Sunday, December 5, 2010

Norwegian Wood to hit local cinemas

Nostalgia: A scene from Norwegian Wood, directed by Vietnamese-French director Tran Anh Hung. The film is based on the best-selling novel by Japanese writer Haruki Murakami. — File Photo

Nostalgia: A scene from Norwegian Wood, directed by Vietnamese-French director Tran Anh Hung. The film is based on the best-selling novel by Japanese writer Haruki Murakami. — File Photo

HA NOI — Norwegian Wood directed by Vietnamese director Tran Anh Hung, who resides in France, based on the best-selling novel by Japanese writer Haruki Murakami, will reach Asian audiences later this month.

The film will first hit screens in Japan on December 11, Chinese Taiwan on December 17, Hong Kong on December 30 and Viet Nam on December 31.

The Viet Nam premiere will be shown at Ha Noi's National Cinema Centre on December 20 with the director's presence.

Hung and producer Shinji Ogawa spent four years trying to win the author's approval to allow the novel to be adapted to the big screen.

Hung, who won the top prize at the Venice Film Festival for his 1995 film Cyclo, said it was never an option to make Norwegian Wood outside Japan or in any other language.

He first wrote the screenplay in French, had it translated into English and eventually Japanese, and relied on help from his producer to communicate with the actors.

"Murakami was very open and said I could adapt it in any language I wanted and in any place in the world," Hung said in a recent interview.

"But I said I wanted to film Japanese faces, because what attracted me in the novel was that it was Japanese," he said.

Adapting a best-selling novel like Norwegian Wood for the cinema can be a tough task for any director, but making the film in a language the director doesn't speak is a challenge in its own right.

That's the challenge Hung faced in bringing the Haruki Murakami story of love and loss to the screen 23 years after the book enchanted millions of Japanese readers and raised the author's profile globally.

The film's score includes the song Norwegian Wood by The Beatles and original music written by Jonny Greenwood. It stars Kenichi Matsuyama, Rinko Kikuchi and Kiko Mizuhara.

Norwegian Wood, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival in September, is a nostalgic story of loss and sexuality. The story's protagonist and narrator is Toru Watanabe, who looks back on his days as a first year university student in Tokyo.

Through Toru's reminiscences we see him develop relationships with two very different women – the beautiful, yet emotionally troubled Naoko, and the outgoing and lively Midori.

Director Hung was born in 1962 in Viet Nam's central city of Da Nang and emigrated to France when he was 12. He has long been considered at the forefront of the wave of acclaimed overseas Vietnamese cinema for the past two decades.

His films have received international acclaim, and until recently, had all been varied meditations on life in Viet Nam.

He received his first Oscar nomination (for Best Foreign Film) for The Scent of Green Papaya (1993), which also won two top prizes at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival, and a second for Cyclo (1995), featuring Hong Kong movie star Tony Leung Chiu Wai, which eventually won a top prize at the Venice International Film Festival. The Vertical Ray of the Sun, released in 2000, was the third film of what many consider his "Viet Nam trilogy".

After a sabbatical, it was officially announced that Hung was back behind the camera with the noir psychological thriller I Come with the Rain (2009), which features a star-studded international cast that includes Josh Hartnett and Elias Koteas. — VNS

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Brazilian film week in Hanoi

A week-long festival of Brazilian films starts on Saturday (Dec.4) at the National Cinema Center in Hanoi till Dec.10.

Brazilian cinema started in 1889 with the Rio de Janeiro based film-maker, Afonso Segreto. Since then Brazil has made a name for producing comedies in the 1950s, musical animations and films influenced by the French New Wave of the 1960’s.

The festival which is called “Panorama of Brazilian Movies” will screen seven films that are suitable for all ages including Romance; Os desafinados (Out of Tune ); O auto da compadecida (The Passion of Christ); Meu nome nao e Johnny (My Name is Not Johnny); Noel, o poeta da Vila (Noel-The Samba Poet); Dois filhos de Francisco (Two Sons of Francisco); and the documentary Peoes (Metal Workers) by Eduardo Countinho about the labor strikes of 1979-1980.

All films will be screened in Portuguese with Vietnamese subtitles. Free tickets are available at National Cinema Center, 87 Lang Ha Street, Hanoi or at the Brazilian Embassy, The Apartment T-72, 12 Thuy Khue Street in Hanoi.

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Vietnam Fashion Week unveils Spring-Summer designs

Wife of the consul general of France in HCMC, Boivineau Bich Hue inspects a crocodile leather wallet by Ton Phat Crocodile at the fashion-week press conference on Thursday - Photo: Kieu Giang
Twenty Vietnam designers will unveil nearly 1000 of their latest designs at Vietnam Fashion Week Spring-Summer 2011 at the Consulate General of France in HCMC’s District 1 at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.

Veteran designers like Minh Hanh, Viet Lien, Trong Nguyen and Quang Huy will join colleagues from Viet Thang Corporation - Hong Vuong, Van Khoa and Bich Ha and free-lance designers including Tuan Huy, Duc Hai, Van Vo, Hung Viet, Cuong Thinh, Thanh Huyen, Hien Le Hai Long-The Huy, Le Hang, Minh Minh, Bao Kim, Minh Hoa and Dang Khoa at the parade.

“I have witnessed the development of Vietnam’s fashion industry and I’m truly impressed by the creativeness of young and talented designers,” Gérard Boivineau, the French consul general in HCMC, said at the press conference on Thursday.

“That’s why I and the consulate general of France are honored to host the Vietnam Fashion Week for the second year since the first one in 200,” Boivineau said.

Together with Viet Thang Corporation other local accessory-makers like Vitco shoes, Ton Phat crocodile leather, Phuc Khanh jewelry and shoe-maker Le Huy Tien will be sending their creations down the catwalk.

The collections hail a return of bright colors and checks. Materials like crocodile leather, python leather, precious stones and Viet Thang’s new 3D textiles will make the show uniquely Vietnamese.

The Vietnam Fashion Week Spring-Summer 2011 is organized by the Consulate General of France in HCMC, Vietnam National Textile Garment Group (Vinatex), Vietnam Textile & Apparel Association (Vitas) and Vietnam Leather & Footwear Association (Lefaso).

The event will be held in the consulate,  6 Le Duan Boulevard, District 1, HCMC.

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Miss Earth committee names judging panel

Hollywood actress Rachel Grant, one of the 10 members of the Miss Earth jury - Photo: Official website of Rachel Grant
The organizing committee of Miss Earth beauty pageant 2010 on Wednesday announced the 10-member judging panel for the crowning night which will take place at the Vinpearl Land in Nha Trang City, Khanh Hoa Province on Saturday.

The jury consists of seven international members and three local members. They are Michael Jeffrey Rosentha, well-known photographer in Hollywood and guest judge of the U.S. reality show America’s Next Top Model; Marie J.Y.E.Collart, actress, publicist and spokesperson to American and French Stars; Rachel Grant, Hollywood actress (starring in the movie Die Another Day) and eco and social activist; Ella Bella, Youth Ambassador for the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP), Eddy Tan, Vice President, Programming for Fox International Channels (Star World, FX, [V], tvN & Nat Geo Music Asia), Karla Paula Henry - Miss Earth 2008; Nenad Bratic, famous architect of Aedas Interiors Company in Hong Kong.

Three Vietnamese judges are Pham Sanh Chau, secretary general of the Vietnam National Commission for UNESCO, Hoang Dai Thanh,
editor-in-chief of Thoi Trang Tre (young fashion) magazine and Nguyen Nhu Quynh, artist, violinist and dancer, many of her designs were selected for exhibition at the Musée de Mode, Paris in 2010.

84 contestants of the beauty pageant are now training for the dancing and performing skills for the crowning night at the Vinpearl Land musical fountain stage. It is expected that over 5,000 will attend.

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Thursday, December 2, 2010

HCMC non-profits hold event for Int’l Volunteer Day

Volunteers from the organizing committee discuss plans for Sunday’s International Volunteer Day event in HCMC - Photo: Courtesy of LIN Center for Community Development
A special event for International Volunteer Day will be held by not-for-profit organizations this Sunday Dec. 5 with 200 volunteers expected to attend.

Event organizers said the event aims to show the NPOs’ appreciation and encouragement for the many ways volunteers help build strong communities.

“Volunteers in Vietnam mainly just want to help and support the community,” said Pham Truong Son, Event Coordinator and Community Liaison at LIN Center for Community Development, one of the organizers.

Son said the 12 NPOs that were organizing the event had thousands of volunteers to thank for the work they have done through their volunteering projects. The event will be special because more than 80% of the NPOs that are organizing the event for International Volunteer Day are Vietnamese, Son said.

The NGOs that are organizing the event are Blue Dreams Volunteer Group, DRD Volunteer Club, Habitat for Humanity Vietnam, Health Volunteers Organization, IVC (International Volunteer Club), LIN Center for Community Development, SIFE Economic University HCMC, Smile Group, Suc tre (Youth Energy) Group, Sunshine Volunteer Group, Tri thuc tre (Young Experienced) Group, Volunteers for Peace Vietnam and the HCMC Women’s Charity Association.

Only two of the NGOs in the organizing committee, Habitat and Sunshine Volunteer Group were international, the Lin community liaison officer said.

The program to be held at the International International School Saigon Pearl in HCMC (92 Nguyen Huu Canh Street, Ward 22, Binh Thanh District) from 8:30 am to 11:30 am will have booths and games plus a forum for volunteers and NPO representatives to share their stories.

It will be much bigger than last year’s small gathering for volunteers, said Dana Doan, full time Advisor to the LIN Center.

Volunteers in Vietnam not only give their time they also provide important skills.

Son said LIN had about 60 active skilled volunteers who were indispensable to the organization, because they provided important services for free that the new NPO could not afford to pay for.

That included online volunteers who help with translating, website design, graphic design and financial management.

Ms. Bao, vice-head of Blue Dreams said, “The event is also a great chance for me and my colleagues to meet our counterparts at other volunteer host organizations to learn new approaches to attracting new volunteers and keeping existing volunteers engaged and motivated.”

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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Vietnamese wins Australian education award

K'Chin has been named Queensland's international student of the year.

K'Chin has been named Queensland's international student of the year.

HA NOI – Vietnamese K'Chin, 21, who underwent life-changing surgery in Australia, has been named Queensland's international student of the year.

Born in a remote village near Da Lat in central-highland Lam Dong Province, K'Chin broke his leg as an infant and spent his first 13 years crawling or hopping because he could not walk.

Rotary Oceania Medical Aid for Children took him to Australia in 2002 and provided him with both medial treatment and an education.

"I couldn't walk so I just crawled until the age that I could hop on one leg, and I hopped for 13 years," he told an Australian Broadcasting Corporation reporter.

Now he can not only walk, he has been nominated his school captain for next year.

"I think that education and being educated is the most important part of our life," said the young man who never went to school in Viet Nam let alone spoke English.

"It's a great honour," he said of the award made by the Queensland Education Department.

"I came to Australia for surgery. It's so wonderful that I am awarded the title."

K'Chin thinks all children should have an education. – VNS

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The reality of living with HIV

Speaking for themselves: The exhibition allows visitors to listen to people with HIV tell their own stories. — VNS/Photo

Speaking for themselves: The exhibition allows visitors to listen to people with HIV tell their own stories. — VNS/Photo

HA NOI — The exhibition Pain and Hope tells the stories of people living with HIV and is one of ten national events being held this year to mark the 20 years since the first case of HIV/AIDS case was diagnosed in Viet Nam.

Since that time, public awareness and education about HIV education have increased considerably, but this was the first time the HIV epidemic has been approached from the perspective of a museum exhibition, said museum director Vo Quang Trong.

"The exhibition aims to encourage wide discussions in society about the HIV epidemic and related issues and create an opportunity for people living with HIV and people working in HIV prevention to share and exchange experiences and professional knowledge, as well as to look back at the response to AIDS by people living with HIV, the Government, and society as a whole in the past 20 years," said Trong.

Through the images and voices of health officers, journalists, volunteers, religious organisations, scientists, and people living with HIV, the exhibition uses the museum language to guide visitors through different stages of emotion experienced by people living with HIV and those working in HIV prevention, he said.

"This is extremely difficult work, but the lessons of the world can't be applied in Viet Nam," said Nguyen Thi Hue from HCM City's AIDS Prevention Committee. "Although peer models are very successful, it depends on the culture of each country. We took things step-by-step. At first, I simply had to obey what my organisation was telling me. Then I began to understand and sympathise with the people."

Materials for this exhibition were gathered from three research sites in the northern city of Hai Phong, the northern province of Dien Bien and HCM City. Materials also came from organisations and individuals in Ha Noi, the northern province of Ninh Binh, the central province of Quang Binh and the southern province of An Giang.

The resulting exhibition has been arranged into sections entitled Pain, Stigma, Will to Live, Joint Forces and Grateful Hearts.

Nguyen Thi Khuyen, 13, a girl from HCM City who lost her mother to AIDS, spoke about her plastic piggy bank displayed in the exhibition.

"My adoptive mother sometimes gives me money to put in a piggy bank, so I take the money out once a year and buy offerings on the anniversary of my mother's death," Khuyen said.

Visitors to the exhibition have left many messages in a guestbook for those afflicted with HIV.

"You are very courageous that you can face the stigma and society's prejudice," wrote one visitor. "Be patient and strong to show how valuable you are."

The exhibition, co-sponsored by the Viet Nam Museum of Ethnology and the Centre for Community Health Research and Development, runs through June of next year.

During the event, the Viet Nam Museum of Ethnology is also holding ongoing educational activities and events for young visitors to help them experience the exhibition space and more fully understand the HIV epidemic in Viet Nam. — VNS

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