Now Playing
 Nostalgia for the Countryland Thuong nho dong que, Vietnam (1995)
 Death on a Full Moon Day Pura Handa Kaluwara, Sri Lanka (1997)
 Dark Night of the Soul Anantha Rathriya, Sri Lanka (1996)
 Sandy Lives Doi Cat, Vietnam (1999)
 Girl from Hunan, A Xiangnu xiaoxiao, China (1986)
Black Snow Ben ming nian, China (1990)
 Song of Tibet, The Yeshe Dolma, China (2000)
 Land Has Eyes, The Pear ta ma 'on maf, Fiji (Rotuma) (2004)
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Asia Pacific Film Festival Online
Most Asia and Pacific
Island feature films are not picked up for wide or even limited distribution
because of factors such as a competitive marketplace, limited ownership
of screens and broadcast systems, government censorship, and scarce financial
resources. This means that there are thousands of outstanding feature
films from Asia and the Pacific made by dedicated, talented, and often
courageous filmmakers whose visual stories are never seen outside their
countries.
iFilm Connections: Asia & Pacific will break this pattern, creating
a window so that you can stream on your computer many overlooked feature
films from Asia and the Pacific any time you want. The Asia Pacific
Film Festival on-line will allow you to discover little gems whose stories
shed light on what life is like inside distinctive Asian and Pacific Island
cultures.
This site's private film festival will offer feature films made by Asian and Pacific Island storytellers whose work
illuminates issues about the impact of globalization on the everyday life
of people of Asia and the Pacific.
We will start with a small selection with four rarely seen award winning
feature films – from Vietnam, China, and Fiji. As subscribers increase,
so will the number of feature films we will stream.
Featuring a tribute to master filmmakers: Prasanna Vithanage (Sri Lanka) Featured Intro
The first Sri Lankan feature film, Kadavunu Poronduva (Broken Promise) was made in 1947, just one year
before Sri Lanka obtained independence from British rule. During the past six
decades, Sri Lankan cinema has made steady progress, winning international
awards, while facing numerous formidable social, political, and economic
challenges. The ethnic conflict that has engulfed the island for the past 25
years has certainly not helped matters. In 1956, Lester James Peries, who was
to put Sri Lankan cinema on the international map, directed the path breaking
film Rekava (Line of Destiny);
this inaugurated the artistic tradition of filmmaking in Sri Lanka. The focus
of this short essay is on one of the most important film directors of Sri
Lanka, who has chosen to follow the artistic tradition of filmmaking opened up
by Lester James Peries: Prasanna Vithanage. He has earned a wide reputation,
both nationally and internationally, as a distinguished filmmaker from Sri
Lanka... Read Full Featured Intro XIE Fei (China) Featured Intro
The Exquisite Sadness of Life: Random Thoughts on Xie Fei’s Films
As I was re-watching the films of Xie Fei made in the past two decades, two openings came to my mind: a hand-held camera in Black Snow (Ben ming nian, 1990) tracking the walking steps of a Beijing youngster through a subway tunnel in the dark, and a panning shot in A Girl From Hunan (Xiang nu xiao xiao, 1986) smoothly revealing the undulating landscape of Hunan, a province in Central China. The former is slightly edgy and restless, and the latter is exquisitely quiet and lyrical. The two films also differ greatly in subject matter: One follows the after-prison life of a Beijing youth and records the sound bites of the big city at the juncture of an earthshaking rebellion (the 1989 student movement); and the other tells the story of a child bride and her futile struggle with predetermined fate in a mountainous village far removed from the hustle and bustle of the big city. These two openings, when juxtaposed, are certainly of an unequivocal demonstration of the director’s versatility, but as we review the entire oeuvre of Xie Fei, it becomes clear that lyricism and a gentle sense of life’s sorrowfulness speak more truth about this largely undervalued cinematic master...Read Full Featured Intro
FILM CRITICISM
Featured Intro
Gender and Cinema: Speaking Through Images of Women
What is the relationship between gender and cinema? And how can we explore this question productively so that new meanings emerge to enrich our viewing experience and general knowledge about the world? My questions are inspired by Denise Riley's provocative book Am I That Name? Feminism and the Category of 'Women' in History (1988). Most will immediately recognize the reference to the famous dialogue in Othello between Desdemona and Iago where the former asks the latter: "Am I that Name, Iago?" However, Desdemona's gesture here is foremost rhetorical, for her response to Iago's follow-up question shows that the fair lady harbors some misgivings: "Such as she says my lord did say I was." (Shakespeare, Act IV, Scene II, 1622). Riley actually quotes the dialogue at the beginning of her first chapter to indicate that she shares Desdemona's distrust: Can one name adequately capture the multiplicity, complexity, and subtle nuances of female subjectivity? In the context of Riley's study, that name is "woman," a historical category that is "discursively constructed" and thus "a volatile collectivity in which female persons can be very differently positioned" (1988: 2). Given that categories of gender, and by extension our understanding of sexuality, have shifted or broadened in meanings over the centuries, what are the implications of Riley's claim for cinema? How do images of women, especially, speak to the spectator? Is the spectator positioned as masculine /feminine or male/female? Last, but not least, is femininity presented in a particular way through the cinematic lenses?
Read Full Essay |