Sombo Chet has checked the top two items off
her bucket list - paying off her car and owning her own home - and come
January will reach No. 3 when she visits Cambodia, the homeland of her
parents.
The 28-year-old Stockton woman who
was born in a refugee camp in the Philippines will travel in January to
the land of her ancestors, but for those unable to make such a trip,
Chet, for the second consecutive year, will bring a taste of Cambodia to
Stockton.
A year after showing "Rice Field of
Dreams," Chet has arranged for filmmaker Greg Cahill to screen "Two
Shadows." The film is about a Cambodian-American woman who travels to
her birthplace after receiving a letter from Cambodia claiming her
long-lost brother and sister, who disappeared during the civil war 20
years earlier, are still alive. The movie will be shown at 7:45 p.m.
Saturday at the Empire Theatre in Stockton. Tickets are $10 for adults,
$5 for children. Cahill and cast members, including actress Sophea Pel,
who plays the lead role of Sovanna, will participate in a
question-and-answer session after the film.
"Two Shadows"
What: Film shot in Cambodia by Greg
Cahill, starring Sophea Pel as a woman who travels to her birthplace
after receiving a letter from Cambodia claiming that her long-lost
brother and sister are still alive. Her journey is not only filled with
danger, but is one of self-discovery. The film is followed by a
question-and-answer session with Cahill, Pel and other actors.
When: 7:45 p.m. Saturday
Where: Stockton Empire Theatre, 1825 Pacific Ave., Stockton
Admission: $10, $5 children, available at the door or in advance at (209) 598-3378 or sombochet@gmail.com.
"I believe in paying it forward," said Chet,
who is creating a nonprofit organization called GuyCambo with a Guyanese
friend to provide as-yet-undefined aid to their two native countries.
"Bringing a second film is keeping the momentum going and helping my
organization. I'm getting connected with the right people. I'm putting
myself out there. I didn't mean to meet the director, Greg Cahill. It
just happened for a reason."
Chet met Cahill
at the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival and, touched by the
story, which is based on true events, convinced him to bring his movie
to Stockton.
"She's Cambodian-American like me
and she's going to Cambodia for the first time," Chet said. "I
understand. You don't know what's going to happen. ... She came to
America for a better life after what happened to everybody's families,
the separation because of genocide. It's something someone out there can
relate to, not my immediate family, but someone out there will. We
can't forget the past. We need to know where we come from."
Knowledge of the past isn't easy to come by, Chet said. Her mom is hesitant to speak of it.
"Nobody
talks about anything positive, anything about the past," Chet said.
"People my age have questions, and little by little, pieces are coming
out."
The film industry hasn't been
particularly forthcoming with stories of Cambodia, but when Cahill saw
the 2002 Matt Dillon film "City of Ghosts," one of the first Hollywood
films to be shot in Cambodia, he was hooked.
"It had such an impact; the music in the film had such an impact on me," Cahill said.
The
soundtrack featured a female Cambodian rock singer named Ros
Sereysothea, who died at the hands of the Khmer Rouge, along with other
singers of that era. Cahill's research took him to Cambodia, where he
fell in love with what he saw.
"On a more
superficial level, it's visually stunning, the natural scenery and
ancient and contemporary temples, the villages, the rivers," said
Cahill, who grew up in Boston and attended New York University film
school.
"The No. 1 thing I walked away with is
the way everyone is friendly. The striking thing is everyone has an
incredible story given the tumultuous history of the last 30, 40 years.
Everybody, every family was affected by the civil war, the Khmer Rouge.
There's an abundance of stories."
Hollywood,
though, is content to crank out money-making action blockbusters and
popular sequels rather than character-driven stories, said Cahill, who
has worked on such mainstream hits as the television series "Medium" and
"Mad Men." Cahill stretched the bounds of film subjects by making "The
Golden Voice," a short film about Sereysothea that he's now working to
develop into a feature-length movie, and "Two Shadows."
"One
of the issues I have with a lot of Americans is, to them, Cambodia is
synonymous with one thing, the killing fields," Cahill said. "That was
30 years ago. What happened after that, to the refugees, the families
who were broken up? There's never a follow-up. That's what this film
attempts: how it affected people 30 years later. It's about a girl who
finds out her brother and sister she thought were dead since she left
Cambodia, there's a possibility they may be alive. She goes to look for
them. It's a common thing with Cambodian-Americans. A lot of them are
missing family members they have no idea what happened to."
If his film lacks the universal appeal of the latest "Batman" or "Harry Potter" movie, Cahill doesn't mind.
"As
a filmmaker, I don't know if I would want to make popcorn
entertainment," Cahill said. "It's great, and I love it, but at the same
time, filmmaking can tell more important stories."
Contact reporter Lori Gilbert at (209) 546-8284 or lgilbert@recordnet.com.
1 comment:
Srey Khmao!
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