Showing posts with label falls love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label falls love. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Vietnam film wins in Stockholm


Director Phan Dang Di's first movie, Bi, Dung So! (Bi, Don't Be Afraid),
has won Best First Feature at the 21st Stockholm International Film
Festival.


His senior cameraman, Pham Quang Minh, won
the award for best cinematography. Bi, Dung So! also won best
screenplay during the Cannes film festival's critics week, as well
as the new talent award at the Asia-Hong Kong Film Festival.


The film is scheduled to open at box offices in Vietnam next
month. It will be broadcast on TV network Arte Channel in France and
Germany .


The film narrates the story of a young
boy called Bi who lives with his mother, father and aunt in a house in
Hanoi . When Bi's grandfather, who has been absent for many years,
suddenly reappears, the family are once again reunited. However, his
return turns out to be far from auspicious. Bi's father begins to stay
out late, to the point where he stops coming home at all in what appears
to be a way of coming to turns with his own loneliness when his own
father was absent. Meanwhile, Bi's aunt falls in love with a young man
whom she meets on a bus, his father falls in love with a masseuse and
his mother behaves as if nothing has changed.


The
feature is much more than just a family drama. Director Di represents
the lost because he has no way to express complex emotions. The
photography borders on poetry and the interesting camera angles and the
fascinating film locations, combined with realistic dialogue, turn this
film into something extraordinary. Ordinary people become remarkable.
The life of the child is nothing short of enchanting, and viewers become
intimate witnesses of a family struggling to escape loneliness.


Holly Hunter, who starred in The Piano, headed the jury panel, said
she was amazed by power of the scenes and thought the film compelling.


Meanwhile, cameraman Minh's photography was described
as poetic and dignified in its simplicity and subtle technical
perfection.


The 12-day Stockholm Festival, which
ended on Nov. 28, was launched in 1990. It has become one of the leading
film events in Europe . The festival takes place every November and
typically features about 180 films from more than 50 countries./.

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

French historian falls in love with Hanoi

Philippe Chaplain, chairman of France’s National Heritage League, has a
deep fondness of Hanoi and has spent many years researching the thousand
year old capital city.


Chaplain first set foot in Hanoi in 2002 and was attracted by the city’s
peaceful settings and landscapes, its Old Quarter and historical and
cultural sites, especially the Thang Long Royal Citadel, which inspired
him to collect information on the city such as books, photos and CDs.


Since 2006, Chaplain has taken part in contests on Thang Long-Hanoi and has won prizes four times.


After seven years, he had amassed over 1,000 photos of Hanoi and
subsequently has put on two photo exhibitions about the Vietnamese
capital to mark the 1,000 th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.


According to Vietnamese historian Duong Trung Quoc, this is a precious
photo collection and will help young Vietnamese people to understand
more about the capital’s past.


In 2007, Chaplain
launched a website in French, Vietnamese and English at:
http://www.hanoilavie.com , which is the first website on Hanoi run by a
foreigner. He said he hoped that the site would act as a bridge of
friendship and a meeting place for fans of Hanoi.


At present, he is in Hanoi to enjoy the atmosphere of the grand
millennium. He says that Hanoi is always in his heart and he wants to
protect and preserve it along with Hanoi’s citizens./.

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