Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Documentaries screened to mark Party Congress

Documentaries screened to mark Party Congress

Six documentaries on national defence and construction will be screened
from January 20-22 to mark the success of the 11th National Congress of
the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV).


The selected documentaries include films shot from the ‘60s of the 20 th as well as those made in 2010.


A 40 minute film of “Images of Ho Chi Minh’s revolutionary life” made
in 1960 has recalled the revered CPV founder’s activities at home and
abroad from 1920 till 1960.


The documentary won the Golden Lotus award at the second national film festival in 1973.


“The South is in my heart”, of the same length, confirmed the Party’s
stance that the southern region is always integral to Vietnam . It
also told a moving story about President Ho Chi Minh’s deep feelings for
the south, which were reflected in his famous saying “The South is
always in my hear”.


Director Hong Ha shot the film
in 1976, just one year after the American war came to an end, as a
tribute to the late President Ho Chi Minh who longed for the national
reunification.


There is another film about Ho Chi Minh, which won the Golden Lotus award at the ninth national film festival in 1990.


General Vo Nguyen Giap, the famous commander in chief of Vietnam
’s People’s Army, is also highlighted at the festival through “General
Vo Nguyen Giap, a century-a life”. The documentary recalled the
considerable contributions to the two wars against French and US
invaders the nation’s hero made, who turned 100 years old last October.


The remaining two films feature the contributions that CPV member have made to the national liberation and construction./.

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Student wins online short film festival

Student wins online short film festival

Thinking of You by Vietnamese-American Vu Quang Huy has won the Golden
Heart prize for best film at YxineFF, Vietnam's first online short film
festival.


The chemical biology student from the University of California (UC) also
received prizes for best director and best cinematography at a ceremony
held at HCM City's BHD Cinema Star on Dec. 26.


American student of the UC, Christy Yang won the prize for best actor.


Huy's film, produced in 2009, is a vignette about a quirky flower-shop girl and the elusive "object" of her desire.


He is polishing the script for a movie version of the film he hopes to make in the next two years.


The five-minute version also won the Audience Award at Hidden Genius, a
short film competition sponsored by the Vietnamese-American Arts and
Letters Association.


It has been screened at various festivals like the Vietnamese International Film Festival and San Diego Film Festival.


At the YxineFF, animated film The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of
HCM City grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes.


The 4-minute-40-second film depicts the journey of an unnamed,
faceless character that jumps out of a book's page through the book that
takes it through heaven, destruction, urbanisation, and war.


Thuong said he actually created the character and background from
paper before resorting to stop motion, an animation technique.


The film is the 23-year-old's first production and was screened at the
Future Shorts Festival, which is organised by the global short film
community, held in Vietnam last year.


The organisers
of YxineFF, the Sai Gon Media Company and local film aficionados, gave
away the Red Heart prize for best film chosen by audiences to L.O.V.E by
Vu Ngoc Phuong, an overseas Vietnamese from the Philippines.


Up in the Tree, directed by Bui Quoc Thang of Hanoi, won the New Heart prize for the film with creative and new ideas.


All the award-wining films can be watched at the festival's website at www.yxineff.com.


The festival, which was launched in May, aims to broaden the
independent film-making community in Vietnam and offer local film-makers
an opportunity to promote their works worldwide.


It
showed 20 films in the Competition category for 10-minute films, 21
films in the Panorama category for 30-minute shorts made in the last
three years, and 12 films made by young directors in the In Focus
category./.

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Friday, December 10, 2010

New biopic on President Ho makes premiere

New biopic on President Ho makes premiere

A film about President Ho’s revolutionary activities in China – “Vuot
qua ben Thuong Hai” (Across Shanghai) made by the Vietnam Writers’
Association Film Studio (VIVAFILM), premiered in Hanoi on Dec. 12.


VIVAFILM Director Nguyen Xuan Hung said the biopic can be seen as the
second part of “Nguyen Ai Quoc o Hong Kong (Nguyen Ai Quoc in Hong
Kong).


The film will be officially on screens in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City as from Dec. 17.


Based
on the script by Vietnamese writers Ha Pham Phu and Le Ngoc Minh and
Chinese author Jia Fei, the film, directed by Trieu Tuan of Vietnam and
Fan Dong Yu of China, portrays the life of Nguyen Ai Quoc in 1934 when
he came from Hong Kong to Shanghai to try to make contact with
international revolutionary movement.


The film spotlights the
innate traits of a leader of Nguyen Ai Quoc and praises the
contributions to the Vietnamese revolutionary cause by Vietnamese
patriots in China and the assistance that several historic figures gave
to Nguyen in Shanghai.


The film was mainly shot in Hengdian Film
Studio in Shanghai, and Nghe An, Quang Binh, Thanh Hoa, Quang Nam
provinces of Vietnam. The role of Nguyen Ai Quoc is played by actor Minh
Hai.


The State provided 70 percent of the film’s cost, about 11 billion VND, and the remaining 30 percent was mobilised by VIVAFILM.


After
the film, VIVAFILM has begun shooting two other films also of
revolutionary topics to celebrate the 11th National Party Congress in
2011./.

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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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Monday, November 29, 2010

Wildly inaccurate film on Uncle Ho criticized

Director and People’s Artist Dao Trong Khanh has written an article
slamming a documentary film called “Truth about Ho Chi Minh” which was
recently produced overseas by a group of exiles, for distorting the
history of President Ho Chi Minh.


First of all
Khanh, a respected director of documentary films in Vietnam, affirms
that “Truth about Ho Chi Minh”, though a documentary, contains no
documentary value because of patchy and poor images which were used
carelessly just to illustrate their quotations.


“With music and the opening made in a theoretical manner, the film
quoted Stephane Coustois’s saying that, ‘People say history is the
science of human misfortune and the century of bloody violence in which
we are living has confirmed this saying broadly.’ But the truth is,
history is not just like that. Unceasing efforts and creativity, the
non-stop struggle for progress, and the pursuit of freedom and happiness
are basics of miraculous historical movements in the noble spirit of
humanity, including the sacrifice of revolutionaries worldwide. The
ambiguous and one-sided way of presenting an issue in a gloomy and
tragic manner inevitably results in a one-sided interpretation of the
content of the film,” writes the director.


Khanh
further points out that the images of massacres introduced in the film
are in fact pictures and documentaries of the crimes committed by the
French colonialists and US aggressors against the Vietnamese people. But
in this film, their real origins are ignored and they are attributed to
patriotic resistance fighters and communist soldiers. In addition, a
line-up of anti-communist maniacs are used to stage “radiofilm”
interviews - monologues without any illustrations.


He writes, “It makes no sense at all when one after another characters
speak in a serious manner about President Ho Chi Minh’s birthday and
death date – facts that Vietnam has officially announced. Vu Ngu Chieu
and Tran Gia Phung have laid stress on a letter from Nguyen Tat Thanh
(Ho Chi Minh) asking for enrolment at a French school in 1912. It should
not be forgotten that during this period it was necessary to seek all
possible ways to help the country and the people.”

“Sophie
Quinn Judge, who lives in a capitalist society and does not understand
anything about revolutionary activities, made a wild guess about the
relationship between President Ho Chi Minh and other women like famous
revolutionary Nguyen Thi Minh Khai. ‘There seems to have been an affair
between the two,’ said Quinn in the film. This is not the way
researchers do their work. Researchers do not use the word ‘seems’,” the
director says, adding how can one believe in a researcher like Vu Ngu
Chieu who has wrapped himself up in foreign archives for many years
to engage only in gossip and other people’s private affairs that are
unrelated to history.


People’s Artist Khanh, who
himself made a documentary about President Ho Chi Minh, says when
compiling documents about the President he had a chance to read the
original copy of the “Prison Diary” poem collection but did not pay
attention to Uncle Ho’s handwritings on the cover: 1923-1933. After many
years, when some people showed interest in this matter, the then Vice
Director of the Ho Chi Minh museum Nguyen Huy Hoan said the note just to
mark the 10-year “big misfortune” period according to Uncle Ho’s
calculation, not the time he penned the poems, adding that people do not
understand this so tend to speculate.


Khanh said he
also knew about the meeting between poet Pavel Antolkolski, who
translated the “Prison Diary” poem collections into Russian, and
President Ho Chi Minh, as well as the meeting between the President and
R. Bershatsky when this poet visited Vietnam. During this meeting, with
his openness and in his usual modest manner, the President made coffee
for his guest and said, “We write poetry when we have free time. In
Vietnam , everybody writes poems,” he recalled. The President did not
think of himself as a poet but the whole world is captivated by his
eloquent verses. Against this honourable history, the sabotage and
slandering campaigns of exile groups overseas are so mean, Khanh said.


According to the People’s Artist, researching Ho Chi
Minh heritage and learning about his thoughts and morality is not only a
long and huge scientific research project but also a conscious
evolvement of a nation towards “The true, the good and the beautiful”.
He stresses that hatred, slander and fabrications reflects the
degradation in personality which goes against human beings’ spiritual
evolution and advancement, binding oneself and losing the one’s root.


“It is true that the life of President Ho Chi Minh is
a legend. The legend is always beautiful. It contains the mystery of
romantic spirit and the transcendence of human awareness about the
world. US journalist William J. Duiler had written in his book about
Ho Chi Minh: “All great people have an implicit mystery”. He cited
President Ho Chi Minh as saying in an interview with journalist Bernard
Fall that, “The elderly like to have a small mystery about them. I would
like to keep a little bit of mystery about myself. I believe you
understand what I said.”


The legend of Ho Chi Minh
will forever be treasured by mankind and mankind will always try to seek
more understanding about it, Director and People’s Artist Dao Trong
Khanh concluded./.

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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Green documentary film award launched

Germany’s Geothe Institute in Hanoi launched a contest on green
documentary film, “Climate Change-Changing My Life” in Hanoi on Nov.
1.


The VietDocs 2011 aims to create a playground for young
film makers to produce short films on the environment in Vietnam .


According to the Head of Goethe Institute, Almuth Meyer
Zollitsch, contestants in the age group of between 18 and 30, have to
submit proposals on their film. A maximum of 20 interesting proposals
will be selected for the second round.


The selected
proposals will be developed into films with a duration of not more than
15 minutes, with focus on climate change and its impacts on Vietnam
’s environment.


The jury will pick up 10 best
films to be showed at the European documentary film festival to be held
in Hanoi next June.


The first prize winner
will receive an award of 1,000 USD and an amount of 3,500 USD for a
longer film on the same topic. The film will be sent to compete at a
festival on Southeast Asian scientific film, SeaDocs 2012./.

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Monday, November 1, 2010

German cinema on show in Hanoi

German cinema on show in Hanoi

A week of international award-winning German films from the 1999-2009
decade kicked off on Nov. 1 at the Hanoi Goethe Institute.


Among the screenings will be Policewoman (2000), Head-On (2004), Go for
Zucker (2004), Longing (2006), The Lives of Others (2006) and Jerichow
(2008).


The Lives of Others, directed by Florian
Henckel von Donnersmarck, was released at the same time as the
screenplay was published. It is set in 1984 East Berlin . An agent of
the secret police, monitoring the conduct of a writer, who is also his
lover, finds himself becoming increasingly absorbed in their lives. It
won the 2007 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It had
earlier won seven Deutscher Filmpreis awards – including best film, best
director, best screenplay, best actor, and best supporting actor –
after setting a new record for having received 11 nominations.


It also won the Bavarian Film Prize and the German Film Prize. At the
Locarno International Film Festival it won the People's Choice Award,
while in France it won the Cesar for Best Foreign Film.


The movie will be shown on November 6 at 7.30pm.


Head-On, which drew widespread attention for focusing on Turkish
immigrants, was the fourth film by German/Turkish director Fatih Akin,
and marked his international breakthrough.


It was
awarded the Golden Bear, the German Film Prize and the European Film
Prize. It will be screened on November 3 at 7.30pm.


The film week is part of the celebrations to mark Germany Year in
Vietnam . Every two months a decade of German cinema history will be
featured. Each film, in its own right, was talked about, shocked and
impressed, and epitomised the era both in East and West Germany ,
according to organisers.


"In November we focus on the
new millennium, the time of the reunification of divided Germany ,
with all its problems," organisers said.


The films will have English subtitles and Vietnamese dubbing. Free tickets can be picked up at 56-58 Nguyen Thai Hoc Street./.

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Thursday, October 28, 2010

‘Floating Lives' makes splash

‘Floating Lives' makes splash

Vietnamese film Canh Dong Bat Tan (Floating Lives), an adaptation from
an award-winning short story by Nguyen Ngoc Tu, is poised to become a
box-office hit in HCM City.


Tickets were sold out hours
before the filmshows began at big cinemas like Megastar Hung Vuong,
Galaxy Nguyen Du and Galaxy Nguyen Trai on Oct.27.


Several theatres increased the number of daily shows from two to three but many people were still unable to get tickets.


The film, produced by the BHD Company, has grossed nearly 4 billion VND (205,000 USD) in the first four days of screening.


"We're encouraged that Floating Lives are attracting big crowds at
cinemas and many viewers have posted favourable comments on social
networking sites," said Ngo Thi Bich Hien, BHD deputy director.


"The film tells an emotional story and audiences are curious about it, " Hien said.


"We enjoyed the film because its representation of human despair,
suffering and love is lively and persuasive, " said a third-year HCM
City university student. "The film's well-known actors and actresses
also attract young people," he said.


Floating Lives,
which premiered at the Vietnam International Film Festival in Hanoi
last week, will also be screened in Bien Hoa, Da Nang and Hai Phong.


The film, directed by Nguyen Phan Quang Binh, tells the
story of a family who leads a nomadic life on rivers in the Cuu Long (
Mekong ) Delta region. The main character is Vo (played by overseas
Vietnamese actor Dustin Nguyen) whose wife left him for a cloth vendor.
He seeks solace in other women, whom he jilts as soon as they have
fallen in love with him.


When Suong (acted by Do Thi Hai
Yen), a prostitute, joins the family, Vo's daughter and son welcome her
and love her. Vo's affection for her also grows.


Canh Dong
Bat Tan created a literary stir among Vietnamese readers when it was
published five years ago. Released by the Tre (Youth) Publishing House,
the story was a bestseller in Vietnam in 2005.


"We
know how difficult it is to turn a work of literature appreciated by a
great number of people into an equally popular film," the film makers
said.


The story won an award of the Vietnam Writers Association in 2006./.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Film industry in the spotlight

Filmmakers and critics gathered in three workshops within the framework
of the first Vietnam International Film Festival on Oct. 20 to discuss
and encourage the development of the domestic film industry.


The Republic of Korea ’s film critic Cho Bockrey said she loved
watching Vietnamese films but used to feel that the local cinema
environment was very out-of-date.


"I've watched
several films by director Dang Nhat Minh and met some filmmakers," Cho
said. "I feel that the Vietnamese film industry is similar to the RoKo
industry about 20 years ago."


Cho said she played a
key role in choosing Vietnamese locations for the film Red River by
Chinese director Zhang Jia-rui, and she lauded the teamwork and quick
official approvals she witnessed in Vietnam .


Yoo
Byung-woon, who works as a cinematographer with the Korea Broadcasting
System, said he has been to Vietnam six times and lauded the efforts
of the Vietnamese movie industry despite limited technical conditions.


"The friendly manners and efforts of the Vietnamese
people, as well as the beautiful scenery and unique customs, are a rich
inspiration and will lead more film crews to select Vietnam as a
location," Yoo said.


"Vietnamese culture excites
creativity," he added. "It was very strange that, when we were preparing
a scenario back home that we couldn't work out, we just had to arrive
in Vietnam and work directly with a Vietnamese film crew, and we
were given new suggestions and inspiration."


The
director of the Singapore International Film Festival, Phillip Cheah,
suggested that Vietnamese filmmakers listen to and exchange more with
their audiences.


"We have seen Vietnamese films but
we want more," Cheah said. "If you bring your films closer to the
standards of international audiences, the film industry will develop
steadily."/.

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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Local industry attracts foreign film makers

Cinematography officials have offered an attractive environment,
including legal support, for international partners interested in
producing films in Vietnam.


The offers were
made at a workshop held in Hanoi on October 19, where organisers
emphasised simple licensing procedures, tax exemption and low production
costs as major incentives for foreign film producers.


Playwright Nguyen Thi Hong Ngat, Vice President of the Vietnam
Cinematography Association, made it clear that international film
producers were exempt from taxes for using local services while services
were cheaper than other countries, such as the hire of skilled workers
or professionals, enabling a large number of people to be employed at
relatively low cost overall.


Licensing procedures
were being simplified and Cinematography Law simply asks applicants to
submit a written request and film scripts in both English and
Vietnamese. The licences will be granted within 30 days, or the Ministry
of Culture, Sports and Tourism will have to explain in writing the
reasons for refusal to grant a licence.


The Head
of International Relations Section under the Cinematography Department,
Do Duy Anh, said with Vietnam’s open-door policy, an increasing number
of international award-winning foreign-made films have been shot in
Vietnam, such as “Indochina”, “The Quiet American”, “Cyclo” and “Buffalo
Boy”.


“In each of the past five years, Vietnam
welcomed between 15 and 20 foreign film-making delegations to shoot
footage,” said the film official in charge of international affairs.


Actor Phuoc Sang, who represented the private film studio of the same
name, described Vietnam as a virgin and promising land for the seventh
art industry and called for further investment and greater efforts by
film makers, both domestic and international, to roll out high quality
and attractive products.


Foreign delegates called
on Vietnam to build and upgrade their film studios as well as
establish truly professional film-making companies as basic conditions
to attract more foreign film producers./.

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Japanese features, anime to screen

Japanese director Nobuhiro Doi's latest film Hanamizuki is one of ten
films scheduled to show in competition at the first Vietnam
International Film Festival, which runs until Oct. 21 in Hanoi.


Hanamizuki is a romantic drama which tells the story of high school
student Sae Hirasawa, played by Yui Aragaki, who lives a simple life
with her mother in a peaceful northern fishing town but dreams of a life
overseas.


She meets two special men in her life.
One is another high school boy who she falls in love with. They
encourage each other to pursue their dreams, even as their dreams pull
them apart. The other man is an upperclassman who shares her same
dreams.


Doi, with the support of the Japan
Foundation Centre for Cultural Exchange, is scheduled to arrive on Oct.
19 to attend the festival and conduct question and answer sessions about
the film.


Born April 11, 1964 in Hiroshima
Prefecture , Doi began as director for the hit TBS television series
Good Luck!! in 2003 and Orange Days in 2004 until striking it big with
the 48 million USD box office hit Be With You the same year, his
directorial film debut.


Hanamizuki was released in Japan in August and is his third feature film.

My Darling Is a Foreigner, the directorial debut by Kazuaki Ue, will also compete for the festival's top prize.


Eatrip by Yuri Nomura, and Mental by Kazuhiro Soda will compete in the
documentary and short film categories, respectively. Mental won the
Best Documentary Award at the Pusan International Film Festival and the
Dubai International Film Festival in 2008.


Japanese
animation will also make a showing at the festival with Summer Wars
(2009) and The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (2006), both directed by
Mamoru Hosoda. Both films have received numerous awards not only in
Japan but throughout the world, including the Best Animation Award at
the Japan Academy Awards in 2007 (The Girl Who Leapt Through Time) and
in 2010 (Summer Wars).


Please see the What's On section on page 27 for the festival calendar./.

Monday, October 4, 2010

National film making contest for students closes

National film making contest for students closes

An awarding ceremony for the national film making contest for
Vietnamese students was held in Hanoi on October 2, as part of
activities to mark the 1,000 th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.


The event was jointly held by the Ministry of Education and Training,
Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and Japanese embassy in Vietnam.


The first prize belonged to students from Tay Son
junior secondary school in Hai Chau district in the central city of Da
Nang with the film “Buoi hoc cua Thuy” (Thuy’s class day).


This group along with other groups, which won the second and third
prizes, will be invited to Japan to join the International Film Making
Competition for Asian children, scheduled to open on December 4 in
Ibushiki city, Kagoshima prefecture.


The national
contest received 36 three-minute films by junior and senior school
students from 36 cities and provinces nationwide, of which 15 films were
made by students from Hanoi.


Initiated by
Japan-Vietnam Special Ambassador Sugi Ryotaro in 2007, the event aims to
nurture young people’s dreams and ambitions, encouraging them to strive
harder for the better future./.

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Traditional music of capital to be released

A DVD set featuring the traditional music of Hanoi will be released
later this month in honour of the capital's millennium in October.


The set, which is the first of its kind, includes
four DVDs featuring the history of Hanoi 's traditional music,
including songs and music works in different styles performed by veteran
and young singers and musicians. Most of them work for the city's
traditional theatres.


The DVD-producer Music
Publishing House invested a great deal of money and human resources to
record and film the artists on stage and in daily life.


The film's directors, People's Artist Tran Van Thuy and Nguyen Si
Chung, perfected the film with beautiful scenes and music.


Veteran artists Thanh Ngoan, Xuan Hach, Minh Anh and The Dan, four of
the region's leading traditional singers and music players, perform at
their best in the film.


"Our artists'
performances and talks provide audiences with the knowledge and beauty
of traditional music and instruments," said Chung, the film's director.


He also added that through the DVD audiences
could improve their knowledge of the different forms of music and could
sing traditional tunes.


The film will be
available in bookstores to celebrate 1,000 years of Hanoi . The film
highlights Ca Tru, Hat Xam and Canh Hong Tu, three popular genres of
music in the royal citadel of Thang Long (former name of Hanoi ).


Ca Tru (also known as Hat A Dao or ceremonial
singing), an ancient genre of chamber music, features female vocalists
who sing while playing music on bamboo tablets.


This was associated with a geisha-like form of entertainment.


The music was inscribed on the list of Intangible Cultural Heritage
in need of Urgent Safeguarding in 2009 by the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO).


Hat Xam (blind buskers music) is a type of folk music dating from the Tran Dynasty in the 14th century.


It was generally performed by blind buskers who travelled around the
citadel to earn their living by singing in common places like markets.


Xam artists often play Dan Bau (monochord) or Dan
Nhi (two-chord fiddle) to accompany the song themselves. The most
famous surviving artisan of the art form is Ha Thi Cau, a Hanoi
resident.


Canh Hong Tu is the kind of music used in religious ceremonies which dates back thousands of years ago in Thang Long./.

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Monday, September 13, 2010

Vietnam international film fest focuses on Asian pictures

Vietnam's first international film festival will be held in Hanoi from
October 17-21 to celebrate the capital's millennium, said Le Ngoc Minh,
deputy director of the Ministry of Culture's Cinema Department.


Thirty cinematic works by Asian directors in three categories,
including feature films, documentaries and short films, will be screened
during the festival.


Competitive entries will
include both celluloid features and documentaries produced within the
last two years. Entries may or may not have been screened already, but
they should not have been broadcast on television or the internet.


Eight award categories will include best feature, best short film,
best documentary, best director, best actor, best actress, the NETPAC
(Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema) prize, and the Journalists
prize.


Three conferences on Vietnamese cinema will
be held during the festival, including Solutions to Enhance Production
of Vietnamese Films, Vietnam – an Attractive Environment for
Producing Films, and Building a Vietnamese Cinema Industry.


Two Vietnamese feature films will participate in the competition:
Trung Uy (Lieutenant) by director Ha Son and Long Thanh Cam Gia Ca (A
Song about a Musician in the Thang Long Citadel) by director Dao Ba Son.


The feature film jury will include Australian
director Phillip Noyce, director of the Venice Film Festival Marco
Muller, French cameraman Francois Catonne, actress Kang Su-yeon from the
Republic of Korea , and Vietnamese director Dang Nhat Minh.


Jury members for the short film and documentary categories will
include French cameraman Mathieu Poirot Delpech and Vietnamese director
Bui Dinh Hac.


Aruna Vasudev, the founder and
President of NETPAC, Philippine director Doy Del Mundo, and Vietnamese
cinema critic Ngo Phuong Lan will sit on the NETPAC prize jury.


Journalists who cover cinema will sit on the Journalists Award panel.


Films will be screened at the National Cinema Centre, MegaStar Cinema
branches and Cine Complex. Some films will also be screened outdoors in
the King Ly Thai To Garden and in the square in front of the Hanoi Opera
House.


The opening and closing ceremonies will be held at the National Convention Centre on October 17 and 21, respectively.


A music gala will be held for participants at the Temple of Literature .


Three outdoor photo exhibitions will also be held in the city centre during the festival./.

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Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Belgian film director lectures on documentaries

The renowned Belgian film director Thierry Michel, will teach Vietnamese
directors and cinematography students how to make documentary films at a
five-day training course, starting on September 6.


The course has been jointly sponsored by the Wallonie-Bruxelles
delegation to Vietnam and Vietnam ’s National Documentary and
Scientific Film Studio, as part of an ongoing programme of cooperation.


The course will help the trainees to analyse
Vietnamese and foreign documentary films for reference, as well as films
that have been completed, including documentary films projects of
Vietnam .


Also as part of the course, the trainees
will have the opportunity to discuss trends and renewal of documentary
film making in Asia and other parts of the world as well as the
techniques required by Asian and global TV channels. They will analyse
the weak and strong points of Vietnamese documentaries so they can
integrate the country’s film industry into world cinema.


The participants will also be taught how to create and form the
necessary scenarios to meet the requirements of European film producers
and TV channels.


Thierry Michel, who is also
journalist and a lecturer at the Institute des Arts de Diffusion (IAD)
in Belgium, has produced two feature films along with numerous well
known documentaries including Mobutu the King of Zai-ia, the Congo
River, Children of Rio, Iran: Veiled Appearances, the Metamorphosis of a
Train Station and Donka./.

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Thursday, August 26, 2010

Film week celebrates with national festivals

Film week celebrates with national festivals
$0 The Cinematographic Department (CD) will held a film week nationwide
from August 31 to September 6 to mark the celebration of the 65 th
August Revolution (August 19) and National Day (September 2). $0
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At a press briefing in Hanoi on August 24, the Ministry of
Culture, Sports and Tourism assigned the CD to partner with Departments
of Culture, Sports and Tourism in 63 cities and provinces, cinema
companies, and movie and film publishing centres across the country to
hold the event. $0
$0
The organisation board said the CD
has directed the Vietnam Film Import-Export and Distribution Company
(FAFIM Vietnam) to send film versions to cities and provinces. $0
$0
As scheduled, Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City will show the first
film on August 31. Other cities and provinces will incorporate the film
week into their future schedules. $0
$0
Free entrance will be available for movie fans on the first day of the film week. $0
$0
The film week will screen famous celluloid films such as Dung Dot
(Don’t burn), Nhin ra bien ca (Look at the sea), Duoc Song (Right to
live), Sinh menh (Life) and documentary films like Buoc ngoat (Turning
point), Teing Vi Cam o My Lai (The sound of violin in My Lai), Cao
nguyen Da (Stone Plateau). $0
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The film “Hoa Dao” (Peach Blossom) will
open the film week at the National Centre Cinema, the August cinema,
Thang Long A cinema in Hanoi and several cinemas in cities and
provinces nationwide./.$0

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