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The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced today Old Ghosts,
New Dreams: The Emerging Cambodian Cinema (April 19-25). To be
presented in conjunction with the citywide Season of Cambodia arts
festival, FSLC will team with the great documentarian Rithy Panh to
screen a fascinating survey of films from Cambodia.
FSLC Executive Director Rose Kuo said, "This program of films reveal a
Cambodia few have actually seen, from the heartbreaking truths and
legacy of the Khmer Rouge as well as the Cambodian people who survived
that struggle to both endure and maintain their culture - all documented
and told through the camera lens."
Among the films screened as part of Old Ghosts,
New Dreams: The Emerging Cambodian Cinema will be an exploration of the
work of Rithy Panh, led by his documentary, S21: THE KHMER ROUGE DEATH
MACHINE (2002), a startling journey back to the notorious Tuol Sleng
prison (code-named "S21"), which was converted into a genocide museum,
and DUCH, MASTER OF THE FORGES OF HELL (2012), his more recent
uncompromising character study of about the first leader of the Khmer
Rouge organization to be brought before an international criminal
justice court.
Other highlights of the week-long film series will be Davy Chou's
GOLDEN SLUMBERS, a moving investigation of Cambodia's lost cinematic
heritage with first-hand accounts of the emergence and flourishing of
Cambodian cinema with filmmakers at the forefront of creating the films
that chronicled life in Cambodia from the 60s through the 70s. The
documentary, A RIVER CHANGES COURSE is the feature directorial debut of
Kalyanee Mam, the cinematographer for the Academy Award-winning
documentary INSIDE JOB. The film which won the World Cinema Grand Jury
Prize 2013 at the Sundance Film Festival, looks at the damage that rapid
development has wrought on Cambodia's land and people. Anne Bass's
uplifting documentary DANCING ACROSS BORDERS (2011), follows the journey
a young man's dancing talent took him - from the countryside of
Cambodia to the halls of New York's School of American Ballet to the
stage of the Pacific Northwest Ballet in Seattle.
Season of Cambodia, a special initiative of Cambodian Living Arts in
partnership with Cambodia's leading arts organizations and New York's
most vibrant cultural and academic institutions, will bring more than
125 performing and visual artists to New York City's stages, screens,
galleries and public spaces, creating a broad and dynamic platform for
Cambodia's cultural treasures to be shared with an international
audience. Season of Cambodia will be a celebration of the living arts -
of the people and practices that make up our cultural fabric.
Season of Cambodia is co-chaired by Anne H. Bass, John Burt,
and Darren Walker.Support for the Season of Cambodia Film program is
provided by the Hotel Sofitel New York and Cultural Services of the
French Embassy. Additional institutional lead support for the Festival
comes from the Ford Foundation, The Rockefeller Foundation, Robert Sterling Clark
Foundation, Fresh Sound Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Asian
Cultural Council, The Kaplen Foundation, Openbox Inc., EVA Air,
Bloomberg Philanthropies, The Pollock-Krasner Foundation, U.S. Embassy
Phnom Penh, The Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation, Sofitel NY and Henry Luce Foundation.
All screenings will take place in the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film
Center, 144 West 65th Street (between Broadway and Amsterdam). Tickets
will go on sale April 4, 2013 at the Film Society's box offices; and
online at www.FilmLinc.com. Single screening tickets are $13; $9 for students and seniors (62+); and $8 for Film Society members. Visit www.FilmLinc.com for complete information.
Films, Descriptions & Schedule:
DANCING ACROSS BORDERS (2011) 88min
Director: Anne Bass
Country: USA
On
a trip to Angkor Wat in Siem Reap, Cambodia in January 2000, filmmaker
Anne Bass came across a sixteen-year-old boy who moved her immensely
with his amazing natural charm and grace as a dancer. A longtime devotee
of the world of dance, Bass felt compelled to give this young boy the
opportunity to leave his home and follow a dream that he could not yet
have fully imagined. From the serene countryside of Cambodia to the
halls of New York's School of American Ballet to the stage of the
Pacific Northwest Ballet in Seattle, DANCING ACROSS BORDERS peeks behind
the scenes into the world of dance and chronicles the intimate and
triumphant story of a boy who was discovered, and who only much later
discovered all that he had in himself.
Screens Saturday, April 20
DUCH, MASTER OF THE FORGES OF HELL (2012) 110min
Director: Rithy Panh
Countries: France/Cambodia
Between
1975 and 1979, the Khmer Rouge regime caused the death of some 1.8
million people. Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, was in charge at
M13 for four years before being appointed to the S21 centre in Phnom
Penh where 12,280 people perished, according to the remaining archives.
The first leader of the Khmer Rouge organization to be brought before an
international criminal justice court, Rithy Panh records Duch's
unadorned words, without any trimmings, in the isolation of a
face-to-face encounter. At the same time, he places it into perspective
with archive pictures and eyewitness accounts of survivors. As the
narrative unfolds, the infernal machine of a system of destruction of
humanity implacably emerges, through a manic description of the minutiae
of its mechanisms.
Screens Sunday, April 21 and Wednesday, April 24
Screening on Sunday, April 21 includes intro and Q&A with director Rithy Panh
FIVE LIVES (2010) 93min
Directors: Various
Country: Cambodia
Five
young Cambodian directors follow five lives in Phnom Penh, the capital
city of Cambodia. The films were produced during a documentary workshop
led by world acclaimed director Rithy Panh.
Screens Thursday, April 23
Films include:
A BLURRED WAY OF LIFE by Sopheak Sao
I CAN BE WHO I AM by Sarin Chhoun
MY YESTERDAY NIGHT by Lida Chan
A PEDAL MAN by Katank Yos,
A SCALE BOY by Kavich Neang
GOLDEN SLUMBERS (Le Sommeil d'Or) (2011) 96min
Director: Davy Chou
Countries: France/Cambodia
Davy
Chou's moving investigation of Cambodia's lost cinematic heritage is an
oral history with first-hand accounts of the emergence and flourishing
of that country's cinema in the 60's as described by directors Lu Bun
Yim, Ly You Sreang, former actress Dy Saveth, (the first Cambodian movie
star, who now makes her living as a dance teacher), and two middle-aged
Cambodian cinephiles who wax lyrical at a café about the glory years.
The interviews are interspersed with visits to former Phnom Penh movie theaters that have been converted into Karaoke clubs and restaurants,
Screens Thursday, April 25
THE LAND OF THE WANDERING SOULS (La terre des ames errantes) (1999) 143min
Director: Rithy Panh
Countries: France/Cambodia
The
documentary follows a group of workers who are laying a high-tech fiber
optic cable that will link Cambodia to the rest of Asia and Europe. The
project is a hopeful symbol of the country's slow integration into the
world community and the modern technological age. However, for the
people employed to actually dig the trench by hand -- a group of rice
farmers, ex-soldiers, and their families, the poorest of the poor -- the
work is a mixed blessing. This film provides a haunting glimpse into
the lives of these indigent workers as they encounter the painful
remnants of the past - mines, bones, and a landscaped littered with
human suffering - and labor to bring Cambodia into the modern age.
Screens Saturday, April 20
Screening includes intro and Q&A with director Rithy Panh
THE LAST REFUGE (2013) 55min
Directors: Anne-Laure Porée and Guillaume Soun
Country: Cambodia
THE
LAST REFUGE follows the resistance of the Bunong, who have been living
for centuries of the hills of eastern Cambodia, confronting alienation
and annihilation by foreign companies who steal their lands, clear their
sacred forests and their traditional cemeteries in order to cultivate
rubber plants. In early 2010, a group of "resistants" took refuge on the
land of their ancestors in the heart of the forest and recreated a
field out of respect for traditional Bunong values.
Screens Tuesday, April 23
RED WEDDING (2012) 58min
Directors: Noces Rouges, Lida Chan and Guillaume Soun
Country: Cambodia
The
winner of the Best Mid-Length Documentary award at last year's
prestigious International Documentaries Film Festival Amsterdam, Red
Wedding is the story of Sochan Pen, who has kept a terrible secret for
over 30 years: that she was forced to marry a much older man, a soldier,
by the Khmer Rouge at the age of 16 and then raped and beaten on her
wedding night before she escaped. Four decades later, Sochan, who now
grows rice in a former killing field (where decomposed bodies are still
unearthed), brings her complaint to the UN-sanctioned Khmer Rouge
Tribunal. In so doing, she speaks up for the 4000+ women who suffered
similar fates during the regime and lived their lives in shame and
terror. Produced by Rithy Panh.
Screens Monday, April 22
A RIVER CHANGES COURSE (2012) 83min
Director: Kalyanee Mam
Country: Cambodia
Devastating
scars are etched into the red earth as Sav Samourn ponders the future
for her family in the deep jungles of Cambodia. Tumultuous waves pound
against Sari Math's boat as he navigates through waters being fished to
extinction. The sewing machine taps and hums beneath Khieu Mok's
delicate fingers as she struggles to make money to pay off her family's
mounting debt. Against this backdrop A RIVER CHANGES COURSE is a
cinematically spectacular and sensory journey into the lives of three
young Cambodians and their families and an immersion into a world both
distinctive and familiar. In her feature directorial debut, Kalyanee
Mam, the cinematographer for the Academy Award-winning documentary
INSIDE JOB, explores the damage rapid development has wrought in her
native Cambodia on both a human and environmental level. Rural
communities, used to reaping the bounty of their mountainous jungles and
lush rivers, have witnessed their forests being cleared, land becoming
scarce and costly, and fishing stocks rapidly depleting. No longer able
to provide for their families, and often accruing massive debt as a
result, many Cambodians have been forced to leave their rural lives
behind to seek employment in the industrial factories of Phnom Penh.
Screens Friday, April 19
S21: THE KHMER ROUGE DEATH MACHINE (2002) 101min
Director: Rithy Panh
Countries: France/Cambodia
In
S21, Rithy Panh brings two survivors and former members of the Khmer
Rouge back to the notorious Tuol Sleng prison (code-named "S21"), now a
genocide museum. Painter Vann Nath confronts his former captors in the
converted schoolhouse where he was tortured. It was by chance that he
escaped that fate that most of the prison's 17,000 men, women, and
children suffered. The "crimes" of these prisoners were meticulously
documented to justify their execution. The former Khmer Rouge guards
respond to Nath's provocations with excuses, chilling stoicism or
apparent remorse as they recount the atrocities they committed at ages
as young as 12 years.
Screens Sunday, April 21 and Wednesday, April 24
Screening on Sunday, April 21 includes intro and Q&A with director Rithy Panh
WHERE I GO (2012) 55min
Director: Neang Kavich
Country: Cambodia
San
Pattica is a mixed Cambodian-Cameroonian son whose father came to work
in Cambodia in 1992-1993, during a period of the first election in
Cambodia after the Khmer Rouge regime collapsed. Since his parents left
home for many years, Pattica was raised by his grandmother. However, she
was forced to bring Pattica to study and live in an orphanage in Phnom
Penh and Pattica was inspired to learn about his own identity by the
discrimination he faced from day-to-day.
Screens Monday, April 22
Screening will include intro and Q&A with director Neang Kavich
Shorts Program (82min):
THE GRANDDAUGHTERS OF WATER (2012) 12min
Director: Yann Cantais
Country: Cambodia
A
delicate evocation of village life, shot in black and white. Children
play, adults work, drink and prepare meals, while a grandfather silently
sits on his porch and remembers the terrors of the past.
PAULINA (2012) 30min
Director: Caylee So
Country: USA
17-year-old
Paulina has found herself attracted to the game of bets and wagers; a
love understood and shared by her father and a community of Cambodian
gamblers. Met with strong disapproval from her sister Sopheap, Paulina
remains tied to the community. But soon she finds herself in the midst
of her father's war with addiction, and the realities of this world is
unmasked; Paulina must choose between the world she is drawn to and the
life she might someday want.
SAMSARA (1989) 29min
Director: Ellen Bruno
Country: USA
This
meditative, quietly urgent study of common life in Cambodia in the
aftermath of Pol Pot was the first film from documentarian Ellen Bruno
(SATYA - A PRAYER FOR THE ENEMY, SKY BURIAL), who served as a relief
worker in Southeast Asia before studying film at Stanford. SAMSURA, shot
in 16mm by cinematographer Ellen Kuras, was selected for preservation
by the National Film Registry in 2012.
TWO GIRLS AGAINST THE RAIN (2013) 11min
Director: Sopheak Sao
Country: Cambodia
The
latest documentary shory from filmmaker Sopheak Sao is about Soth Yun
and Sem Eang, two women who met during the Khmer Rouge regime and fell
in love. Their bond has survived years of forced separation, first by
the government and then by their families, and an ongoing struggle for
respect within the community of Takeo in southern Cambodia. Screened in
the Panorama section of this year's Berlin International Film Festival.
Public Screening Schedule:
Screening Venue:
The Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center
144 West 65 Street, between Broadway & Amsterdam
Friday, April 19
7:15PM A RIVER CHANGES COURSE (83min)
Saturday, April 20
7:00PM THE LAND OF THE WANDERING SOULS (143min)
(with intro and Q&A with director Rithy Panh)
9:30PM DANCING ACROSS BORDERS (88min)
Sunday, April 21
4:00PM Shorts Program (82min)
6:00PM S21: THE KHMER ROUGE KILLING MACHINE (101min)
(with intro and Q&A with director Rithy Panh)
8:45PM DUCH: MASTER OF THE FORGES OF HELL (104min)
(with intro and Q&A with director Rithy Panh)
Monday, April 22
7:30PM RED WEDDING (58min)
9:00PM WHERE I GO (55min)
(with intro and Q&A with director Neang Kavich)
Tuesday, April 23
7:30PM FIVE LIVES (93min)
9:30PM THE LAST REFUGE (55min)
Wednesday, April 24
7:30PM S21: THE KHMER ROUGE KILLING MACHINE (101min)
9:30PM DUCH: MASTER OF THE FORGES OF HELL (104min)
Thursday, April 25
7:30PM GOLDEN SLUMBERS (96min)
Founded in 1969 to celebrate American and international cinema, the Film Society of Lincoln Center
works to recognize and support new directors, and to enhance the
awareness, accessibility and understanding of film. Among its yearly
programming of film festivals, film series and special events, the Film
Society presents two film festivals in particular that annually attract
global attention: the New York Film Festival, which just celebrated its
50th edition, and New Directors/New Films which, since its founding in
1972, has been produced in collaboration with MoMA. The Film Society
also publishes the award-winning Film Comment Magazine, and for over
three decades has given an annual award-now named "The Chaplin Award"-to
a major figure in world cinema. Past recipients of this award include Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks, and Sidney Poitier.
FSLC presents its year-round calendar of programming, panels, lectures,
educational and transmedia programs and specialty film releases at the
famous Walter Reade Theater and the new state-of-the-art Elinor Bunin
Munroe Film Center. For more information, visit www.filmlinc.com and follow #filmlinc on Twitter.
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