize was shared by Vuong Duc for the movie Rung Den (Black Forest), Gia Hung for the documentary Ngu Ngon Thoi Nay (Modern Fable), Trong Hoa for the investigating report Thien Tai va Nhan Tai (Natural Calamities and Man-Made Calamities), and Nguyen Nhan Lap's cartoon Meo Vat (Small Trick).

Ha Noi-skilled director Duc's Rung Den is a quality film that attracted young audiences back to the cinema after its release in 2008. It featured young actors such as Kieu Chinh and Thach Kim Long.

The film described the tragic lives of people who destroy forest land.

Viet Nam Green winner Phuong said that making films featuring environmental problems was not a new experience in Viet Nam.

"Through our work, we hope audiences can learn about saving the natural world and have a visual treat as well," he said.

Organised by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment and its partners, the Viet Nam Cinematography Association and Viet Nam Television, this year's national Environment Film Festival attracted 131 entries, including 70 investigating reports, 35 documentaries, 18 science films, four films and four cartoons. — VNS

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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Culture Vulture

Director Tran Anh Hung's latest film Norwegian Wood recently premiered at Ha Noi's Megastar Cineplex, with the film to open in cinemas nationally tomorrow. Hung, an overseas Vietnamese who lives in France, spoke about the film adapted from the popular novel by Japanese writer Haruki Murakami.

How have you tried to ensure fans of the novel are not disappointed when they watch your movie?

I don't care about it. I was just interested in making a good movie. If the movie doesn't match what audiences' imagined, that's their affair, not mine. This is the first time I've made a movie from a well-known novel. I not only tried to tell the story in images, but I wanted to express my thoughts and feelings when I read the novel. I choose a way to go straight to the heart of the matter, without beginning with a character's recollection as usual.

What's more, the novel did not address the relationship between past and present or cause and effect. If I made the movie following the novel's structure, I would have had to add more details than are present. But there's already a lot of information in the original.

I began to shoot the movie in winter and delayed it in five months waiting for summer. Japanese actors are great, and the languages barrier was not a problem. We could understand each other well because of the common language of cinema.

Director Jean-Jacques Annaud's 1991 film The Lover, based on the book by Marguerite Duras, ignited a constroversy because of the many sex scenes in the film. There are also a lot of sex scenes in Norwegian Wood. But the sexuality in the novel is handled in a very pure way. How did you convey that in making this film?

The director needs to have an exact eye. While sex scenes attract interest, they need to be there for good reason. In the movie, when the protagonist has sex, it is significant and psychologically changing. So I made these scenes special. I focused on the expression on the actors' faces. When watching the movie, audiences will feel it.

Sex in a movie should relate to the theme of the movie. What is the theme of Norwegian Wood? It is that a main female character cannot make love and it leads to her death. It makes her guilty because she thought that her boyfriend's death was due to this reason. Murakami seems to overaccentuate sexuality. Sexuality is the salvation of his characters.

Did you have any trouble with Murakami, who is known to be very tough?

We didn't have any trouble with Haruki Murakami. He knows the cinema. The writer cannot intervene in the director's work. We discussed a lot and it was very good for me. It helped me to write the script. He was satisfied when he watched the movie. I think I'm lucky. Before I reached agreement with Murakami, he didn't want anybody to make a movie from his novel.

The novel focuses on characters' psychological states more than on situations. How do you sustain the interest of audiences in the movie?

The novel reminds me of my youth, with a lot of love and emotion and everything I experienced. It brings me to a special sadness about life and loss which people possible may not have had a chance to see. It is the reason why I made the movie. I believe that it will touch the hearts of audiences. If audiences reach the end of the movie and have remembered their own emotions of first love or fear of loss, I will have been successful.

The movie is being screened in Japan and I know that there have been many responses to the film in Japanese. I've been too busy to ask assistants to translate them for me. I will know in a few weeks.

I cannot guess the responses of Vietnamese audiences. I will have to wait for the answer. Obviously, I hope they will be moved after the come out of the theatre. — VNS

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Yxine short-film winners announced

Director Do Dang Thuong (L) receives a cash prize from the Yxine Film Fest for his film “The Journey Unknown” - Photo: Courtesy of the organizer
A five-minute film by a young Vietnamese American, Vu Quang Huy, won four prizes including best director and best actor at the Yxine Film Fest, an online short-film competition, on Sunday in HCMC.

The winners of the contest that opened in May were announced at the website www.yxine.com.

Huy’s film, “Thinking of You”, was also granted the Golden Heart Award and Best Cinematographer by the five member jury: director Viet Linh, director Nguyen Quang Dung, journalist Le Hong Lam, critic Nguyen Thanh Son and novelist Ho Anh Thai.

“The Journey Unknown” by Do Dang Thuong won best screenplay and best editor. “L.O.V.E” by Vu Ngoc Phuong won the Red Heart Award voted by the audience. “Up in the Tree” by Bui Quoc Thang received New Heart Award for emerging directors.

“Thinking of You” had previously won a Hidden Genius award, a short film competition open to emerging filmmakers by the Vietnamese American Arts and Letters Association held at the University of California, Los Angeles in April.

During the duration of the Yxine competition, there were twenty movies screened on the website.

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Vietnamese Student wins online short film festival

“Thinking of You” by Vietnamese-American Vu Quang Huy has won the Golden Heart prize for best film at YxineFF, Vietnam's first online short film festival.

The chemical biology student from the University of California (UC) also received prizes for best director and best cinematography at a ceremony held at Ho Chi Minh City's BHD Cinema Star Sunday.

American student of the UC, Christy Yang won the prize for best actor.

Huy's film, produced in 2009, is a vignette about a quirky flower-shop girl and the elusive "object" of her desire.

He is polishing the script for a movie version of the film he hopes to make in the next two years.

The five-minute version also won the Audience Award at Hidden Genius, a short film competition sponsored by the Vietnamese-American Arts and Letters Association.

It has been screened at various festivals like the Vietnamese International Film Festival and San Diego Film Festival.

At the YxineFF, animated film The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCMC grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes.

The 4-minute-40-second film depicts the journey of an unnamed, faceless character that jumps out of a book's page through the book that takes it through heaven, destruction, urbanization, and war.

Thuong said he actually created the character and background from paper before resorting to stop motion, an animation technique.

The film is the 23-year-old's first production and was screened at the Future Shorts Festival, which is organized by the global short film community, held in Vietnam last year.

The organisers of YxineFF, the Sai Gon Media Company and local film aficionados, gave away the Red Heart prize for best film chosen by audiences to L.O.V.E by Vu Ngoc Phuong, an overseas Vietnamese from the Philippines.

Up in the Tree, directed by Bui Quoc Thang of Hanoi, won the New Heart prize for the film with creative and new ideas.

All the award-wining films can be watched at the festival's website at www.yxineff.com.

The festival, which was launched in May, aims to broaden the independent film-making community in Vietnam and offer local film-makers an opportunity to promote their works worldwide.

It showed 20 films in the Competition category for 10-minute films, 21 films in the Panorama category for 30-minute shorts made in the last three years, and 12 films made by young directors in the In Focus category.

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Student wins online short film festival

Best cuts: Scenes from The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCM City grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes. — File Photo

Best cuts: Scenes from The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCM City grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes. — File Photo

HCM CITY — Thinking of You by Vietnamese-American Vu Quang Huy has won the Golden Heart prize for best film at YxineFF, Viet Nam's first online short film festival.

The chemical biology student from the University of California (UC) also received prizes for best director and best cinematography at a ceremony held at HCM City's BHD Cinema Star on Sunday.

American student of the UC, Christy Yang won the prize for best actor.

Huy's film, produced in 2009, is a vignette about a quirky flower-shop girl and the elusive "object" of her desire.

He is polishing the script for a movie version of the film he hopes to make in the next two years.

The five-minute version also won the Audience Award at Hidden Genius, a short film competition sponsored by the Vietnamese-American Arts and Letters Association.

It has been screened at various festivals like the Vietnamese International Film Festival and San Diego Film Festival.

At the YxineFF, animated film The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCM City grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes.

The 4-minute-40-second film depicts the journey of an unnamed, faceless character that jumps out of a book's page through the book that takes it through heaven, destruction, urbanisation, and war.

Thuong said he actually created the character and background from paper before resorting to stop motion, an animation technique.

The film is the 23-year-old's first production and was screened at the Future Shorts Festival, which is organised by the global short film community, held in Viet Nam last year.

The organisers of YxineFF, the Sai Gon Media Company and local film aficionados, gave away the Red Heart prize for best film chosen by audiences to L.O.V.E by Vu Ngoc Phuong, an overseas Vietnamese from the Philippines.

Up in the Tree, directed by Bui Quoc Thang of Ha Noi, won the New Heart prize for the film with creative and new ideas.

All the award-wining films can be watched at the festival's website at www.yxineff.com.

The festival, which was launched in May, aims to broaden the independent film-making community in Viet Nam and offer local film-makers an opportunity to promote their works worldwide.

It showed 20 films in the Competition category for 10-minute films, 21 films in the Panorama category for 30-minute shorts made in the last three years, and 12 films made by young directors in the In Focus category. — VNS

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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Action flick kicks off holiday season

Black and white: Singer Siu Black and model Anh Thu in the movie Gentle as a Nun. — File Photo

Black and white: Singer Siu Black and model Anh Thu in the movie Gentle as a Nun. — File Photo

HA NOI — Viet Nam's first holiday season movie release, Em Hien Nhu Ma So (Gentle as a Nun), hits cinemas yesterday.

In the film, directed by Hoang Thien Tru, a former singing star (real-life singer Siu Black) meets a Buddhist nun (Anh Thu) who is a martial arts expert on a secret mission to recover a priceless religious artefact. The two of them witness a murder committed by the son of a mafia boss and, entangled with the underworld, take refuge in a church.

Anh Thu has previously appeared in such popular films as Nhung Co Gai Chan Dai (Long-Legged Girls) and Hon Truong Ba Da Hang Thit (The Butcher's Soul and Truong Ba's Body). Playing a Buddhist martial arts nun in the new film, she spent two months in martial arts training and performs her own stunts in the film.

For Black, movie acting is still an experiment, although she turned in an engaging performance in the film Huyen Thoai Bat Tu (The Legend Alive). She turns in another surprising performance here, as a former star sour with the passing of her youth.

"I'm keen on action movies," said Black. "Sometimes I forget dialogue, but I'm absorbed in the action scenes,

The holiday movie season will eat up at Tet (Lunar New Year), when the Thien Ngan Studio will release Bong Ma Hoc Duong (Ghost at School), the first 3D movie from director Le Bao Trung.

"To prepare for my biggest project, I spent time to learn 3D filmmaking from specialist Chuck Comisky in Hong Kong," said Trung.

Trung and his crew were supported by cinematographer Joel Spezeski, and post-production for the film was completed in Hong Kong.

Pop singers Wanbi Tuan Anh, Truong Quynh Anh and Elly Tran all play leading roles in the film.

"By using 3D technology, we can make films completely different from 2D products, which have poorer images and music," said Dinh Thanh Huong, the movie's production manager.

High-tech, sophisticated productions would attract fans of different ages and backgrounds, he added.

Ghost at School will be screened in both 2D and 3D versions.

Viet Nam first saw 3D technology in the cartoon Phu Dong Thien Vuong, produced by the HCM City-based LCKSoft Company. Other 3D animations like Tho Va Rua (Rabbit and Turtle) and Chu Heo May Man (Lucky Pig), produced by the Viet Nam Cartoon Studio and the 3D Sao La company, have impressed children.

"I think making 3D cartoons and movies isn't difficult for domestic filmmakers," said Trung, who recently opened his own studio, LBT Entertainment. "But the problem is how to encourage movie producers to become involved in the new business."

Other movies expected for the holiday season will be the Viet Film Studio's Dai Chien Co Dau (Fighting Bride), Thien Su 99 (Angel 99) – produced for the teen market by Phuoc Sang Studio – and Sai Gon Yo! from the Chanh Phuong Studio. — VNS

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