Short film fest finds
its feet
Vietnamese
thriller ‘Underground’ (2) is among movies screened at the fourth edition
of online short film festival YxineFF, which will end December 13.
Photo courtesy of YxineFF
YxineFF has been back for the fourth time, and it is
certainly making a name for itself.
The online short
film fest has drawn greater participation from filmmakers within and outside
the country and attracted more viewers every year.
Its online views
have increased from more than one million in the first years to more than 2.5
million in 2012, according to information on its website.
From curious
interest in the beginning, the festival has found its feet and won respect
from insiders as a true cradle of indie film aspirations.
“YxineFF has
become a real film fest, and more importantly, a feast that is always free
and open,” acclaimed Vietnamese French director Tran Anh Hung said in a The
Thao & Van Hoa newspaper report last week.
This year’s
festival, themed “Choice”, attracted 200 entries including documentaries and
cartoons, submitted between April and July this year. Of these, 76 have been
chosen for screening until the festival ends in the middle of December.
YxineFF awards
movies in four major categories: international, local Vietnamese, Panorama
and In Focus. There were 100 entries in the first year (2010) on the theme of
love, 150 each for the next two editions, with respective themes “Belief” and
“Individual”.
This year many
foreign films have come in from other Southeast Asian countries, including
three from the newly-opened
One Vietnamese
entry, “Bong kia sen” (Cine - Dream), is a boat journey of a cockroach and
the friends it makes on the way. Its Director Huynh Cong Nho dropped out of
college to follow his filmmaking dream.
“Duoi long dat”
(Underground), an international competition nominee, is a Vietnamese thriller
that depicts a typical village afternoon that goes eventful when a group of
youngsters decide to come to play at the graveyard, which keeps thousands of
untold stories.
Filipino film
“Forgotten Angels on Paper Planes” is set around red light districts of
Angeles,
Cambodian piece
“Daughter and the Palmae Blossom” was nominated for a Rainbow Heart (for LGBT
movies) together with two Vietnamese films.
There’s one film
about the wife of a disabled man torn between her physical desires and her
vow and beliefs; and others that deal with women struggling between
traditional and modern values, marriages that defy religious barriers and
social prejudice in Indonesia, a farmer’s life on the South Korean island of
Yeonpyeong in the wake of the alleged North Korean attacks, and the truth
behind the political flamboyance in Filipino elections.
Malaysian drama
“Memoria” surrounds a girl’s dull routine to discuss about dealing with
betrayal from one’s beloved people and moving on from hurtful past, while
German documentary “A Mongolian girl with a bag full of happiness” portraits
a young Mongolian woman coming to Eastern Germany as a child with great
expectations, only to face the reality of high unemployment and rampant
racism.
Vu Manh Cuong, a
young businessman and a movie lover who started the film fest website, said
it has been a successful forum for young indie filmmakers, and as an online
event, attracted participants from across the world.
“The project was
started with the passion and belief that it was the right and beautiful
thing, being independent and self-controlled.
“We’re glad that
our vision has received good responses from many people inside and outside
the country, and that will be a big support for us to stick with it,” Cuong
told The Thao & Van Hoa.
This independence
is not something that the local film industry has had, with movies made by
state-run studios, depending on the state budget and having to face
suffocating scrutiny, while private productions keep eyes fixed on box office
returns rather than artistic maturity.
Writer Doan Anh
Thuan, a judge for international films, said the festival has given
participants “freedom in their creativity, which is of ultimate importance in
practicing arts.”
Observing how far
the festival has gone, Hung has signed up to be a supporter for this year,
together with other big names in
As people who had
started their filmmaking careers with short films, the directors all praised
YxineFF for its ability to give any starters a free chance.
Charlie Nguyen,
director of 2007 blockbuster “Dong mau anh hung” (The Rebel), said in an
interview with the website posted on YouTube that the film fest has created a
movement among new filmmakers.
“There’s a fire,
an excitement for any person longing to make a film as they know they will
have an audience.”
Di, whose “Bi,
Dung so” (Bi, Don’t be afraid) won two Critics Week awards at
“Here, the whole
world can watch your movie and the directors thus may be able to measure the quality of their products.”
As a director who
constantly voices support for young filmmakers and freedom in filmmaking, Di
said YxineFF saves filmmakers from most of the government’s censorship as an
unofficial venue.
“It allows freedom
of expression, making the road to real filmmaking shorter and more
practical,” he said.
Hung also said
good filmmakers need to focus on their passion and put concerns about
censorship behind, and the YxineFF environment gives room to do exactly that.
The film fest
organizers said although they don’t impose strict regulations like a
governmental supervisory body, they implement their own flexible set of rules
that has proved effective – keeping the website from being shut down and
meanwhile attracting more indie filmmakers.
Hung said with its
diverse content and languages, YxineFF allows Vietnamese filmmakers to judge
where they stand among the world film industry, even if it is the shorter
format.
The festival only
added awards for international films last year, though it had introduced new
filmmakers in previous years.
This year, six
short films made at the beginning of their career by successful directors Siu
Pham, Phan Dang Di, Nguyen Quang Dung, Vu Ngoc Dang, US-based Ham Tran (who
made a profitable debut with a romcom chick flick last month) and award-winning
Bui Thac Chuyen (head of the jury last year) were screened in a new category
called Before The Long Feature.
The festival’s
awards include certificates, tools and cash prizes ranging from VND5-20
million (US$237-950). Some awards are based on viewers’ votes.
The film fest
currently receives support from many organizations including the Danish
Cultural Development & Exchange Fund, Goethe Institute
It has built close
partnership with Blue Productions – an indie film company founded by renowned
actress Hong Anh, also a member of the jury, and the duo have been
distributing several short films to local television stations.
Cuong said he
hopes YxineFF can develop into a private studio and sponsor young filmmakers’
projects in the near future.
Charlie Nguyen
said YxineFF has high potential to grow into a prominent film fest not only
because it is open, diverse and international, but also because it has a team
of passionate and encouraging organizers.
“It has matured
through the years, and a generation of [professional] filmmakers will come up
from there.”
Thanh
Nien News
|
Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 11, 2013
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét