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Yamagata 2003
Pushing the Boundaries of Documentary
by Stephen Teo
The 8th edition of the Yamagata International Documentary
Film Festival (YIDFF) unfolded over a period of less than a week (October
10-16), tightly packing in several programmes including the main competition
of fifteen films, the New Asian Currents, new Japanese documentaries,
and a focus on Okinawa as a "nexus of borders". The Fipresci
jury zoned in on the New Asian Currents, with 30 films (both short films
and long features) in competition -- a category that was more able to
meet the stated purpose of Fipresci to award new and young cinema. The
cinemas represented covered a geographic area ranging from Palestine to
Japan, and needless to say, the subject matter was wide and diverse, taking
in intimate and heartbreaking studies of families in crisis and overviews
of national politics and the survival of a people. The high quality of
the films and the excellent standards of the filmmakers made it a difficult
task to pick just one prizewinner. I was personally impressed by several
films which I felt were all equally worthy of a prize, and these included
Korean director Lee Hosup's "And Thereafter", a film that slowly
reveals the secrets of a dysfunctional family resulting from a marriage
between an American soldier and a Korean woman from the days of the Korean
War, and Lee Chang-jae's "Edit", that superbly delineates the
pain of a filmmaker who questions his own lack of social commitment while
making a film about three people who are socially committed to making
their society better. Sha Qing's "Wellspring"is a touching film
about a family with a son suffering from cerebral palsy; Korean director
Lee Mi-young presented an effective documentary "Dust Buries Sabuk"
which revisits the history of the Sabuk Incident (the protest of mine
workers in a coal mining town) and thus recapitulates Korea's past history
of repressive government; and Malaysian director Amir Muhammad's "The
Big Durian" was an entertaining potted history about Malaysian politics
under the 22-year rule of authoritarian leader Mahathir Muhammad. In the
end, the jury finally decided to award the Fipresci Prize to "Three-Five
People", directed by China's Li Lin, and to award a Special Mention
to "A Short Journey" by Thai director Tanon Sattarujawong (this
latter film runs only five minutes and the award was to commend the director's
ability to tell everything he needed to say in this short time span).
"Three-Five
People" is a feature-length video documentary which tells about the
tragic state of street children scraping an existence on the streets of
Chengdu, the capital city of China's Sichuan Province. Director Li Lin
shot the work as her graduation piece for the California Institute of
the Arts, and the film dates from 2001. Originally intending to make a
documentary in Tibet, Li was passing through Chengdu and befriended the
children (two boys and a girl) after meeting them loitering about in the
railway station. Li then decided to make her film about these children,
practically abandoned to their fates by all and sundry. The resulting
work is a harrowing exposure of corruption. Li at first shows us scenes
of the children stealing gold earrings from passers-by in order to fund
their heroin habit (and she does not flinch from showing us in great detail
scenes of the children shooting heroin in various parts of their bodies
-- and these scenes alone pose a confronting sense of realism to the viewer).
Li gradually shows how the authorities -- the police and their informers
-- are culpable in making the children what they are (particularly the
informers, who incite the children to steal and then sell them the heroin
they need). To her credit, the director does not merely observe a tragic
social phenomenon playing itself out in front of her camera, she tries
to intervene in the process of her filming, attempting to help the children
herself and to convince the authorities to do their bit. The courage and
commitment of the filmmaker is an integral part of the drama, and in this
film, Li Lin represents what was really the most exciting discovery of
the New Asian Currents programme, namely that Asian filmmakers are increasingly
prone to pushing the boundaries of documentary filmmaking, addressing
certain ethical issues within society and within cinema itself.
Stephen Teo
© FIPRESCI 2003
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