THOMAS PODVIN’S FREELANCE WORK
Freelance writer - translator - Editor

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Thursday 29 June 2006

2005 Live/Cold Fairyland/Shanghai, CN

There’s not much to be said about Shanghai ‘alternative’ band Cold Fairyland, that hasn’t been said already. Most every music critic in the country has taken a stab at pigeonholing this band, but the band, and its front woman Lindi, refuse to cooperate. The best we can offer is that Cold Fairyland thinks out of the box. The band – Lindi on keyboard and pipa; Su Yong on bass; Zhou Sheng’an on cello; Li Jia on drums; and Song Jianfeng on guitar – incorporates elements of various music genres (world music, gothic, jazz, funk, dream pop, etc.,) with traditional and contemporary Chinese sounds. And they do it best live, not in the studio. Hence, this live album recorded at ARK in Xintiandi in 2005, is Cold Fairyland at its best, from the surrealistic “The Cat from Paris” to the social commentary of “The Dead Children in the Newspapers”. But whatever the song’s provenance, Lindi’s vocals drive the melody from beginning to end with a meticulous precision. Unfortunately, the live recording sometimes suffers from less accurate reproduction – the price of independence, perhaps.
Cold Fairyland/available at www.miyadudu.com

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue

Nowise Assault/718/China (experimental)

Chinese independent and experimental music may be looked upon as something of an oddity in its homeland. And to Western ears, it may sound odder still. But that hasn’t stopped Yan Hun, the founder (in 2000) of the Sub Jam label, and one of the pioneers in China’s experimental music scene, from doing what he does best. Which is just about everything. Yan is involved in many arts: poetry, music, film and literature. But his most lasting accomplishment may be that he has proved that the fusion of electronic sounds with poetry works. Last year, Sub Jam released Nowise Assault, a 60-minute CD of made-in-China electronica, more specifically ‘leftfield electronic music’ blending artificial sounds with spirituality and poetic ambience. In this entry, 718, aka Sun Lei, a central figure in the experimental scene, offers ambient music and down tempo beats featuring ethnic or/and industrial influences. “Taoism or Calm” intermingles drum solos into a spiritual atmosphere; while “Over and Over” provides more than seven minutes of noise with an industrial edge. “Aluminum” is a straight piece performed on the piano, the crystalline purity of which is at one point corrupted by lowfi noise. Say what you will, this is highly addictive, hypnotic music.
Sub Jam/available at http://www.subjam.org/

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue



(c) that's PRD
PRD Chief editor: Christopher Cottrell
June 2006 issue

Uta Baga Complete Singles Collection 1995-2005/Ken Hirai/Japan

Osaka-born songwriter/singer Ken Hirai is known as the ‘King of Japanese R&B’. Influenced by Donny Hathaway, Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye, Hirai’s sound features warm vocals atop beats borrowed from soul (“Miracles”), funk (“Strawberry Sex”), dance (“Style”) and pop music (“Kiss of Life”). This two-CD release offers 23 chart topping singles in chronological order from Hirai’s debut “Precious Junk” in 1995 to “Pop Star”, released last October. Along the way, this disc provides a fair overview of his progression from saccharine to emotional, passing by sentimental, mushy and blue. Still, Hirai’s success is based on his appeal to middle-aged housewives, be they from Japan, China, Korea or the West. And as such, his success owes as much to his unique falsetto as it does to his appearance – for a ‘pure blooded’ Japanese, Hirai looks pure Caucasian. In any case, Hirai has sold 6.5 million units in Asia alone. Following recent live shows in the US – he appeared at the high-profile 2002 FIFA World Cup concert with Lauryn Hill – what can we say? The King is back.
Sony-BMG

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue



(c) that's PRD
PRD Chief editor: Christopher Cottrell
June 2006 issue

Jazz House Independent 4/Various artists/Italy/Taiwan

In the early 1990s, Irma, an Italian label, altered musical perceptions with the first of its jazz/house/fusion series of compilations. The Jazz House Independent compilation is the fourth in the now classic series, and thanks are due to High Note Records for making this gem available in the Chinese mainland. This entry blends jazz, house and afrobeat (American funk rhythms fused with African percussion), in a double bill of atmospheric electronica. CD one (unmixed) was compiled by one of the original Irma artists/producers, Black Mighty Wax (BMW), while CD two was mixed by label mate, Dino Angioletti of the Pastaboys. The various international artists gathered here attest to the global success of jazz house music genre. Examples include the groove-laden “Mafe Disco” by France’s Claude Monnet; the powerful “Happy” by the UK’s Max Sedgley; and the mesmeric “Madame Blanche” by US DJ Moses. This disc also includes some of the most successful club tunes recorded for Irma Records: a fantastic re-edit by US DJ Danny Krivit (from Body & Soul in New York) of “Starlite”, and Don Carlos featuring Michelle Weeks on “Take Me Higher” remixed by Japanese house DJ Yukihiro Fukutomi.
High Note Records

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue



(c) that's PRD
PRD Chief editor: Christopher Cottrell
June 2006 issue

Best/Mika Nakashima/Japan

Since the turn of the century, Japan’s most popular female vocalist, the 23-year-old Mika Nakashima, has enjoyed huge success and a long run at the top of the charts. As the title states, this release compiles the best of the diva’s work, from 2001 until the present. That said, Nakashima’s pop superstardom owes much to her publicity agent, whose promotional efforts have made her a household name. In 2001, Nakashima made her debut with the song, “Stars”, the theme song for the Fuji TV drama Kizudarake no Love Song, in which she also starred. Other works have appeared in a number of the very popular anime series; “Find the Way”, for example, became a massive hit (and a karaoke favorite) after being featured in the Mobile Suit Gundam Seed series in 2004. Later, the song was covered by Korean singer Park Hyo-shin and featured in a Korean soap opera. Indeed, Nakashima’s music travels well; she currently enjoys acclaim in the Chinese mainland, Taiwan Province and, as mentioned, South Korea. In addition to covers of John Newton’s “Amazing Grace” and L’ Arc en Ciel’s “Glamorous Sky”, this CD includes the Valentine’s Day song “Aishiteru” and the sexy, up tempo jazz number “Love Addict”, written by Nakashima herself. If J-Pop is your thing, this is the one to get.
Sony-BMG

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue

Korean cinema/http://www.hancinema.net/

http://www.hancinema.net/

Since the late 1990s, the Korean entertainment industry, in the form of movies and TV dramas, has exploded across Asia and the West. In part because the Korean government has a quota system which favors domestic product, but also because the product is generally of high quality, though not always. Of late, however, there’s likely to be a big fall off in quantity, following a change in Korean policy; but in the meantime, banked product will continue to pour out. To help one keep track (and au courant), the ‘Korean movie and drama database’ Hancinema.net is a handy, English-language resource, offering a comprehensive database of film personalities, movies and TV dramas (with names listed in English, Korean and Chinese). The content is exhaustive: fact sheets, news, filmographies, box office figures and industry data, photo galleries, BBS and links to e-stores. Hancinema.net also provides an efficient and smartly-designed search engine. With this site, Hanju mania is here to stay.

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue

Wicked Snitch/http://www.idontlikeyouinthatway.com/

http://www.idontlikeyouinthatway.com/

Jenny and Todd have an opinion, an opinion on everything ‘showbiz’. In July 2005, they launched the self-proclaimed ‘sexiest site on the Internet’ IDontLikeYouInThatWay.com wherein they share their (often scathing) opinions with folks like us. Yet this website is more than just a platform for their gripes and trash talk. It’s an eye-opener, with off-the-record quotes and less than glamorous pics of one’s favorite stars. In short, this is the web equivalent of Kenneth Anger’s Hollywood Babylon, volumes one and two. And just as entertaining for the same target audience: the insatiable gossip hunter. We don’t wish to lower ourselves but here are just two examples: “Orlando Bloom almost killed a guy with his car, and apologized with an autograph” and “Tom Cruise says he will eat the cord and the placenta after fiancée Katie delivers their baby.” Authentic, gross, and strangely addictive.

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue

Anna May Wong/Graham Russell/Gao Hodges

Los Angeles-born Anna May Wong (1905-1961) was the most prominent Chinese-American actress during the silent era, though her career extended to the early 60s. From 1919 to 1960, she played in more than fifty US and European movies (The Thief of Baghdad, 1924; Shanghai Express, 1932) with stars such as Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. and Marlene Dietrich. More celebrated in Europe and Japan than in the US or China, Wong, despite her many roles, still suffered from racial typecasting. At the time, the Hollywood system cast whites in Chinese roles, while ‘real’ Chinese were relegated to (often demeaning) supporting parts. In addition, mixed race romance was forbidden on the screen. As a result, Wong’s enormous potential as an actress was never truly given reign, though decades after her death she was given a star on the legendary Hollywood Walk of Fame. In this compelling biography, professor of history Graham Hodges provides copious accounts of the glamour, and the prejudice, that was the fate of many an actor of Chinese descent in the first half of the twentieth century.
Palgrave Macmillan

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue



(c) that's PRD
PRD Chief editor: Christopher Cottrell
June 2006 issue

China Style/Sharon Leece/Michael Freeman

Since the early 17th century, Westerners have been intrigued with that decorative fairyland known as Chinoiserie. That said, Chinese interior design has been constantly reinterpreted over the centuries, in both the West and in Asia, and China Style presents a fascinating look at how decorators from Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore, New York, London and Minneapolis have used this fanciful and elegant style in personal and commercial interiors. Illustrated with photographs by Michael Freeman, this 208-page coffee table book examines Chinese design influences from five periods: the Ming and Qing dynasties; Chinoiserie Old and New, the new Shanghai style, and China Modern. As evidenced in 36 settings ranging from a scholar’s garden to an opium den, and from the imperial palace to a rural home. Such is the sumptuous sheen of Freeman’s work that the text, written by Sharon Leece, the former editor-in-chief of Elle Decoration magazine, is almost superfluous, though she does offers tips on how to achieve the art of Chinese style.
Periplus Editions/available in foreign book stores and at https://peripluspublishinggroup.com/periplus/

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue



(c) that's PRD
PRD Chief editor: Christopher Cottrell
June 2006 issue

Wednesday 28 June 2006

Thomas Podvin interviewing a Hong Kong filmmaker








Photo courtesy Mick Ryan www.mickryan.com.

These photos show Thomas Podvin in action, interviewing Jacob Cheung Chi-leung, director of A Battle of Wits, in the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Shanghai, People's Republic of China (June 2006).

Thursday 8 June 2006

Behind the Myth; independent filmmaker Lu Yitong seeks the real Wu Song

No sane Hollywood producer would intentionally devalue a pop culture icon. Audiences won’t ever witness, say, Superman kicking the crutches out from under a cripple, or Batman caught drunk behind the wheel of the Batmobile. Yet in his directorial debut, Lost in Wu Song (LIWS), the multiple-hyphenated scriptwriter-director-actor-producer Lu Yitong deftly deconstructs one of China’s prominent literary figures Wu Song. Wu Song, of course, isn’t a pop icon, not yet. Rather he’s a popular, traditional Chinese hero from the pages of the 14th-century classic novel The Water Margin. Idolized by Chinese everywhere, Wu Song is considered the quintessence of manhood. Fond of fighting and drink – once, while under the influence [of alcohol], he killed a tiger with his bare hands – Wu Song is, like his Western counterparts, a righteous man, one whose reputation must remain unsullied. Yet in LIWS, Lu portrays this mythic character as a dumb, violent boozer.
Quite obviously, this is not a mainstream film. It has no big stars; it is not backed, financially or otherwise, by a big studio. Nor does it have a plot constructed by formula. It is neither an art-house flick, nor a product of the sixth-generation school of social realism. Rather, this is an independent production, a deadpan, offbeat comedy by first time, Beijing director Lu. Four years in the making, LIWS was financed solely by private investors, mainly Lu, his relatives and friends.
Which is why this wry, thought provoking tale of an idealist, wannabe filmmaker, Men Desong, is so refreshing. Men, still a virgin at 30, has a dream: to make the definitive film about his childhood hero Wu Song, and then retire and become a Buddhist monk. Men’s biggest problem is finding the right actor to play Wu Song, one who is a living embodiment of the legendary brute. Men pursues his quest with a daft, bullheaded tenacity, in spite of pressure from his producers to compromise. What follows is a series of Don Quixote-like misadventures, the outcome of which changes Men for good.
Equally stubborn, Lu, 43, never compromised his independence in the production of LIWS. While this is his film debut, he has worked in, and around, the industry for two decades, in France, the US and India. And his experience, as well as his love for cinema, is evident in the reception this film has received at various international festivals and with critics. To name but one tribute to Lu’s skills as a filmmaker, LIWS won the 2005 International Federation of Film Critics award (FIPRESCI). Nevertheless, Lu, much like other independent filmmakers, has yet to secure a deal for domestic release of his film.
In the meantime, he’s just completed a short film that will be part of an omnibus movie project, wherein seven directors were randomly assigned a color as the theme of their work (Lu received green, representing spring, hope and vigor); the resulting seven films will be screened at the Calcutta Film Festival in November 2006. In addition, the director is planning his next feature-length film, set in Shanghai.
We spoke with Lu about his enthusiasm for cinema, his approach to deconstructing myths, and the state of independent filmmaking in the Chinese mainland.

that’s: LIWS is a film-within-a-film. Is it based on your own experience?
Lu Yitong: LIWS has very little in common with my life or experience. It has much more to do with my inner intellectual world. This film’s a fable; it’s suggestive. It relates to the process of modernization in China, which is based on Western models, and filled with contradictions and absurdities. One of the consequences of the process, in particular China’s economic growth, is that idealism has been destroyed. It has also created extreme uncertainty. I have observed this process – from a distance – and [in the film] I express my thoughts on it also from a distance.

that’s: Tell us about the characters in the film.
LY: Growing up as a boy, Wu Song was for me the perfect super hero. But now I see him as a symbol of the contradiction between traditional and modern values. Pan Jinlian is Wu Song’s sister-in-law. In the legend, she poisons her husband, Wu Song’s brother, because she wants to be with her lover, Xi Menqing. Wu Song avenges his brother and kills the couple. In LIWS, Pan Jinlian symbolizes a reality [that the dreamer and would-be filmmaker] Men Desong must confront. If Pan were living today, excepting the fact that she kills her husband, she would be a very modern and independent woman.

that’s: One of the film’s themes is the conflict between fantasy and reality.
LY: [Of course] there’s no such thing as a living Wu Song; he’s the product of my character’s [Men’s] imagination – Wu Song is a symbol. All the characters around Desong are symbolic of reality. Mei Li [the modern Pan Jinlian] doesn’t just represent love; she represents reality through sex. I wanted to tell the story of an idealist, Men Desong, who confronts an all-powerful reality. He’s like Don Quixote trying to fight his enemies which turn out to be windmills. Like him, Desong is bound to fail. He’s ridiculous; yet at the same time, he inspires respect. In the film, it’s not clear whether, in the end, he accepts reality or not. He may very well continue to struggle against his windmills. My main interest is to show the failure of my characters.

that’s: In the movie-within-the-movie, the cast is constantly rehearsing but they never actually begin shooting.
LY: The [interior] film only exists in Desong’s imagination. LIWS’s plot traces the progression of a quest, a quest for Wu Song, i.e., a quest for an ideal. As such, the rehearsals show different actors portraying Wu Song, all of whom perform the same scene. Desong compares their performances in his search for the ‘real’ Wu Song. When he finally finds the right one, his film is ruined because the living Wu Song shatters Desong’s illusions.

that’s: Can Chinese viewers accept your deconstruction of the Wu Song myth?
LY: I didn’t want to cause my compatriots too much grief by completely annihilating their hero; the destruction of idols and heroes is a painful process. [But] to reverse and to deconstruct [a myth] is also a pleasurable experience. This contradiction is, in my opinion, both inspiring and fruitful. In artistic terms, the process falls in the grey zone between affirmation and negation.
This film also addresses issues such as the contradiction between idealism and reality, tradition and modernity, money and art, etc. These contradictions are very much a fact of life in contemporary China. If I told you that heroes of ancient times are the criminals of the present day, what would you think?

that’s: Is black comedy a reflection of your personality?
LY: I’m a skeptical person. I like to explore that which is hidden, its multiple implications and multi-layered significance. In my past life, when I was an artist, I liked [French Dadaist] Marcel Duchamps and post-modernist concepts and art. Satire, provocation and playfulness are the most important characteristics of the post-modernism movement. So when I saw films that featured these qualities, I naturally liked them. For example, the films of Stanley Kubrick, the Coen Brothers, and Quentin Tarantino’s early works.

that’s: Is Men Desong and his approach to filmmaking a portrait of the current state of the industry in the Chinese mainland?
LY: No. Desong could never become a director; he’s [probably] too thick and slow-minded for that. Yet he may also be too smart. There’s a Chinese saying that goes “very intelligent people appear to be stupid.” So who knows, perhaps he could be a director after all.

that’s: Describe the role of a Chinese independent filmmaker.
LY: The Chinese independent cinema scene is much more political than the Western one. But I want to keep a distance from politics. My criticisms are [aimed] at the cultural level. I believe problems with reality, including political problems, are all related to and rooted in the cultural tradition.
I really like Arthur Rimbaud’s poem about “art being elsewhere”. And Milan Kundera’s interesting modification to that poem: “life is elsewhere”. I believe both life and art are elsewhere; only by having an ‘elsewhere’ can you really be independent. China’s current independent film scene is ambiguous and awkward. Many independent Chinese films are independent from the Chinese film system, yet they’ve fallen into the system of Western film festivals and film critics. It is very difficult to reconcile this contradiction, but not impossible.

that’s: Where does LIWS stand then?
LY: From LIWS’ financial investment to the production process to the inner spirit of the film, you can say it’s a 100 per cent independent film. But I don’t want to overemphasize this concept of independence because if you’re independent for the sake of being independent then you’re no longer independent. Independence doesn’t have a particular form – it’s a spirit, a state of mind.
LIWS is not a ‘realistic’ film but rather a ‘post-expressionist’ one; it goes back and forth between dream and reality. Yet, for a debut film and a Chinese independent film, the budget was slightly higher than the norm.

that’s: How do you expect audiences to react to such a film?
LY: To be able to balance art and commercialism is the highest aim in cinema. LIWS is trying to head in that direction. On the surface it’s funny, and underneath there’s satire and criticism. This can satisfy different types of audiences. In China, we say “people who have ethics will see ethics; wise people will see wisdom; common people will see the ordinary.” I hope that with LIWS I’ve come close to realizing this thought. It’s my deepest wish that the largest number of people can see my film, as it touches on universal themes.

Special thanks to Caroline Nath.

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
June 2006 issue

Saturday 27 May 2006

Hostel/Eli Roth/US/2005

Here’s a film that will make backpackers think twice before they take to the road in search of easy women, in Southeast Asia or Eastern Europe. Three young (and horny) American guys are advised that Europe’s hottest chicks are to be found in a Bratislava suburb, in Slovakia. Off they go. But what they don’t realize, until, of course, it is too late, is that American guys are prized in this particular market. Prized for their blood. The 95-minute film starts off as your average teen movie with plenty of the usual hanky-panky, then shifts to the serial killer mode, then on to sheer horror, before finally ending up in the survival genre. Indeed, Hostel isn’t for the squeamish; it’s one wry, twisted, gob-smacking, raw and filthy piece of celluloid. 568 liters of blood were used during production – that’s 6 liters spilled every minute. In spite of the gore, director/scriptwriter Eli Roth (Cabin Fever) does a good job blurring audience perspectives – viewers aren’t quite sure if they’re meant to be voyeurs or victims. It comes as no surprise, then, that Quentin Tarantino is producer and that Japanese trash-cinema king Takashi Miike guest stars.
Lions Gate Films

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
May 2006 issue

Rome/J. Milius/W. Macdonald/B. Heller/US/UK/2005

The so-called civilized Western world owes a great deal to its glorious ancestors the Romans, including the notions of war, empire and republic. It seems life in the good ol’ days was full of violence (and orgies); superstition (the winner of a given war was forecast with bird guts); and media pundits (who wandered about shouting out the news in the forum [marketplace]). Such is the focus of the first season Rome, the HBO/BBC multi-award winning TV-series set during the last years of Gaius Julius Caesar’s reign, shortly after completing his conquest of Gaul (modern France). “Rome was a dog-eat-dog place of energy and chaotic filth with a very small elite and masses of poverty,” says creator/writer John Milius (Conan the Barbarian). Indeed, Milius doesn’t spare the viewers sensitivity; Rome is for mature audiences – it's gory, brutish, ruthless, addictive and also very erotic. Just like the real thing. To provide a sense of realism, extra care and money were spent in all departments: from the sets to the costumes (at five acres, the world largest outdoor set; 4,000 designs in wardrobe). Rome also boasts a good cast: Ciarán Hinds (Munich) as Caesar is nothing if not a model of authenticity, strength and charisma. Figuratively and literally, Rome’s a hell of a show.
HBO/BBC

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
May 2006 issue

Gladiator/Ridley Scott/US/UK/2000

That Gladiator, winner of five Academy Awards, has been given the Extended Special Edition treatment comes as no surprise. This three DVD box set was supervised by director Ridley Scott (Blade Runner) and recently released in China. True, this USD 100 million epic isn’t as majestic as, say, Ben Hur (1959), but it did revive the ‘swords and sandals’ genre, after a nigh on four decades' absence. Disc 1 offers the longest cut (164 minutes) in its original aspect ratio (2.39:1, anamorphic) with audio commentaries from male lead Russell Crowe and Scott. Disc 2 features a 3-hour documentary “Strength and Honor” that breaks down the various steps of the filmmaking process (from research/scriptwriting to costume and weaponry design, ending with an overview of the film’s impact around the world). By Disc 3, the viewer may have had about enough; this one contains featurettes on visual effects, deleted scenes, storyboards etc., etc. But the storyboard featuring Crowe battling a rhino is quite thrilling, as is the segment about the “resurrection” of Oliver Reed, who died during production. It seems the special effects team had to re-do several shots where his face was placed over a body double.
CAV Warner

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
May 2006 issue

A History of Violence/David Cronenberg/US/2005

In a nation where anyone can carry a gun, it's not easy to distance oneself from violence. At least according to Canadian-born director David Cronenberg (The Fly, Dead Ringers). In this, the director's twentieth film, partially based on the eponymous graphic novel by John Wagner, Cronenberg focuses on the family, whereas Wagner focused on the mob. The film relates the story of the small town owner of a diner, who's thrust into the spotlight after killing (in self-defense) two thugs. In no time, his quiet home life becomes a cycle of ever-more-vicious ultra-violence. With the director posing the question (among others): how much carnage is necessary to protect one's family from harm? Though made with a relatively small budget, History is a prime example of Cronenberg's cinematic audacity and intelligence; he demonstrates the ease with which "normal" people can fall into a spiral of violence, and how it provides an all too easy answer to life's complications. The film itself is full of violence–excessive, quick and intimate, though never exploitative. This straight-forward modern tale, supported by a superb cast (Viggo Mortensen, Maria Bello, William Hurt), won several awards, from NY to LA, and the 63-year-old director's hometown (2005 Toronto Film Critics Association Awards for Best Director and Best Picture and Best Canadian Film).
New Line Cinema

(c) that's Shanghai Magazine
Chief editor: Steven Crane
May 2006 issue



(c) that's Guangzhou
Guanzhou Chief editor: Christopher Cottrell
May 2006 issue

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