As part of the Pan-Asian
Film Festival, four shorts (and some full-length trousers) were shown in London
at the ICA, all having performed quite well a few months ago in HK.
To open was ‘The
Little One’ by Tam Wai-ching, probably the worst of the bunch, in that it lacks
some narrative structure and some blanks seem to require filling. A pair of
step-siblings get the horn for each other, much to the anger of their father,
who likes a bit of incest himself, forcing the teenagers to vent their
frustrations. A bit patchy in places, ‘The Little One’ feels very much like
student film, trying to throw-in lots of artsy shots and angles, without really
delivering much substance.
Next was ‘Flowers
with Aphasia’- which won Li Sum-yiet Best Film in December, and is perhaps my
favourite – where a florist is ‘harassed’ daily by a young boy wanting him to
make a reef. Irritated by the boy, the florist eventually gives in and gets to
work on the boy’s design. Gradually developing a friendship, the florist is
left to consider his relationship with his own son and lament what might have
been. The simplest film of the quartet, ‘Flowers with Aphasia’ is also the
strongest, being that it focuses on a story between two central characters,
without straying too far from the point, making it perfectly suited to the short
format.
‘On Sleepless Roads,
the Sleepless Goes’ by Isabella Candice Lam is probably the most stylishly shot
of the four, but again suffers from a few plot holes and fractured
storytelling. Like ‘The Little One’, it perhaps needed a bit of a longer format
to fully explore the characters and their motivations rather than glossing over
them. But still, ‘On Sleepless Roads, the Sleepless Goes’ is a solid enough
piece about a man finding himself trapped in a situation, as the road to Hell
is paved with good intentions.
Winner of the Fresh
Wave Best Student Film, ‘Dong’ focuses on Yang Dong, a schoolboy actor coming
to terms with the world of women. Pursued by Nuannuan (the ‘warmth’ to his ‘winter’),
Dong gradually grows a fancying for her aunt, a woman he can only stare blankly
at. As the story progresses and the Beijing performance draws near, Dong is
increasingly lost and confused by the world around him. More than just a simple
childhood crush, Li Yushang hints that the lonely Dong’s affection for Nuannuan’s
aunt is a longing of a different kind.
As with any short
film, trying to do too much can leave a fractured and disjointed affair. ‘The
Little One’ and ‘On Sleepless Road, the Sleepless Goes’ perhaps try to do too
much in a short period of time, needing more depth to the characters to really work.
Also, some being student film, there can, at times, be a sense of trying to do
too much and not yet fully finding the best way to express ideas. It is no
surprise that the simpler, gentler films are the ones that are much stronger
and complete.
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