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

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environment was very out-of-date.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

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, 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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