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admin
04-23-2010, 11:39 AM
There are several Vietnamese films among the Asian films screening at the upcoming (begins April 29, Thursday) in the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival: http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/films-events/schedule/ (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/films-events/schedule/)

Click on country pull-down menu (on right box under Browse Films)
Countries include: Cambodia, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, People's Republic of China, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam.

Also, starting this Thursday (22 April), there is another film festival, the Newport Beach Film Festival in Orange County, California: http://schedule.newportbeachfilmfest.com/
with films from Asia etc.

Click on country pull-down menu.
Countries include: Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nepal, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Tadzhikstan, Uzbekistan


The Vietnamese films showing at the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival are:

PROGRAM 55 (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/program-guide/program-55/)

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5 | ADRIFT | 7:00 PM | DWNTN


Program Info
Watch Trailer

Program Info https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=391509f94c&view=att&th=1281c7109653c299&attid=0.0.1&disp=emb&zwADRIFT
DATE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 5
TIME: 7:00 PM
VENUE: DWNTN (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/fest-info/venues/#DWNTN)
BUY TICKETS (https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pe/8088005) ADRIFT (Choi Voi)
(Vietnam, 2009) Dir.: Thac Chuyen Bui; Scr.: Phan Dang Di
Video (originated on 35mm), 110 min., color, narrative, in Vietnamese w/ E.S.

ADRIFT begins at a wedding, life’s intersection when a person relinquishes their youthful past and takes on the promise of marital bliss. A perfect beginning to Bui Thac Chuyen’s seductive and atmospheric rumination on sexual awakening as modern day Vietnam enters a social and moral crossroad. It is Hai and Duyen’s wedding. We first see Duyen attempting to remove her wedding dress alone as her groom prefers to spend his wedding night getting passed-out drunk at the reception. Hai is a baby faced taxi driver, two years her junior and a virginal mama’s boy. Nothing is consummated this night and it begins to seem like it never will. After once again being rejected by Hai, Duyen seeks some solace with her best friend Cam, a complicated and cynical writer who has veiled romantic feelings for Duyen. There, Duyen discloses to Cam her approach to her marriage and her life that “if you don’t expect too much then everything is simple.” It is an old world perspective, echoed by Hai’s domineering mother who chides “girls shouldn’t ask for too much. You’ll get spoiled.”
Soon, this simple life begins to take some twists and Duyen’s modest expectations begin to change. Through Cam, Duyen meets Tho, a lusty Lothario who sparks something in Duyen that puts her life in a tailspin. Meanwhile Hai befriends a teenage girl who lives in the flat downstairs with her father, further complicating this slowly weaving web of repressed desires and carnal angst. Instead of using broad dramatic strokes to portray the turbulent changes in the character’s lives, director Chuyen gently uses subtle pinpoint dabs.
The film’s hypnotic rhythm belies its meditative mood. The mosaic bathroom glass obscuring the moving figures on either side, a song on the car radio, a stroll on the streets of Hanoi, even a boiling pot of water carried by Duyen and Cam’s mother appears like dance. The restraint represents the cautious passage into a societies changing ideals. Even intimate erotic moments come at a guise of a foot massage or a shared steam bath under an ornate sheet. ADRIFT speaks of how, at this point in time, where does one’s desires take anchor. What takes precedence, antiquated social mores that no longer seem to ballast the lives of 21st century Vietnam or the personal yearnings of an individual seeking a chance at true happiness.
— Joel Quizon
[/URL][URL="http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/schedule"]
(http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/films-events/?postTabs=0)

admin
04-23-2010, 11:40 AM
Watch Trailer ADRIFT
DATE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 5
TIME: 7:00 PM
VENUE: DWNTN (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/fest-info/venues/#DWNTN)
BUY TICKETS (https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pe/8088005)


PROGRAM 35 (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/program-guide/program-35/)

SUNDAY, MAY 2 | MS. TU HAU | PROGRAM 35 | 4:15 PM | DGA 2

https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=391509f94c&view=att&th=1281c7109653c299&attid=0.0.2&disp=emb&zwMS. TU HAU
DATE: SUNDAY, MAY 2
TIME: 4:15 PM
VENUE: DGA 2 (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/fest-info/venues/#DGA)
BUY TICKETS (https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pe/8086825) MS. TU HAU (Chi Tu Hau)
(Vietnam, 1962) Dir.: Pham Ky Nam; Scr.: Bui Duc Ai
35mm, 78 min., black and white, narrative, in Vietnamese w/ E.S.
Considered a masterpiece of Vietnamese cinema, Pham Ky Nam’s enduring classic, MS. TU HAU, is a product of the countries fledgling film industry which took rise during the war years. While screened in various festivals since its release in 1962, MS. TU HAU has not received the proper international attention that it deserves as a gem of world cinema. Once easily dismissed as war time propaganda that extol nationalistic virtues, the film should now be seen and enjoyed as a harrowing tale of the sacrifices made by a selfless hero despite great personal losses.
MS. TU HAU tells the story, as the narrator explains, of a “simple but exciting life of a genuine South woman.” Not so simple really, but exciting nonetheless. Tu Hau is a common woman from a fishing village whose husband has gone away to fight in the revolution. She takes care of her young daughter as well as her aging father-in-law. Soon, her peaceful village is attacked. From there a series of tragic events would befall Tu Hau. Each one would challenge her will. She survives so she can continue to raise her child. As a midwife, she puts aside her own grief to assist in a neighbor’s childbirth. Eventually her hardships drive her to join the resistance and ultimately makes the difficult sacrifice of leaving her child behind so she can help lead the front. Tu Hau personified the strength and conviction of the Vietnamese woman of the era.
At the onset of the Vietnamese film industry, director Pham Ky Nam was one of the few to have trained in France. Influenced by contemporaries, imbuing European film sensibilities that recall works from Renoir’s GRAND ILLUSION to Bergman’s THE VIRGIN SPRING, his masterpiece still radiates an authenticity and ageless visual style. Beautifully and intimately photographed, grounded always by the austere beauty of Tra Giang, who portrays Tu Hau. Themes of survival, community and sacrifice for the greater good are universal, as is the story of a mother’s lasting bond with her child. Include with that, thrilling suspense, heartwrenching drama, and a keen look into the heart of a hero and how she overcomes unbearable hardships to help lead her people in a time of great despair. There should be little doubt as to why MS. TU HAU is a timeless work of art and an entertaining motion picture achievement.
— Joel Quizon
VIEW ALL FILMS (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/films-events/?postTabs=0) | VIEW ALL EVENTS (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/films-events/?postTabs=1) | VIEW PROGRAM SCHEDULE (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/schedule)

PROGRAM 39 (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/program-guide/program-39/)

SUNDAY, MAY 2 | INTERNATIONAL CENTERPIECE | 7:00 PM | DGA 1



Program Info
Watch Trailer

Program Info https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=391509f94c&view=att&th=1281c7109653c299&attid=0.0.3&disp=emb&zwCLASH
DATE: SUNDAY, MAY 2
TIME: 7:00 PM
VENUE: DGA 1 (http://asianfilmfestla.org/2010/fest-info/venues/#DGA)
BUY TICKETS (https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pe/8087125) CLASH (Bay Rong)
(Vietnam, 2009) Dir.: Le Thanh Son; Scr.: Johnny Tri Nguyen, L.E. Thanh Son
35mm, 90 min., color, narrative, in Vietnamese w/ E.S.
Globalization has made Vietnam the next Tiger in the Asian economy. According to the PriceWaterHouseCoopers’ Global Entertainment Report for 2009-2013, Vietnam is the last entertainment market to exploit, with an emerging creative content industry and a national population of 87 million, with half under the age of 30. That’s a massive consumer base. Therefore, many Vietnamese American filmmakers have returned to a changed Motherland, free of the vestiges of its war-torn and political past. Incredible opportunities are abound. The milestone in new Vietnamese filmed entertainment was reached when Charlie Nguyen’s period martial arts masterpiece THE REBEL closed the 2007 Film Festival and walked off with the Grand Jury Award for Best Narrative Feature. THE REBEL provided a breakthrough in the re-imagining of Vietnam as an Asian cinema force. It also encouraged an influx of new Vietnamese filmmakers whose filmmaking activity between Vietnam and the U.S. have resulted in critically acclaimed and popularly viable works including Ham Tran’s JOURNEY FROM THE FALL (2005) and Stephane Gauger’s THE OWL AND THE SPARROW (2007). The new actioner CLASH, starring Johhny Tri Nguyen and Veronica Ngo (the stars of THE REBEL) and directed by Le Thanh Son (who served as an assistant director on THE REBEL) is a reunion of sorts, but also another reinvention of the Vietnamese action film.
Ex-convicts Quan (Johnny Tri Nguyen) and Cang (Johnny Depp look-alike Lam Minh Thang) are part of a hit squad assembled by Trinh (Veronica Ngo) to steal a hard drive from French mobsters. Trinh works for an elusive criminal mastermind who seeks the hard drive to get control of VINASAT.1, Vietnam’s first and only satellite. As the crew proceeds to execute the theft, a lone counter-operative from within the crew runs off with the hard drive. Quan reluctantly helps Trinh hunt down the traitor, but nothing is as it seems in this duplicitous world of crime and secret agendas. CLASH was released in Vietnam during the Christmas season, opposite a little film called AVATAR. James Cameron’s film went on to break box-office records in Vietnam and the rest of the world, but CLASH proved a sturdy box-office standout and eventually stayed in theaters through Tet, or the lucrative Lunar New Year, generating its own record box office grosses. Director Le’s film represents a milestone in Vietnamese filmed entertainment, cross-pollinating the trends of the West with the sensibilities of the Vietnamese. The Festival is honored to present CLASH as its International Centerpiece Gala.