Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Asian film center-stage at first Vietnam film fest

Phillip Noyce
File photo of director and AiF ambassador Phillip Noyce, who will act as a judge at Vietnam's first international film festival next month
Photo: AFP

Asian cinema will take center-stage at Vietnam's first international film festival next month, the government says.

The festival, from October 17-21 will feature 30 works by Asian directors in three categories: feature film, documentary and short, said a statement received Tuesday from the Ministry of Culture's cinema department.

The event is being held as part of celebrations to mark Hanoi's 1,000th anniversary.

Entries in the juried festival were produced during the last two years and may have been shown already, but they must not have been broadcast on television or the Internet, the cinema department said.

Among the judges will be Australian Phillip Noyce, who directed "The Quiet American," a 2002 film adaptation of Graham Greene's novel set during Vietnam's war of liberation against France.

The statement said other judges include Vietnamese director Dang Nhat Minh, whose 2009 film "Don't Burn" dealt with the Vietnam War, Venice Film Festival director Marco Muller, and South Korean actress Kang Su-Yeon.

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Cartoon on legendary Hanoi founder to screen

cartoon
Photo: VNA

A cartoon on a legendary Emperor, who founded Thang Long capital, now Hanoi, is scheduled to air this Friday.

The film, entitled “Dragon’s Son”, is the first long cartoon using 3D technology in Vietnam, Nguyen Thi Hong Ngat, Executive Director of the Cinematography Association Studio said at a press briefing in Hanoi Monday.

The 90-minute footage is about the childhood of King Ly Thai To, or Ly Cong Uan at birth, who founded the 216-year-long Ly Dynasty in 1009.

Painters have animated over 30 characters, designed 20 major scenes and conducted almost 850 acts.

Director Pham Minh Tri said the “Dragon’s Son” is “100 percent Vietnamese”, from sounds to music and costumes. The cartoon is characterized by northern countryside sceneries such as banian trees, ferry stations, pagodas and buffalo boys playing and fishing.

Ly Cong Uan was born at Co Phap Pagoda, in the village of same name, Bac Ninh province, in 974.

At the age of 3, his mother took him to the pagoda for monks there to bring him up. He was named Ly Cong Uan by the monks and became a monk.

Under the protection and support of Ly Van Hanh, also known as Van Hanh monk, who was a respected monk in the holy Anterior Le Dynasty court, Uan came to the capital and took several promotions to the Left Guard-Commander of the Anterior Citadel, a high rank in the army system. In 1009, Le Ngoa Trieu, the last king of the Anterior Le Dynasty died under the wrath of the people because of the ferocity and cruelty brought on them in his time. Dao Cam Moc, a senior official, and Van Hanh monk used their power to enthrone Ly Cong Uan without any debate, beginning the Ly Dynasty.

The then capital Hoa Lu in the northern province of Ninh Binh was a tiny area with craggy geography bounded by mountain ranges, which had been suitable for a turbulent era but was not conducive to peacetime development and growth. Ly Thai To chose to move the capital to a broader area lying in the flat alluvial delta named Dai La, now Hanoi. In 1010, he began the move and while travelling from the former capital to the new land, he saw a Yellow Dragon ascending, so he changed the new land's name from Dai La to Thang Long.

Vietnam is celebrating the millennium anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi on October 10, which is called the Grand Festival.

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HCMC hotel set for annual German beer festival

beer
Oktoberfest at HCMC’s Windsor Plaza Hotel next month will offer fun, games, and massive quantities of German food and beer
Photo: Reuters

Oktoberfest at Ho Chi Minh City’s Windsor Plaza Hotel next month will as usual offer a week of music, German beers, and all-you-can-eat food.

Among the well-known German offerings at the festival meant for guzzling beer will be the premium Krombacher beer and Schneider Weisse wheat beer, sausages, meats and carvings, breads, pretzels, and a dozen desserts.

Also as usual, every guest will get a one-liter beer mug as a souvenir and have the chance to win a nightly lucky draw.

Bavarian music group Trenkwalder will return for a third time to perform traditional songs.

Guests can try their hand at traditional German games to test their strength and skills.

Last year the event attracted 10,000 participants who drank 15,000 liters of beer and more than four tons of food.

Tickets to the festival on October 8-10 and 13-16 start at VND600,000 (US$30.7).

Held for the first time in 1810, Oktoberfest attracts some six million international participants to Germany each year.

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Neolithic era cave was home to early humans

Artefacts: A scientist gathers stone objects found in Tham Choong Cave, which is thought to have housed primitive humans during the Neolithic Era (7,000-8,000 years ago). — VNA/VNS Photo Vu Quang Dan

Artefacts: A scientist gathers stone objects found in Tham Choong Cave, which is thought to have housed primitive humans during the Neolithic Era (7,000-8,000 years ago). — VNA/VNS Photo Vu Quang Dan

TUYEN QUANG — A cave in Na Hang District in the northern province of Tuyen Quang is thought to have housed primitive humans during the Neolithic Era (7,000-8,000 years ago).

Tuyen Quang Museum's director Quan Van Dung said that experts from the museum and the Viet Nam Archaeology Institute discovered primitive human artefacts in the cave, which is known as Tham Choong Cave to the locals.

The archaeologists discovered more than 1,000 stone objects, including tools for cutting, chopping and grinding. The tools were handmade with stones that had been retrieved from a riverbed.

The expert said the tools bore Hoa Binh cultural features (34,000 years ago and lasted till 2,000BC).

Archaeologist found tools made from animal bones, including a narrow tool with a sharp point.

The scientists at the site assumed that the tool was likely used to stitch their clothing that was made from tree bark. — VNS

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Gaming shops flout curfew

Game on: Internet shops in Ha Noi are flouting a new city regulation requiring them to close by 11pm, with many continuing to operate until 6am. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Tu

Game on: Internet shops in Ha Noi are flouting a new city regulation requiring them to close by 11pm, with many continuing to operate until 6am. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Tu

HA NOI — Internet shops in Ha Noi are flouting a new city regulation requiring them to close by 11pm, with many continuing to operate until 6am.

The rule, imposed on September 1, was aimed at reducing online game abuse among young people.

But Nguyen Hung, a student at the University of Technology and a self-confessed online game addict, said the hours after 11pm were "gold" for internet shops because many students rushed to them at night after finishing their studies for the day.

Hung said he often plays at a shop on Le Thanh Nghi Street in Hai Ba Trung District.

"It's a new school year, and many students from rural areas who come to study at universities in Ha Noi still have money to afford online games throughout the night," said Hung.

A shop owner who asked to have his name withheld said, "Despite the city's restriction, we try to keep our shop open to earn money."

The city has cut the main internet line to the shop, but the shop remains connected through shared network lines, he said, although the quality of the internet connection was lower, causing trouble for some gamers.

Many shop continue to operate without internet connections by offering offline games.

"These offline games are still entertaining," said Hung. "There's still blood and violence. Offline games are as dangerous as online games."

To get around the post-11pm ban, may shop use internet connections during the day and cut the line during the late hours to deal with any city inspectors.

Some internet shops have tried to find a loophole in the restriction by registering to change their form of business to a cafe – while continuing to providing oneline gaming.

For example, the Dat Shop on Giang Vo Road, which has been fined and urged to stop late night operations many times, has opened a cafe and provides free internet for customers who order a coffee.

Dat has also made this change since the new restriction bans internet shops and internet shops within a 200m radius of a school but not a cafe with internet.

An official from the Ha Noi Department of Information and Communications, Pham Quoc Ban, said they were confused as to how to deal with the problem. "But we'll tighten controls to prevent violent online games which have a highly negative effect on young people's behaviour and lifestyles."

Violations will be imposed with heavy fines and forced to be closed, Ban said.

The new regulation was also imposed in HCM City where 4,000 internet shops and over 1 million internet subscribers exist. — VNS

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Bao Viet, HSBC fund mobile school libraries in Danang

Pupils of Ngo May Elementary School in Danang read books of the mobile library. - Photo: Courtesy of HSBC
BaoViet Holdings Insurance Corporation and HSBC Vietnam have launched a VND1.5 billion mobile library project for primary pupils and disadvantaged youngsters in Danang City of Vietnam.

“Bearing in mind the local conditions, the mobile library project is highly effective in giving children access to reading materials which helps to improve individual literary and their educational achievement overall,” said Matthew Martin, chief technology and services officer and chairman of the corporate sustainability steering committee for HSBC Vietnam. 

Mobile libraries would visit 136 schools during the 2010 - 2011 school year. Around 58,000 students across eight districts in Danang City would benefit from the scheme. The project has been organized by Global Village Foundation in cooperation with Danang City’s Department of Education and Training.

A library containing 275 books on a variety of subjects, including Vietnamese literature, culture, reference, and fun reading material, would be delivered to each school reading hall for children aged to 12 from that area. Every semester, the library would rotate to other schools so that each school gets access to the four different sets of books over a two-year period.

“HSBC Vietnam is committed to investing in Vietnam’s most valuable asset – its children,” Martin said in a statement.

The mobile library program is a Global Village Foundation initiative that gives thousands of students and teachers a chance to appreciate the fun aspects and intellectual benefits of reading to improve the children’s aptitude and appetite for learning.

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Monday, September 13, 2010

Bao Viet, HSBC fund mobile school libraries in Danang

Pupils of Ngo May Elementary School in Danang read books of the mobile library. - Photo: Courtesy of HSBC
BaoViet Holdings Insurance Corporation and HSBC Vietnam have launched a VND1.5 billion mobile library project for primary pupils and disadvantaged youngsters in Danang City of Vietnam.

“Bearing in mind the local conditions, the mobile library project is highly effective in giving children access to reading materials which helps to improve individual literary and their educational achievement overall,” said Matthew Martin, chief technology and services officer and chairman of the corporate sustainability steering committee for HSBC Vietnam. 

Mobile libraries would visit 136 schools during the 2010 - 2011 school year. Around 58,000 students across eight districts in Danang City would benefit from the scheme. The project has been organized by Global Village Foundation in cooperation with Danang City’s Department of Education and Training.

A library containing 275 books on a variety of subjects, including Vietnamese literature, culture, reference, and fun reading material, would be delivered to each school reading hall for children aged to 12 from that area. Every semester, the library would rotate to other schools so that each school gets access to the four different sets of books over a two-year period.

“HSBC Vietnam is committed to investing in Vietnam’s most valuable asset – its children,” Martin said in a statement.

The mobile library program is a Global Village Foundation initiative that gives thousands of students and teachers a chance to appreciate the fun aspects and intellectual benefits of reading to improve the children’s aptitude and appetite for learning.

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