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Deepa Bharath
They range from screen-splitting martial arts action to
side-splitting comedy.
Asian films featured in this year’s Newport Beach Film Festival
certainly do run the gamut, senior programmer Keiko Beatie said. At
one end is “Water Boys,” a Japanese comedy about a swim coach who
desperately tries to turn a hopeless team of misfit high school boys
into graceful synchronized swimmers.
“It’s actually the best comedy we have in this year’s festival,”
Beatie said. “It’s a very cute film.”
“Water Boys” is scheduled to be screened on Wednesday at the Lido
Theater.
At the other was “Red Trousers -- The Life of the Hong Kong
Stuntsmen” starring Robin Shou of “Mortal Combat” fame. Its Saturday
screening was a big hit, Beatie said.
Thursday will feature “Small Voices” at the Lido Theater, which
was Phillipines’ 2003 Oscar submission for Best Foreign Film. The
film is about a small town music teacher who enters her students in a
music contest, giving the poverty-stricken townsfolk hope and the
spirit to pursue and fight for their dreams.
Also playing in Lido Theater on Thursday will be “In the Name of
Buddha,” a film that sends out a plea to the island nation of Sri
Lanka, ravaged for decades by ethnic war between the native Sinhalese
and the Tamil settlers who came from the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.
The controversial film was banned in India and Sri Lanka, but was
screened in the Oslo Film Festival in Norway.
Producers Sai George and K. Shanmughathas of London attended the
opening night of the film festival on Thursday.
“We’re very happy to get this opportunity to screen our film in
Newport Beach,” George said. “This film is basically our call to all
the countries and people involved in the civil war in Sri Lanka to
embrace peace in the name of Buddha.”
Shanmughathas said they faced several challenges as producers in
marketing the film because of its sensitive subject matter.
Beatie said she has always been impressed by the “enthusiasm of
Asian filmmakers.”
“They put in a lot of work on their story line,” she said. “And
they are very dedicated to the technique of filmmaking.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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