asia

Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival 2009

Each year, the Reel Asian festival’s lineup gets stronger and stronger, and this year looks par­tic­u­larly good to me. Now in its 13th year, this annual fest­ival of cinema from East and Southeast Asia will bring 49 films from 14 dif­ferent coun­tries to Toronto audi­ences from November 11–15. Here are a number of films I’m par­tic­u­larly excited about:

When The Full Moon Rises (Malaysia, Director: Mamat Khalid): A mashup of film styles including film noir, horror, slap­stick and musical make this hard to resist. Disgraced journ­alist Saleh blows a tire out in the coun­tryside and soon finds him­self in a very strange vil­lage filled with gang­sters, spies and cab­aret singers. A string of dis­ap­pear­ances keep him in town to write the story he knows will get his career back on track. That is, if he can sur­vive to tell the tale.

White on Rice (USA, Director: Dave Boyle): Reel Asian always seems to have at least one zany comedy sched­uled each year (Finishing the Game, Ping Pong Playa) and White on Rice seems to take the same delight in playing with Asian ste­reo­types as those other films did. Jimmy is a 40-year-old Japanese man who comes to the US to live with his sister’s family after a painful divorce. Sharing a room with his 10-year-old nephew doesn’t seem to bother him, though, as Jimmy’s a bit of a child himself.

Breathless (Korea, Director: Yang Ik-Joon): Described as both incred­ibly brutal and incred­ibly moving, this story of a violent man who meets his match in a school­girl has been scooping awards all over the place, most recently win­ning the award for Best Feature Film at Montreal’s Fantasia Fest. If I know any­thing about Korean dramas, there won’t be a dry eye in the house by the end.

Fish Story (Japan, Director: Yoshihiro Nakamura): I count on fest­ivals like Reel Asian and Toronto After Dark to bring me some of the stuff from the fringes of Asian cinema, too. While Asia pro­duces a huge number of accom­plished “art” films, it also pro­duces some stuff that’s just plain weird. Japan is a par­tic­ular source of strange cinema, and Fish Story seems a per­fect example. In 2012, a giant comet is set to des­troy the earth, but all is not lost. A for­gotten punk band’s obscure song will save us. Somehow. I’m a sucker for Japanese films that fea­ture bands, so whether this makes any sense at all isn’t really that important to me.

Those are just a few of my picks so far, but I’m sure there will be a few sur­prises as well. Tickets and passes are on sale now. See you at Reel Asian!

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