Going
to a film festival
by Utkrishta Mulmi
It was afternoon, we were having
snacks after organizing photos for our blogs. Pallav sir came in and said that
I, Eena and Anita would be going to a Film Festival in the evening. We had to
be there by 6 so because of traffic we would be leaving earlier.
He told us that Yubakar uncle had called
him and said that he had extra tickets and he wanted to give them to us.
Yubakar uncle also makes films, children from Spiny Babbler Evolution went to
see the launch of “Hamro Team” produced by him. Pallav sir has also made many
documentaries and also docudramas and 3d animated products. I especially
remember “Seven Wonders of Kathmandu.”
Last year, I learned that Yubakar
uncle, was on the jury for the Film Festival named Ekadeshma or In a Far Away
Land. Every year they have a theme for the shorts, and this year’s theme was
“let there be light”. Leading the jury this year was Manisha Koirala, a
renowned Nepalese actress who has had worldwide success through Bollywood, and
leading the young creators section was Namrata Shrestha, a celebrated Nepalese
actress.
The movies were not for children so
the sort of grownups like me, Eena, Anita and Yubakar uncle’s daughter Khushi
went with Pallav sir, Peter who was a professional photographer who has been to
Nepal over the past 30 years, and Yubakar went to watch them.
Went got to Kumari film theatre five
minutes ahead of time, it took us about 40 minutes to get there! The parking
was crowded and there were a lot of people. We might as well have got there
late because nothing happened for the next half an hour until we were let in
the hall. Once in the hall we sat around for another half hour before the
speeches started.
The festival director spoke, Manisha
Koirala and Namrata Shrestha also spoke as well as others. The Nepal Tourism
Board director said the most interesting things. Then the movies started.
Yaaay!
There were four movies: a Chinese one
about a 13 year old who fails and is hit by her mother who commits suicide; a
Iranian movie on a woman who was pushed around by her husband lets him die; an
Austrian short on taste and feelings which was very high quality production but
the topic was less for children; and a Nepali production on women’s struggles
including menstruation, remarriage, not being able to have babies, and child
rape among other things.
Now let us get to the reviews. Our
invitations say:
“It is a proud moment for us, as we
invite you to the opening ceremony of the fifth edition of EKADESHMA
international short film festival – let there be light.”
A
Gentle Night
Directed by Qui Yang; starring Li
Shuxian, Constance Schmitt; runtime 12 minutes; China
Reviewed by Utkrishta Mulmi
The film started with a police
conversation. A couple’s 13 year old child ran away from school and did not
come home. The mother was more worried but the father did not seem concerned
that their child was missing. It is mostly shot in the night. The pace of the
film was very very slow. However, the director did a decent enough job of
keeping the audience interested.
We learn that it was a girl, LinLin,
who had disappeared. We learn from her school teacher that she had failed but
he does not want to go to the police station to help with the investigation for
the fear that people may talk about him. We also learn that the mother had hit
her daughter. The mother pretends that the milk van has arrived and goes out in
the night to find the child.
She gets on a bus and goes to places
that LinLin visits. She goes to a eating place and wonders what is going on.
She asks the eatery owner what is going on when firecrackers explode and prays
when she learns that one of Buddhas has his birthday this day. As she walks
away, she hears that a child’s body has been taken out of the river.
In great fear, she screams and tries
to see the body but the police do not let her. She goes to the morgue and a man
appears. He asks her the particulars of LinLin and tells her to wait. Then the
movie ends. It appears as though LinLin killed herself because she failed and
because she was afraid to face her family. The movie was pretty good. I
personally would not want to jump in the river and I do not want to die.
As I have learned to swim, I would
probably swim the river anyway. I feel sorry for LinLin. I would like to say to
her that it does not matter if you fail or if you get beaten, just don’t commit
suicide. I would like to tell her mother not to beat her child because she
failed. Help her to work harder.
Retouch
by Eena Shrestha
18 November 2017, Saturday
Directed by Kaveh
Mazahari; Sonia Sanjari as
Maryam and Mohammad
Hossein Ziksari as Siyavash; runtime 20 minutes; Iran
This film from Iran was probably the best
of all that were shown during the film launch ceremony. I personally liked the
movie because it had a “sizzling start” as I like to call it. It went into the
action right away. It also had an interesting story and was dramatic at the
end.
While weightlifting at home, Siyavash
suddenly finds himself in danger as a weight pushes down on his neck. He calls his
wife for help. No matter her efforts to pull the object from his body, Maryam
is unable to do so.
Later, it appears as if she wants him
to die and then she makes up her mind. Even when he tells her that he is
choking she just watches her husband take his final breaths. Though she could
probably have saved his life and called for help, she instead leaves home for
work, knowing that he is dying slowly.
She continues on her daily work, she
leaves her baby at the daycare and goes to work. She calls her mother-in-law,
she receives a call from her husband’s workplace and pretends to leave work
early to check if Siyavash is ok, knowing that he is dead.
She picks up her baby from the daycare
and heads home. When home she checks for his pulse with a plastic bag to make
sure she does not get finger prints on, finding that there is no pulse she
pretends not to know that he is dead and then calls for help.
Over all I would give this short an
8/10. It was really interesting but I don’t like cliff-hangers, it keeps me
worried.
Taste
of Love
by Anita Bhattarai,
17 November 2017, Friday
Even though Taste of Love is a nice
movie, I did not understand the movie. It was confusing for me and I had never
seen anything like it before. I liked it when the screen was red and when she
spoke. The movie was 4 minutes and 30 seconds long.
First the girl was tasting many different
types of fruit. She tasted strawberries, orange, chilies, French fries. She
said she liked different tastes, some were salty, some were sour, some were
crunchy, some were sweet. She said French fries she tasted and liked. There are
many colors in the film, red, green, yellow, pink, and more.
The girl was pretty and in most of the
scenes she was lying down. They would show her eyes close up, her lips, her
face, her hair. If there was more content, I think the movie would have been
better.
Silver Bangles
Directed by Rohan Thakuri; runtime 15
minutes; Nepal
Reviewed by Utkrishta Mulmi
The movie was had all the problems of
women and girls and mashed them together. It started showing a woman trying to
take off her bangles. She was not able to take off her bangles. Her drunk
husband came and said that she looked beautiful in it and that she should not
take them off anyway. She is angry that he is drunk.
By profession, she is a midwife who
helped other women deliver babies. However, she herself is barren and cannot
have babies. Therefore, she finds out that her mother in law is trying to get
her husband to take on a second wife. In the middle of this story, her sister
arrives with her son and her daughter who is menstruating according to Pallav
sir. Since we did not really understand what that meant, we did not know what
happened clearly.
However, we did learn that her sister
had to leave for the city as a human rights organization had news of her
husband who had disappeared during the Maoist war. She would leave her daughter
behind and told the woman to take care of her for the 12 days and cleanse her
afterwards.
The woman gets into argument with her husband
when she finds out that he is about to take on a second wife. The film goes on
addresses different situations and ends with the girl sleeping in the woman’s
bed with the silver bangles on. It was a good movie. I learned that I don’t
know about all these problems and issues that women and girls in Nepal have. I
have to learn about menstruation also.
No comments:
Post a Comment