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Part 2 of the Sea the SEA program of short films and features from Southeast Asia and Taiwan unspools this Saturday and Sunday, the closing weekend for the Bangkok Fringe Festival 2008. This weekend's series features packages of recent shorts from Malaysia and Taiwan, and features from the Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand. Among the highlights is Birth of the Seanama, a rare, acclaimed feature by Thai artist and activist Sasithorn Ariyavicha. There is also Tuli by Filipino director Aureaus Solito, A Short Film About the Indio Nacional by Raya Martin (actually not a short film, but a feature) and The Last Communist by Amir Muhammad, which is banned in Malaysia. Here is the schedule: Saturday, February 16 1pm, S-Express Malaysia (55 min.)
3pm, Tuli (107 min.) - A group of Filipino boys gather at the creek. Through the lush forest, sun dapples the ground and water. A kind of ritual begins to transpire. The boys, one by one, are circumcised in a requisite rite of passage. A young girl, Daisy, is also there and becomes her father's stoic assistant in the act. Life in the remote village seems simple and innocent. But as the children grow up, things become more complicated. Daisy, a beautiful young woman, is dissatisfied with her life. Her father is continually drunk and increasingly abusive. An arranged marriage seems her only way out, but she has her eye on a different life. Director: Auraeus Solito 5pm, Birth of the Seanema (70 min.) - The sea is the place that holds all the memories of every being and everything in the world. Through the cracks of the sea emerge the images from which a tale of a lost city is woven – the city in which its inhabitants’ memories, dream, emotions were fragilely interconnected. Director: Sasithorn Ariyavicha Sunday, February 17 1pm, S-Express Taiwan (65 min.)
3pm, The Last Communist (90 min.) - This semi-musical documentary observes the early life and legacy of Chin Peng, leader of the banned Malaysian Communist Party and the resistance against the Japanese and British. The film crosses Malaysia in search of the places frequented by the Communist leader, and conducts interviews, which are interspersed with specifically composed score reminiscent of old-fashioned British propaganda films. Director: Amir Muhammad 5pm, A Short Film About the Indio Nacional (96 min.) - One of the most ambitious Filipino films in the last decade, this is a collection of silent film actualities revolving around the Indio, the common man during colonial times. Set in the 1890s brewing revolution of Filipinos against Spain and follows the life of an Indio in three different phases. A loving historical tribute, it tells the story of a child church bell-ringer torn between his duties to the Spanish state and as a Filipino, then a pubescent caught in the growing pressures of the revolution, and finally an actor in a rural community escaping his troubled soul. Director: Raya Martin. The Bangkok Fringe Festival is being held at Patravadi Theatre, across the Chao Phraya River from Bangkok. It can be accessed by ferry from Tha Chang to Wat Rakhang pier and then a short walk to the right up Soi Wat Rakheng, or by River Express from Wanglang (Siriraj) pier, and a walk down the narrow alleyway next to Family Mart. Admission is 100 baht for each day's afternoon of films. |
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