Showing posts with label Vesoul Asian Film Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vesoul Asian Film Festival. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Make sure an innocent person is not hurt anywhere, anytime under any circumstances.


Mang Zhong (2005) directed by Zhang Lu

Chinese-Korean filmmaker Zhang Lu shares his artistic destiny with the likes of Japanese filmmakers Yoichi Sai (Blood and bones) and Lee Sang Il (Borderline) who are ethnically Korean but have been creatively active for all their lives in their country of residence Japan. As they have personally been victims of indifference, they have decided to mitigate their sufferings by showing their anger,frustration,hurt, disappointment and misery in their films. Their films are about the problems faced by those people who form part of two cultures. The inherent message of these films is how difficult it is to live like a second class citizen in a land whose customs, traditions and are not at all different from one's homeland. On the contrary, "Grain in ear" directed by Zhang Lu tackles the essential question of cultural identity. The film speaks of the cultural clash faced by Cui Shunji, an unmarried woman of Korean origin. She does everything in order to keep her young boy happy. It is important to note that like Chinese filmmaker Wang Chao (Orphan of Anyang), Zhang Lu too started his artistic career as a writer. It is for this very reason that he has deliberately chosen to give a bookish feel to this film. Watching this film, we feel as if we are reading a filmed book. This film is surely not for viewers used to Hollywood style slick, quick action type films where something keeps on happening every now and than. "Grain in ear" portrays how ordinary people are driven to madness when they are provoked beyond the normal limit of endurance. For this film, Zhang Lu received full support as well as cooperation from an equally great writer turned filmmaker, the acclaimed South Korean filmmaker Lee Chang Dong (Oasis) who also worked for a brief while as South Korean minister of culture.

Monday, January 7, 2008

The sorrowful tale of a French tourist falling in love with a Kazakhstan belle.


Steppe Express (2005) directed by Amanzhol Aituarov and Satybaldy Narymbetov

On our habitable planet Earth there are various kinds of film viewers.There are certain who, in order to laugh incessantly about people,places and cultures unfamiliar to them, need veritable, periodic doses of discourteous "movies" like "Borat".Let me make a frank confession. I have not yet seen this film by Sacha Noam Baron Cohen. However, I do wish to state that it is only through films made by native filmmakers that a spectator can acquire the real feel of distant lands.
This is precisely the case of "Stepnoi Express (Steppe Express) directed by Kazakh duo Amanzhol Aiutarov and Satybaldy Narymbetov which provides us with a picture postcard vision of Kazakhstan. It is based on a short story by the legendary Russian writer Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin. Somewhere in Kazakhstan there is a small village whose inhabitants see a train pass through the steppe on a daily basis. For everyone there are lessons to be learnt about the funny thing called life as a French man comes to this god forsaken place. He meets a Kazakh father, starts liking his daughter. This is just the beginning of various
hilarious episodes featured in this film. A word about the amateur actors of this film. "François Labbé" was happily vacationing in Kazakhstan when he got the role due to a stroke of luck. "Aizhan Aitenova", non professional actress of this film had finished her technical studies when she was approached by Aiutarov. "Steppe Express" won the audience prize at Vesoul Asian Film Festival 2006 run by the indefatigable couple Jean Marc Thérouanne and Martine Thérouanne who make it a point to introduce hidden gems of Asian cinema. Make sure you see this film in order to enjoy your forthcoming trip to Kazakhstan.