Wednesday, October 27, 2010

A tale of a family’s struggle to cope

Dustin Nguyen’s character, Vo, (L) in a rare moment of intimacy with the rescued prostitute, Suong, played by Do Thi Hai Yen, who also starred in the Quiet American - Photo: Courtesy of BHD
Canh dong bat tan (Floating lives) is a Vietnamese movie for the emotions and the senses. The film-makers beautifully capture the textures and sounds of the Mekong Delta in this aptly named tale about wanderers and how they cope with events in their lives.

The slow moving story takes place on a small wooden diesel motor boat, typical of boats in the waterways in Dong Thap province where the filming was done.

The boat carries the four main characters, who have almost no connection with anyone or anything beyond the boat’s gunwales, except for a flock of ducks.

The sounds of ducks and the beautiful cooing sounds of the teenage son named Dien (played by Vo Thanh Hoa), who tends them, are woven throughout the soundtrack. The ducks embody the uneducated teen’s defiant and sometimes reckless loyalty that he simply lives without question or fear.

The story starts out when Dien saves a beautiful young woman from an all woman village lynching squad, who are screeching for her blood because she prostituted herself to one of their husbands.

The horribly beaten woman named Suong (played by Do Thi Hai Yen) escapes by staggering through a maze of riverside wooden gangways, and by chance collapses on the bow of Dien’s family’s boat. Dien vouches for her to his brooding father, Vo, (played by Dustin Nguyen) and the boat slowly motors her away from danger.

Dien’s sister Nuong (played by Lan Ngoc) nurses her below deck, through three days of semi-consciousness. When she has enough strength, the frank-speaking Suong quickly builds relationships with the brother and sister, but it’s impossible for her to reach the father whose dark energy pervades the boat as it chugs through the canals. To Dien and Nuong, she plays the part of the mother they lost a decade ago and helps to heal some of their long-felt hurt. To the cruel father, who is too obsessed and angered by the way he lost his wife to give his children love, Suong is a worthless prostitute that is nothing but a burden to him. As the duped husband, Dustin Nguyen plays the victim role well and it is shocking when he tries to dump his children also.

The young director, Nguyen Phan Quang Binh delves adroitly into the emotions contained in Nguyen Ngoc Tu’s short story, “Boundless Rice Field”. The audience cries and giggles as they recognize characters from their own lives on the screen. The acting is good without being brilliant and the translation for the subtitles is done with sensitivity. The grainy quality of the film suits the subject matter and goes wonderfully with the sound making it a must to see at the cinema.

One of the amazing things about the life of these wanderers is how vast and impersonal the Mekong Delta is. It is vital for the children to stay with the boat. If they get separated from it, it would disappear forever. The insecurity is almost tangible.

In one scene, Dien climbs a tower in the paddy fields to try and spot Suong; he vainly scans the endless fields and canals and is left in emotional desolation. Lifelines like mobile phones or emails are worthless to this broken family, who live an almost cashless life except for the sale of a few ducks or eggs. It’s a lyrical depiction of the isolating powerlessness of poverty and the sense of smallness in a vast uncaring wilderness. Love is the only security they have.

VND3.3 billion in takings

Canh Dong Bat Tan, which was produced by BHD Co. Ltd. and Vietnam Studio, had VND3.3 billion in takings after three-day showing in the country’s cinemas.

On the first day, the film burned up the box office worldwide. In HCMC, Cinebox Hoa Binh sold 2,000 tickets and Thang Long Cinema 900, eight times more than the Korean movie Hearty Paws and American flick, The Other Guys. It also blitzed Vietnamese production, Inferno, which only sold 670 tickets in its first three-days. Megastar Cineplex Hung Vuong had to get an extra copy so it could have Floating Lives screening in three cinemas with shows starting every half an hour. On three days of last weekend, over 11,000 movie-goers rushed to HCMC-based cinemas Galaxy Nguyen Du and Galaxy Nguyen Trai. A representative of BHD said there are 23 copies of the film currently screening nationwide, 17 of them in HCMC. By Tuong Vi

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A tale of a family’s struggle to cope

Dustin Nguyen’s character, Vo, (L) in a rare moment of intimacy with the rescued prostitute, Suong, played by Do Thi Hai Yen, who also starred in the Quiet American - Photo: Courtesy of BHD
Canh dong bat tan (Floating lives) is a Vietnamese movie for the emotions and the senses. The film-makers beautifully capture the textures and sounds of the Mekong Delta in this aptly named tale about wanderers and how they cope with events in their lives.

The slow moving story takes place on a small wooden diesel motor boat, typical of boats in the waterways in Dong Thap province where the filming was done.

The boat carries the four main characters, who have almost no connection with anyone or anything beyond the boat’s gunwales, except for a flock of ducks.

The sounds of ducks and the beautiful cooing sounds of the teenage son named Dien (played by Vo Thanh Hoa), who tends them, are woven throughout the soundtrack. The ducks embody the uneducated teen’s defiant and sometimes reckless loyalty that he simply lives without question or fear.

The story starts out when Dien saves a beautiful young woman from an all woman village lynching squad, who are screeching for her blood because she prostituted herself to one of their husbands.

The horribly beaten woman named Suong (played by Do Thi Hai Yen) escapes by staggering through a maze of riverside wooden gangways, and by chance collapses on the bow of Dien’s family’s boat. Dien vouches for her to his brooding father, Vo, (played by Dustin Nguyen) and the boat slowly motors her away from danger.

Dien’s sister Nuong (played by Lan Ngoc) nurses her below deck, through three days of semi-consciousness. When she has enough strength, the frank-speaking Suong quickly builds relationships with the brother and sister, but it’s impossible for her to reach the father whose dark energy pervades the boat as it chugs through the canals. To Dien and Nuong, she plays the part of the mother they lost a decade ago and helps to heal some of their long-felt hurt. To the cruel father, who is too obsessed and angered by the way he lost his wife to give his children love, Suong is a worthless prostitute that is nothing but a burden to him. As the duped husband, Dustin Nguyen plays the victim role well and it is shocking when he tries to dump his children also.

The young director, Nguyen Phan Quang Binh delves adroitly into the emotions contained in Nguyen Ngoc Tu’s short story, “Boundless Rice Field”. The audience cries and giggles as they recognize characters from their own lives on the screen. The acting is good without being brilliant and the translation for the subtitles is done with sensitivity. The grainy quality of the film suits the subject matter and goes wonderfully with the sound making it a must to see at the cinema.

One of the amazing things about the life of these wanderers is how vast and impersonal the Mekong Delta is. It is vital for the children to stay with the boat. If they get separated from it, it would disappear forever. The insecurity is almost tangible.

In one scene, Dien climbs a tower in the paddy fields to try and spot Suong; he vainly scans the endless fields and canals and is left in emotional desolation. Lifelines like mobile phones or emails are worthless to this broken family, who live an almost cashless life except for the sale of a few ducks or eggs. It’s a lyrical depiction of the isolating powerlessness of poverty and the sense of smallness in a vast uncaring wilderness. Love is the only security they have.

VND3.3 billion in takings

Canh Dong Bat Tan, which was produced by BHD Co. Ltd. and Vietnam Studio, had VND3.3 billion in takings after three-day showing in the country’s cinemas.

On the first day, the film burned up the box office worldwide. In HCMC, Cinebox Hoa Binh sold 2,000 tickets and Thang Long Cinema 900, eight times more than the Korean movie Hearty Paws and American flick, The Other Guys. It also blitzed Vietnamese production, Inferno, which only sold 670 tickets in its first three-days. Megastar Cineplex Hung Vuong had to get an extra copy so it could have Floating Lives screening in three cinemas with shows starting every half an hour. On three days of last weekend, over 11,000 movie-goers rushed to HCMC-based cinemas Galaxy Nguyen Du and Galaxy Nguyen Trai. A representative of BHD said there are 23 copies of the film currently screening nationwide, 17 of them in HCMC. By Tuong Vi

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Music show marks Toyota’s 21st year in Asia

Orchestra Citta de Firenze from Florence, Italy, will perform the Toyota Classic Symphony at the Hanoi Opera House tonight to mark the Japanese company’s 21st anniversary in the Asia Pacific.

Renowned conductor Lorenzo Castriota Skanderbeg will wield the baton while tenor Leonardo Melani and talented young Vietnamese pianist Luu Hong Quang, who won the first prize at the 2009 Chopin Piano Contest in Australia, will perform.

The symphony promises an evening of classical Italian music with concertos and symphonies, extracts from traditional Italian operas like Rossini’s La gazza ladra and Verdi’s Giovanna d’Arco.

The show is a part of a series of performances being held from October 23 to November 12 in many Asian countries.

In Vietnam it has been held annually since 1997, acquainting Vietnamese audiences with world masterpieces and enabling local artists to perform with foreign professionals.

The money raised from ticket sales will go into the Toyota scholarship fund for young Vietnamese musicians.

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Halloween creeps up on HCM City

HCM CITY — It has been creeping up on this city, and none too surreptitiously.

Halloween celebrations in HCM City have increased in popularity over the last few years and it has become a more elaborate affair each year.

Nowhere is this reflected more than in the costumes that many shops in the city have imported for the revelries this year. The choice is much wider and the products more expensive.

With a week to go for the festival, business is bustling.

Vanel Tuan, director of Lien Huong Ltd Co, said this year the products are more diverse and two to three times higher in quantity than last year. The company used to sell around 10 kinds of masks and costumes, but this year they have 25 kinds of costumes and more than 150 masks.

For the products imported by his company, retail costume prices range from VND60,000-250,000 (US$3-12.5) while masks cost between VND12,000 and VND15,000, Tuan said.

Superman and Spiderman costumes, angel and butterfly wings as well as a collection of monster masks are perennial favourites, and most of these are made in China.

Halloween accessories are sold in souvenir and toy shops. The youngsters can choose and purchase their costumes and accessories including fake fingernails and teeth from www.lienhuong.vn.

 

Halloween is an annual holiday observed on October 31, mainly in the US, Canada, the UK and Ireland. It is catching on in several other countries including Australia, New Zealand and Viet Nam.

The festival has its roots in the Celtic festival of Samhain and the Christian holiday known as All Saints' Day, but has no religious connotations today.

Typical Halloween activities include trick-or-treat, where kids wearing costumes go from door to door in a neighbourhood and are given gifts of candy and other tidbits; costume parties; carving pumkins into jack-o'-lanterns, ghost tours, bonfires, apple bobbing and visiting haunted attractions.

Le Thu Huyen, who owns the Chip Chip souvenir shop in District 7, said this masks of famous personalities like Michael Jackson that light up are a big favourite this year. Harry Potter costumes are out of stock, she said.

Apart from costumes and other personal accessories, there are those who want to go the whole hog, as they do in the US, where this festival is celebrated with something akin to religious fervour. There are several products on sale for such people as well, like a coffin from which a human skeleton springs up suddenly. This costs more than VND3 million ($150).

Custom made Halloween costumes are also becoming more popular. Hoang Nhat Nguyen of the Kien Do Ltd Co in District 10 said they have received more than 20 orders from customers aged 14-22.

Depending on the customers' needs, the company offers advice, selects materials and suitable accessories to complete the costume in two to seven days for between VND350,000 and 2 million ($17.50-100).

Holiday choices

Many private firms, public agencies, restaurants and leading hotels are cashing in on the increasing popularity of Halloween. On offer are buffets and Halloween parties with different themes.

Phuong Nga Ltd Co, a business with 10 years of experience in organising Halloween festivals for children through its Funny Land toy shop chain, said it has exciting games and activities on offer this year, like making effigies of the devil and a design contest for the popular cartoon character Casper, the friendly ghost.

The company's festival celebrations are being organised on October 30-31 at one of its stores in District 3, with entrance tickets priced at VND160,000 ($8).

The festival will be celebrated at the Dam Sen Cultural Park as well. Customers dressed in costumes will be offered free entrance tickets

The Tho Ngoc Club in District 3, the Student Cultural House and the Chip Chip store are other places where the festival will be celebrated under different themes. Some of the events will raise funds to help households in the flood-ravaged central region. — VNS

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Citibank employees celebrate Global Community Day

Citibank employees and schoolkids from Long Truong Secondary School in District 9. The program aimed to motivate the kids to continue their education - Photo: Ngoc Diem
About 140 Citibank employees, families and friends volunteered to spend one day of their weekend to refurbish a library and offer basic banking knowledge to students at a secondary school in HCMC for their annual community day on Saturday, October 23.

Citibank volunteers donated over 800 new and used books, five used computers and 10 new bookshelves to Long Truong Secondary School in Ong Nhieu Village, Long Truong Ward, District 9. Apart from painting and renovating the school library, volunteers conducted 10 group sessions with students to share their career development stories and introduce the basics of banking business.

The event, jointly organised with the NGO, Save the Children, marks the fifth annual “Global Community Day” of Citigroup Inc.  On the day, more than 45,000 Citi volunteers around the globe came together as a team to support the community in various projects: literacy, housing, environmental protection, nutrition and healthcare.

“Global Community Day is an annual initiative that celebrates what we do to make a difference in our communities every day,” said Brett Krause, Citibank Vietnam Managing Director and Citi Country Officer. Located about 20km from the city centre, Long Truong School is in a fast urbanising suburb with many social challenges and has a high dropout rate among students.  Citibank staff focused on encouraging students to commit to continuous education, according to Krause. 

Bank volunteers told inspiring stories about their own study experience, how they overcame hardship in the past and ended up working in the banking sector.

Also on this day, a hundred Citibank Hanoi staff and friends joined in renovating the library of Ha Cau orphanage in Ha Dong, which they have volunteered all year round to support.

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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Citibank employees celebrate Global Community Day

Citibank employees and schoolkids from Long Truong Secondary School in District 9. The program aimed to motivate the kids to continue their education - Photo: Ngoc Diem
About 140 Citibank employees, families and friends volunteered to spend one day of their weekend to refurbish a library and offer basic banking knowledge to students at a secondary school in HCMC for their annual community day on Saturday, October 23.

Citibank volunteers donated over 800 new and used books, five used computers and 10 new bookshelves to Long Truong Secondary School in Ong Nhieu Village, Long Truong Ward, District 9. Apart from painting and renovating the school library, volunteers conducted 10 group sessions with students to share their career development stories and introduce the basics of banking business.

The event, jointly organised with the NGO, Save the Children, marks the fifth annual “Global Community Day” of Citigroup Inc.  On the day, more than 45,000 Citi volunteers around the globe came together as a team to support the community in various projects: literacy, housing, environmental protection, nutrition and healthcare.

“Global Community Day is an annual initiative that celebrates what we do to make a difference in our communities every day,” said Brett Krause, Citibank Vietnam Managing Director and Citi Country Officer. Located about 20km from the city centre, Long Truong School is in a fast urbanising suburb with many social challenges and has a high dropout rate among students.  Citibank staff focused on encouraging students to commit to continuous education, according to Krause. 

Bank volunteers told inspiring stories about their own study experience, how they overcame hardship in the past and ended up working in the banking sector.

Also on this day, a hundred Citibank Hanoi staff and friends joined in renovating the library of Ha Cau orphanage in Ha Dong, which they have volunteered all year round to support.

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Everyone can be golfer at Café Screen Golf

A guest plays golf at the Café Screen Golf Hoang Mai at 384/1B Nam Ky Khoi Nghia Street, HCMC’s District 3 - Photo: My Tran
My boss once shared these words of wisdom with me: “The smaller the ball, the higher the social position.” The sentence is not perfectly correct, but it means that golf is a game for the rich. But funnily enough that statement has been disproved, as everyone can play golf at Café Screen Golf, Hoang Mai, 384/1B Nam Ky Khoi Nghia Street, HCMC’s District 3.

Hoang Mai, the owner of the café that is the first of its kind in HCMC, said the idea was inspired by his father’s Korean friend who said Korea has about 5,000 indoor screen golf outlets. He said he has noticed the interest level in the noble game increasing in Vietnam as the average income increases.

“Not many Vietnamese have the time and money to go to the golf course, so ordinary people who love golf can come to the café, hang out with other golfers and play for only VND400,000 per hour,” he added.

The café that opened early this month, has three screen golf indoor rooms, one free putting room and an area for serving drinks and food. Each screen golf room is equipped with a set of sticks, shoes, gloves, cameras, projector and other high-tech equipment.

Korean simulation technology has advanced so much that there is an actual real-life feel of golfing, closely replicating the fairways and accurately simulating the golfing action, that makes it appealing not only for practice but also for affordable fun and informal social gatherings.

The players can choose a 9-hole to 18-hole round of virtual golf and choose one of 40 golf courses of the U.K., Japan and Korea. On the screen, clouds roll by in high definition while tree branches sway in a virtual breeze and melodies of birds twitter. The ball drops into a water hazard and creates virtual ripples, swishes through tree leaves or rolls into the hole with a satisfying rattle while spectators cheer.

The room is also equipped with high speed wireless sensors to create a screen golf device that measures the distance of the drive and the spin on the ball. After the rookies tee off, there will be professional golfers on screen to give you advice, illustrating correct position, distance, force and spin function.

The screen recalibrates to show golfers the view from her or his ball’s new position to the flag. As they prepare for the next shot, the computer tilts the swing mat to replicate the incline and advises which club to use. Later it also helps them visualize their putt; virtual drops of water crawl across the screen to indicate how the green slopes.

“I am really excited with this game. I feel as if I am on a real golf course with the virtual space and virtual sounds,” said Tini, a player at the café, adding that the golf course would be especially good for women as they didn’t have to worry about their skin in the sun.

It is a good place for newcomers to the game to practice before heading to real golf courses, Tini added.

In the rooms, there are chairs for friends or family to sit and enjoy drinks while you play.

Drinks and food are priced from VND11,000 to VND59,000. Until the end of this month, the café is offering a 50% discount - only VND200,000 per hour.

Anyone who wants to buy their own virtual set up to play screen golf at home, can also order at the café. For more information, contact (08) 3526 8480.

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