Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Closure in Hong Kong

It's been more than six months since my last post. My wife and I have left Hong Kong and have settled back in NY. There's definitely less sunshine and no trips to exotic destinations in our new life. But we've been blessed with a new addition, our newborn son ISAIAH PARK.

Moreover, thanks to all who followed through and made requests, the Hong Kong Public Library has recently added my first novel BOY GENIUS to its holdings. If you're curious about this novel, you can now get it for free from the public library.

Click to view HKPL catalog listing

My life is vastly different now from what it was in Hong Kong. I've taken a brief break from blogging and shooting films to help take care of our son. There are definitely plenty of times when we miss Hong Kong, but we're also very happy to be back in NY. And I try to keep up my Cantonese by listening to the Cantonese radio--1480 AM--here.

Anyway, that's my two bits for this final post. I'm so happy that a part of me--this blog and my novel BOY GENIUS--remains in HK. Thank you again.

That's all for now. BYE BYE!!!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Day 30, Film 30. My Magnum Opus

I somehow kept this going for 30 days. Whether good or bad, that's a full month of short films... which is just enough to provide me timely closure.


SPECIAL REQUEST
Please, please, please help bring my novels BOY GENIUS and LAS CUCARACHAS to the Hong Kong Public Library by clicking on this link and filling out the web form.

BOY GENIUS by Yongsoo Park (Akashic Books, NYC, 2002) ISBN No.: 978-1888451245

LAS CUCARACHAS by Yongsoo Park (Akashic Books, NYC, 2004) ISBN No.: 978-1888451566


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NOW, having said all that, here is my 30th and final short film in this series: MY MAGNUM OPUS

Enjoy!!!

It's been great fun.

I want to thank everyone who's visited this blog.

I also want to say special thanks to Hong Kong Blogs Review, which provides an excellent and comprehensive overview of HK blogs, for a very kind and generous review. Thank you again for your kind words.





I SHOT HONG KONG!
Here is a compilation of my own favorites (total 10 minutes). You can see these films individually as well on the right side of this blog. Enjoy!

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Marathon in Hong Kong MTR (a film haiku)

Day 29, Film 29.

This film haiku was shot all over Hong Kong during a marathon ride on the MTR.

Enjoy!!!

Monday, March 2, 2009

What China Fears Most

Day 28, Film 28.

This is a film koan about what the leaders of China's government fear most. It was shot at Wah Fu Estate in southwest Hong Kong, above the Wah Fu Estate bus terminal and across the street from the Wah Fu Shopping Center.

I think I may have startled a handful of people while shooting this.

Whatever the case, enjoy!!!


Sunday, March 1, 2009

My Favorite Hong Kong Corporate Shill

Day 27, Film 27.

Here's a very short film haiku about the smog and corporate presence in Hong Kong. Some will no doubt put one and one together and conclude that one is connected with the other, but I will not make such pro-pinko proclamations here.

Enjoy!!!

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Dreaming of China and Tibet

Day 26. Film 26.

Low energy today. Something about weekends brings out the sloth in you, I guess.

Still, I didn't want to throw in the towel at 25.5 films, such a strange number. So, I pressed forward and made this short film koan.

Enjoy!

Friday, February 27, 2009

One Two Three Cantonese (one film, two versions)

Day 25, Film 25.5.

To commemorate 25 days, here's something different. Two versions of the same film. Both start the same way, but end in two completely different places.

Both were shot at the Ferry Pier in Central. No English subtitles needed for the intro. I'm only saying very basic things. I'm sure anyone can follow it.

I've posted Chinese subtitles, though I have no idea whether they are correct. I just like the idea that one can write in a language that one doesn't know thanks to the Web. Very cool.

The first one is the G version. The second is the PG-13 version. Or in HK terms, the first is I and the second is II. I started shooting w/ the G version in mind, but the shots and reality led me to the PG-13 version.

Enjoy!!!


G Version



PG-13 Version

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Track Meet in Wanchai (a film haiku)

Day 24, Film 24.

This is a film haiku shot at Wanchai Sports Ground. It's dedicated to the members of my junior high track team, some of whom were very fast.

The Chinese titles were done by our friend Maggie. She also fixed the titles on WHAT I BELIEVED ABOUT THE CHINESE WHEN I WAS LITTLE. Thank you, Maggie. You rock!!

Enjoy!!!

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Fanling Theater, Hong Kong's Coolest Movie Theater (Part 2)

DAY 23, FILM 23.

Here is the follow-up to yesterday's short film.

This is a tour of the Fanling Theater, the coolest movie theater, by far, in Hong Kong.

Thank you again, Mr. Ming Wan for showing me around. Your theater and you both rock!!!

If you want to experience something special, go to the Fanling Theater. It is a very special theater that oozes history and atmosphere.

It is on 1 Luen Fat Street in Luen Wo Hui, Fanling, just a 15-minute walk or a 5-minute minibus ride (52K) from the Fanling Train Station.

Enjoy!!!

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Oldest Movie Theater in Hong Kong

The Oscars this year was very heavy on nostalgia, trying desperately to connect contemporary movies with classics of yesteryear.

What better way to continue in that spirit than to pay a visit to the oldest movie theater that's still showing movies here in Hong Kong, a place that seems at times to be the antithesis of anything old?

Hence, this short film about a theater that opened back in the 1950s. I made a mistake in my narration. This theater opened in 1959, not 1958. The theater was showing VALKYRIE and LOVE CONNECTED in its two screens when I went.

Day 22, Film 22.

Sorry about the hard-to-read subtitles. I can't make clearer subtitles on Windows Moviemaker. And sorry about my bad tones and poor Cantonese. Still, I love the Wah, and will plow on, knowing full well that I'm saying things wrong.

Enjoy!!!



A longer film that shows the inside of the theater will follow. This is just an introduction posted to keep the streak alive before the clock strikes 12.

I want to thank Mr. Ming Wan, the manager of this movie theater, who was so extremely helpful and gave me a special tour of the place.

Thank you, Mr. Wan. You and your movie theater rock!!!

Monday, February 23, 2009

18 Views of Wah Fu Estate. #19

DAY 21, FILM 21.

Sick today. Fever and congestion. Did not step out of the apartment. Still, did not want to see my streak end. That's the power of turning something into a habit, I guess.

So, here is a short film shot from my tiny balcony overlooking Wah Fu Estate and Waterfall Bay.

And yes, the title of this post is a homage to Jim Feldman's excellent series of paintings of the ICC.

Enjoy!!!

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Three Shorts in One Day

Day 20, Film 20.

You're in for a treat today.

I've been giving you one short per day. But today, we're going to make history.

Today, I offer you not one, but three shorts all from Wah Fu Estate. Don't ask me how I find the energy. It's just how I roll. Moreover, Wah Fu is a treasure trove of inspiration and other delights. There's no limit to the things one can find there just by strolling about...

If you have not been there, you really need to go. It is one of the oldest and nicest government housing projects in Hong Kong. It's also a good place to play basketball, and there are amazing views of the sea.

Enjoy!!!

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Papillon in Hong Kong

Day 19, Film 19

It'd be great if these short films found their audience. But ultimately, we write and make movies for ourselves. And I'm cool with that. I just can't believe how long I've been able to keep this going.

Thank you, So Jene, for encouraging me today and going with me all the way to Lantau. You are awesome!!!

This was shot in Tai O, Lantau Island.

Enjoy!!!

Friday, February 20, 2009

What I Believed About the Chinese When I Was Little

Day 18, Film 18.

Not much energy today. But I really wanted to keep my streak alive. So, I made a film that pays tribute to a film made by Jonny Stranger, with whom I've had the good fortune to make half a dozen films.

Like they say, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. The Chinese titles were done by our friend Maggie Lee. Thank you again, Maggie. You rock!!

Here is my film:




Here is Jonny Stranger's original:




Enjoy!!!

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Alone in Tin Shui Wai (a film koan)

Day 17, Film 17

I'm not sure what people are making of this series of short films, but I'm having a blast. This is the first time I've shot so much stuff with no crew and no other actors. I didn't even know one could make films like this.

Not that this is the m.o. I want to follow from now on or anything--I'm simply making do with what I have for the time being. I'm available as a camera operator and an actor, and I haven't found actors in HK, hence these solo films. But I'm a little surprised that this can even be done, though I have to say that it's not easy. Working alone with a camera definitely has its hazards.

ALONE IN TIN SHUI WAI, the 17th short film in this series, reminds me of YOU CAN'T LEARN TO PLOW BY READING bOOKS, the feature film that Richard Linklater made before SLACKER. He shot it on Super-8. It is mostly of him doing mundane everyday stuff and riding the train through Texas. Very boring stuff, but he later said making that film, which he financed with an inheritance, was his film school.

This isn't my film school, but I've been reminded of little things here and there that I've forgotten over the years about how to frame shots and put shots together. Mostly, I'm enjoying this. They say that suckers do art for art's sake, and real artists do it for money.

That's a complex topic, which I don't want to get into, but I'll say this much. Obviously, I'm not making a cent from any of these short films. That sponsorship deal from Tsingtao never materialized. But, there are lots of dumber ways to waste one's time. I'm enjoying doing these films and seeing parts of Hong Kong that I wouldn't otherwise see.

Some of these short films are good. Others are not. Many people will think that these films and making them is pointless, especially since I'm not getting any money from them. This may be. But then again, what in this world, whether money is involved or not, really is that important in the big picture?

Anyway, that's way too much jabbering... Here's the film koan. It's about the perils of working alone when shooting a film. It's a little long, but stick with it. The ending is worth it.




Enjoy!!!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Tin Shui Wai a.k.a. City of Sadness

Day 16, Film 16

Laurence Lau's CITY BESIEGED and Ann Hui's THE WAY WE ARE, two diametrically-opposed films about life in Tin Shui Wai, prompted me to go to this often-villified new town in the New Territories and take a look for myself.

For those not in the know, Tin Shui Wai, which is often referred to as the City of Sadness, is basically Hong Kong's most notorious 'projects,' where all sorts of unspeakable horrors are said to exist.

In fact, like many 'villified 'hoods,' it's also a place where tens of thousands of ordinary working people live with the humdrum routine of daily life.

If you haven't been there, it's worth making a trip. The light rail at Tin Shui Wai is very cool. There's one that runs in a circle. I rode the loop three times. Very pleasant.

This is my film koan about Tin Shui Wai, shot at Tin Yiu Estate.




Enjoy!!!

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Cecilie Gamst Berg's BLONDE LOTUS

Day 15, Film 15

This is a short film about the novel BLONDE LOTUS, which was penned by Cecilie Gamst Berg, one of the most original and interesting people in Hong Kong and a terrific blogger (China Droll). I read this novel and enjoyed it very much. It is heartfelt and gushing with emotion.

This film was shot in Chungking Mansion, where parts of the book take place.
It is my thank-you to Cecilie Gamst Berg for encouraging people in Hong Kong and elsewhere to learn Cantonese. Check out her excellent Cantocourse series on Youtube.

As for my own quest to learn Cantonese, my tones are bad, I talk like a three-year-old, and I often butcher the language, but learning a language, by definition, means making mistakes. And as a student of Cantonese and other languages, I have to say Cantonese is so very beautiful, elegant, and logical. It's without doubt, the most fun language I've ever studied.

Learning Cantonese and chatting with local people in my broken Cantonese has been such a source of joy for me. My life in Hong Kong would be so much duller without this gift.

So, Cecilie. Doje leih. You rock!!





Enjoy!!!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Best Beach in Hong Kong

Day 14, Film 14

This was shot at the park at the foot of Wah Fu Estate, where I often find myself without even realizing it. So far, to my utter delight, I've made more than a half dozen short films about this place.

It's where I play ball, buy a lot of my groceries, go to the library, sometimes swim, and shoot films.

So, even though I live in Bel Air, which costs way too much and has a huge indoor pool that goes nearly always underused, when we eventually leave Hong Kong, what I'll miss will be Wah Fu Estate, the folks I play b-ball with there, Waterfall Bay, and learning and speaking my broken Cantonese.

That said, I present this film and give respect to Wah Fu Estate and Tsingtao, which I'd rather drink out of a can straight from the Circle-K any day over some fine wine that costs something obscene... You both rock!!!

P.S. I'm no Michael Phelps, but if anyone over at Tsingtao is mesmerized by this film and wants to sign me up as a spokesperson, please know that I work cheap...very cheap... dirt cheap.





Enjoy!!!

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Happy Valentine's Day

Day 12, Film 12.



Enjoy!!!

Friday, February 13, 2009

Patriotism on the Ap Lei Chau Ferry

One of those days. Very little energy or inspiration.

Still, I do not want to break my streak. And anyway, just about anything is better than nothing.

Hence, Day 11, Film 11.




Enjoy!!!

Repulse Bay Secret History

I don't know if it's my computer, connection, whatnot... but I had the most difficult time trying to upload this on YouTube.

Moreover, since our laptop was lost in November, I've had to make do with the built-in Windows Moviemaker to edit these videos instead of Adobe Premiere. Hence, the poor sound, inability to finetune edits, fuzzy subtitles...

Anyway, that's enough venting...

Day 10, Film 10.

Note: 90% of this film is true.




Enjoy!!!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Monday, February 9, 2009

How to Blog Without a Computer

Day 7, Film 7.

HOW TO BLOG WITHOUT A COMPUTER (a film about what blogging is really about)




Enjoy!!!

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Secret Hong Kong Kung Fu

Day #6, Film #6.

This was especially fun to make because So Jene gave me a hand. She's awesome!!!

Forget the doom and gloom. Stay positive and smile. At least we have a roof over our heads...


SECRET HONG KONG KUNG FU (a short film about a martial art that is uniquely Hong Kong)




Enjoy!!!

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Coolest Bar in Hong Kong

Spent the morning doing freelance translating. Spent the rest of the day out with So Jene. Great day. Ate tons of tasty treats.

By the time we got home, it was dark out and it looked like my streak of making short films in consecutive days would end with four.

But, four is such an unlucky number, especially in Hong Kong.

So, I rushed out and shot this at Waterfall Bay Park next to Wah Fu Estate, startling a bunch of gawking barbecuers nearby. I can't exactly blame them. I do come across like a madman most of the time.

The film is sort of a downer, but short. And I'm sure plenty of people have felt this way at one time or another...



Enjoy!!!

41 Cumberland Road

Here is Short Film #4

Shot in Kowloon Tong



Enjoy!!!

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Thank You Vojtech Jasny

I'm still looking for actors to get a feature film on its feet here in Hong Kong... In the meantime, I've started making short films to see how many consecutive days I can go making one short film per day. Many of these will be duds. Some will be good. This is #3 on day three, shot at Aberdeen Country Park. I was inspired to do this by the great Vojtech Jasny. Enjoy!!!



Here's a video response to this short film from the filmmaker Jonny Stranger. Thank you, Jonny. Like Vojtech, you also rock!!!


Hong Kong Apartment For Rent

For anyone looking for the perfect Hong Kong apartment, boy have I got a deal for you...




Enjoy!!!

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

China Welcomes the World!!!

Here is a film koan about China.




Enjoy!!!

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

The Economy, Empty Malls & Revolutionary Road

We have returned from a much-needed but also thoroughly exhausting trip to New York. The flight seems to get more draining every time, and going from warm weather to frigid cold is a real shock to the system.

Due to the wintry conditions and a bout with a nasty cold, So Jene and I didn't get to do as much as we would have liked. But call us doe-eyed losers, just being in the city reinvigorates us somehow. The cliche about distance allowing for clearer vision and truer appreciation applies in our case. NY is absolutely the most diverse city in the world with the most energetic and edgy people.

Seeing DEFIANCE at the Ziegfeld was a treat, not so much for the movie but the Ziegfeld itself, which seems ever more special as large single-screen theaters all but disappear from nearly much of the industrialized world. We also caught an Indonesian film called THE PHOTOGRAPH at the MoMA, which is a great place to see films. It was the first movie from Indonesia I've ever seen.

The general feeling from seeing friends and our brief stay seems to be the same as what must be in other financial capitals. People are anxious about the economy, many people have lost jobs, and there's less foot traffic in stores. But cities are, by definition, crowded places, so the impact of a recession may not be as obvious.

This was far from the case in a small town about 2 hours north of NYC. We went to a small mall just to walk around. Granted this mall was always a small one and never drew huge crowds, but it seemed to have less shoppers than stores at 11AM on a Sunday morning. We wandered into a rather large OLD NAVY and found just 2 other shoppers. This emptiness actually spooked us a bit and spoke volumes about the current recession.

The downturn in the economy impacts everybody, and we've definitely been affected. Fortunately, we have long lived beneath our means, and I rarely buy things. I'm just not as hung up on things as the average person. I'm not into gadgets at all. I honestly couldn't care less what our furniture looks like, what car we drive, etc. And on those rare occasions when I do go to malls or stores, I'm never gripped by an intense desire to buy anything.

So what?
The last thing I want to do is preach to anyone about the evils of materialism or tell them what to do with their money---I'm just a schmuck with a typewriter, after all, and the only money advice I have for anyone is for them to give their money to me.

So what's the point of all this? Simple. Sam Mendes' REVOLUTIONARY ROAD, which I also saw during the trip, is a piece of crap.

Sure Leonardo DiCaprio is a great actor, and ditto for Kate Winslet. I've long been a fan, and they have plenty of other movies, in which they show off their acting chops. But they stink in this movie because the movie tells a story that's without substance.

SUMMARY OF REVOLUTIONARY ROAD
Winslet's character gave up acting to be a housewife. DiCaprio's character works as a marketing guy for the same company his old man worked for and hates it. After some domestic disputes fueled by resentment and dissatisfaction with their dull middle-class existence in 1950s suburbia, Leo and Kate decide they will leave their familiar life in the 'burbs behind and go live in Paris, where they can be true to themselves. They vow to pursue passion & whim, and escape the drudgery of middle-class suffocation & convention. This plan seems so perfect, however social pressure and lack of courage ultimately derail it. They never get to live in Paris. The wife is devastated. Husband is also sad.

THREE REASONS IT SUCKED
I'm sure plenty of people found the picture to be poignant. God knows there are more than enough people who hate their jobs and being in the rat race. Still, I found the film to be cloying, irritating, and disingenuous. Here are three reasons why:

First, its structure is as follows: Characters are miserable, miserable, miserable, miserable, and then they die.

Second, its central conflict is hinged on pseudo-angst.

What do I mean by that? This is all a bit difficult to describe clearly, so I'll use an analogy. This film is like people who say that they would have been 'artists' but were dissuaded by their parents from pursuing their dream, and thus were forced to settle for a more stable and secure profession.

Both the film and such people cling to reasoning that is, at a certain level, disingenous.

The truth is, no person can dissuade or persuade anyone else to go into or out of the arts (that is unless they hold a gun to the other person's head). People become artists because they simply do (for a million+ reasons). It's not because someone persuaded or dissuaded them.

Likewise, if a person really wants to move to Paris, he or she will do so. (This is especially so for bourgeois Americans at a time when the dollar was so much stronger than the franc.) And if a person really doesn't want to, he or she won't. That's all fine. But it becomes annoying when the person, and a rather privileged one at that, doesn't, and then the blame is placed on 'society'.

Third, the film makes its rather obvious point in a clumsy manner.

It actually takes itself so damn seriously and thinks its message is so damn profound and above the audience's head that it uses a supporting character, a neighbor's grown-son recently released from a stint at a mental hospital, to spell out over and over (profundity apparently needs to be translated for mass consumption) the ennui the couple is going through. He declares, "You two are being stifled by this empty existence..."

The scene that follows is even more inane and has the couple reflect on their encounter with this clear-seeing madman. They tell each other: "He is the only one who sees things as we do. The madman is the only one who understands us..."

Some of this clumsy storytelling has to do with adapting a book, but this truth-seeing madman character could have been dropped, or at the least, the ensuing scene (described above) should have been cut.

Having trashed this movie thus, I'll add that for whatever it's worth, all this is not to discount stifling conformity of 1950s life and real social pressure. Peer pressure and conformity are real and powerful social forces. No one questions this. Conformity was stifling in 1950s American suburbs for many people who were really creative on the inside and is still resonant today. We get it.

Just don't try to pass off a nothing-of-a-movie that's mostly about bourgeois whining as if it's saying something new, poignant, or... (sorry, can't help myself here)...revolutionary.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

A BUG'S LIFE (a review of LAS CUCARACHAS)

The Following is a review of my second novel LAS CUCARACHAS from the FAR EASTERN ECONOMIC REVIEW (Sept. 9, 2004)

Please click on the scanned document to enlarge it for reading on a new screen.






Here is another review in Japanese of my novel BOY GENIUS and a reading I did at the Calabash International Literary Festival in Jamaica.

from Mighty Mules' Bookstore Home



カラバッシュ・フェスティバル2004 レポート(最終日)

 とうとう最終日。朝10時から「Akashic Books Presents」というセッションがスタート。前々から楽しみにしていたニーナ・レヴォイラはじめ、韓国系アメリカ人のヨンゴス・パークの朗読が印象的だった。 まず第一にレヴォイラは日系アメリカ人で「Necessary Hunger」「Southland」と続けて日系をテーマにした作品を書いている。

彼女自身の生まれ育ったロスのクレンショーに対する愛情、思いは作家として成功した今もなぜ彼女をつかんではなさないのか非常に興味があったし、日系アメリカ人の作家がカラバッシュに参加していることも同じ日本の血を分かつ者として誇らしかった。ヨンゴス・パークも同様。話し方、身のこなしは完璧なニューヨーカーだが、実はわたし、彼がステージに上がるまでずっと日本人オーディエンスの一人だと思っていた。(笑)アジア系が二人もカリブの文学祭に出ているとはとても嬉しい。と同時にカラバッシュのコンセプトに広がりを感じたのもこの時である。年を重ねるごとに出演者の国籍、バックグラウンドが多様になっているこの文学祭だが、ジャマイカ人アーチストを除けばそのほとんどが移民/ディアスポラの作家。これは何かの偶然だろうか。

 まずは韓国系アメリカ人ヨンゴス・パーク Yongsoo Parkの朗読から。

彼は2001年の作品 「Boy Genius」と新作「Las Cucarachas」を披露。どちらも8才から12才の韓国系少年を主人公にしているので、「たぶんオレがまだ子供だからかな?」と冗談を言いつつ、自らも7歳のときNYへ移住し、それまでの韓国時代の経験とアメリカでの生活がどのように作品に投影されているかについて触れる。意外にも今回のカラバッシュで作品の背景や作家自らのことを話して朗読に入ったのはパークだけだったので、30分という持ち時間の使い方がうまいなと思った。フェスティバルに来ている人の中から「ずっと朗読を聞くのはちょっと退屈」という声もチラホラ聞いていたので、自分の経験をプロのスタンダップ・コメディアン並に笑わせながら話すパークのイントロや流れ作りは際立っていた。そして作者と作品の関連性を聞けた分、オーディエンスもより朗読される内容に関心が高まったことは言うまでもない。

実際「Boy Genius」も「Las Cucarachas」も頭のよい少年が少し過激とも思える行動をとったり、調子のよいくらいに自分の立場をコロコロ変えるので「まったくもう。。。」と失笑させられるのだが、前者では国がスポンサーとしてついているテレビ番組で天才として持ち上げられているボーイ・ジーニアスがアメリカの影響力色濃い韓国でいかにサバイバルしていくかという真摯なテーマを扱っているところが素晴らしい。韓国と日本。全く状況は違うだろうが共感できる部分はとても多かった。丁度第二次大戦後の日本社会といった感じ。そして新作「Las Cucarachas」は舞台をアメリカのNYに移し、主人公ピーター・キムが韓国系移民として人種・貧困の問題が残るプロジェクトでいかに戦っていくかをブラックユーモアを交えて描かれている。

 どちらも作者パーク自身の経験や思いが100%そのまま書かれているとは思わないが、両作品に通じるプロットも多く、彼自身のバックグラウンドや年代の重なりを考慮してもパークと主人公達につながりがあることは間違いないだろう。韓国では「アメリカ万歳!」と国に見離されたボーイ・ジーニアスが極端なアメリカ支持者になり、在留軍人につきまといながらいろんな品物(タバコ、チョコレートなど)や人脈を手に入れていく。そして実際アメリカに移ったピーター・キムは「ブルジョアなんて嘘くせぇ!」とでも言わんばかりに、韓国で知った「アメリカ」と「実際のアメリカ」の違いに激していくのだ。

 作者パークは気のきいた笑いでプロのコメディアンかと見まごうような才能のほとばしりをみせたが、今後の楽しみなアーチストとなる。今回読んだ作品はどちらも日本で人気のでそうな予感。



Here is a rough translation from the web:


カラバッシュ festival 2004 report (last day)

 Finally last day. Morning the session, "Akashic Books Presents" starts from 10 o'clock. The ニーナ レヴォイラ beginning and the recitation of the ヨンゴス park of the Korean type American which beforehand have been enjoyed were impressive. First レヴォイラ continuing with "Necessary Hunger" "Southland" with the Japanese-American, has written the work which designates Nikkei as theme.

As for love and the thinking for クレンショー of the loss where she herself grows why grasping her who succeeds as a writer even now, whether you do not release there was an interest very it was proud and, the writer of the Japanese-American participating in カラバッシュ the same Japanese blood as an amount and a person.

Also the ヨンゴス park is similar. Way of talking, without the body saw it is the perfect New Yorker, but until to tell the truth you transfer, he rises to stage, you thought that directly it is the one of the Japanese audiences. (Laughing) the Asian system as many as two has appeared in the Caribbean literature festival with very is delightful. With also what the extent is felt simultaneously in concept of カラバッシュ is this time. Whenever year is repeated, nationality of the performer, the background becomes various it is this literature festival where, but if you exclude the Jamaican human artist, most the writer of immigration/ディアスポラ. Is this something probably accidental?

 First from recitation of the Korean type American ヨンゴス park Yongsoo Park.
As for him work 2001 "Boy Genius"With new work"Las Cucarachas"It announces. Because both from 8 years old has designated the Korean type boy of 12 years old as the protagonist, therefore "perhaps I still the child, kana? While "with saying joke, also the self at the time of 7 years old immigrates to NY, concerning Korean age and the life in America how are projected to the work to experience of that, it comments.

Speaking the background of the work and the thing individual of the writer even unexpectedly with latest カラバッシュ, because those where it enters into recitation were just the park, method of using the time limit, 30 minutes is good, you thought that is. Because "that directly recitation is heard, it had heard also the voice, just a little boredom" sporadically from midst of the person who has come to the festival, your own experience amuse in like the stand-up comedian of the professional, introduction and the flow making of the park which you speak had been prominent.

And the amount which can inquire about the connection of the writer and the work, from the audience until you say, interest has not increased in the contents which are recited. Actually "Boy Genius" also the action which the boy where "Las Cucarachas" the head is good can think also radical a little is taken, being the roller roller to change his own standpoint in the extent whose condition is good "completely another. . . "

With you can laugh, but the place where the true 摯 theme is handled with former the country with the television program which has been attached as the sponsor boy ジーニアス which is raised as the genius keeps doing how the survival in the American influence color dense Korea, is splendid. Korea and Japan. Completely, circumstance probably will be different, but as for the part which you can sympathize it was very many. The feeling such as the Japanese society of after the second next great war exactly. Mixing black and new work "Las Cucarachas" moves the stage to American NY, protagonist Peter キム how keeps fighting with the project where problem of race poverty remains as the Korean type immigration, humor, it is drawn.

 Neither writer park itself experience and the thinking think 100% are written with that way, but as for plotting which leads to both works being many, considering his himself background and the pile of age, it being being connected in the park and the protagonist you probably will not be wrong. In Korea "the American hurray! "With you see in the country and you become the American supporter whose boy ジーニアス which is separated is extreme, while hang on in the residency soldier, the various article (the tobacco and the chocolate etc.) and you keep obtaining connections. And as for Peter キム which really moved to America "the bourgeoise how lie habit ぇ! "With with as if to say, you knew in Korea, it keeps encouraging in the difference" of America "and" actual America ".

 As for the writer park whether with the laughing where the air is effective the professional comedian you saw and you showed the gushing out of the talent the ま う way, but you become the future pleasantly everyone artist. Both work which this time was read so, being popularity in Japan, foreboding.




Please help get my novels BOY GENIUS and LAS CUCARACHAS into the Hong Kong public library by filling out an on-line request. You can do so by clicking on the prompt on the upper right corner of this blog. Thank you.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

SHAMELESS PLUG for Fellow Writer and Actor

I'm still in the old Mei Gwok. It's cold but comfortable. Biggest cliche in the world, but true. There's no place like New York...

Recently heard from an old friend, another talented writer from NYU, who is now in Ventura, CA. Her name is Tania Weissberg and she wrote this episode of SUSHI PACK, a cartoon on cable TV.



I also found out that NELSAN ELLIS, an amazing actor who was in my experimental short film ANTIGONE 5000, is not only a regular on Cable TV's TRUE BLOOD but will appear in a major supporting role in THE SOLOIST, a feature film starring JAMIE FOXX and ROBERT DOWNEY Jr.



I thank him for his amazing gung-ho attitude doing ANTIGONE 5000 with me back in the day. We ran the production out of my living room and shot it in the woods out in Jersey over the GW Bridge. He never once complained even when we were shooting in the freezing cold. Out of all the actors I've worked with, he's the one whom So Jene, my wife, pegged to be a star. And he's clearly on his way. The guy is amazing.

Anyway, here's to those of us who keep plugging away at writing and acting and making personal movies despite and against all the odds.

I've also finished up a screenplay to shoot as soon as I'm back in the U.S. It's a script I wrote about five years ago and just sat on looking for perfect conditions and waiting for money to materialize. What a stupid of waste of time that was. The material is good. I just reread and polished it up today. It reads well, which makes me wonder what the hell I was doing just sitting on it all this time.

My hiatus in Hong Kong has given me renewed perspective. This time around, I'll shoot with a goddamn camcorder if I have to.

Anyway, kudos to you, Tania and Nelsan. You guys rock!!!!

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Four Predictions for the Near Future aka Joys of Going Home

Notice to all those who have stumbled upon this site by the vagaries that govern the blogosphere of Hong Kong:

I shall be radio silent once again for the next few weeks due to a trip back to the MEI GWOK.

My time in Hong Kong to date has filled me with amazing feng shui and other uncanny supernatural powers that allow me to gaze into the near future and see what will be before they are.

Here is a Youtube video that provides a glimpse of this most unnatural of dark powers:



That said, I will now make four and only four predictions concerning momentously unmomentous events of the near future as we plod bovinely to the Year of the Ox:


1) The Eagles will win the Conference Final, and then advance to and emerge victorious in the Super Bowl, sending shockwaves of euphoria to that great city of Philadelphia, my second heimat, which ranks in my esteemed book, just below NY for hipster living.

2) There will be partying in the streets at Obama's inauguration. Strangers will hug and cry and dance and sing.

3) It will be colder in much of the U.S. during the next few weeks than it is here in Hong Kong.

4) Yours truly will return to the Big Lychee in a few weeks, having put on the now customary 10 pounds from having stuffed his face silly w/ pizza, tacos, gyros, fried chicken, and other healthy American delicacies.


Here's to going home...

Will return to posting in a few weeks, heavier and happier...

'Till then, I now take time to bestow on you a VIRTUAL LAISEE packet and bid you.....a fond.... JOY GIN!!!!

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Eat Kimchi a.k.a. B-ball at Wah Fu Estate

I'm still working on the movie. It's coming along somewhat slowly. In the meantime, to unwind a bit, I've also begun easing back into playing ball. I've been unable to play for 4+ months due to a really bad ankle sprain from back in August.

I played last Sunday morning and again this morning. My ankle still doesn't feel 100%, and I can't jump as well as before--which isn't saying much 'cuz I could never really jump high to begin with. I was the shortest guy on my high school team, but also the slowest and the one with the least ups.

Whatever the case, it was great to play again and to return to what had been a regular game for me before my injury. The same group of regulars, who range in age from early 20s to mid 50s, was there. And they were glad to see me back. It's always a good feeling to be welcomed back to a place.



Playing ball in Hong Kong has been great fun and one of the few ways to really feel a sense of belonging with the local people. I like these guys at Wah Fu so much more than the stuffed shirt types I meet elsewhere all over Hong Kong.

The style of play may be different, but basketball is basketball. It also gives me a good chance to practice speaking the Wah. I can still only say very basic things, and my tones are usually wrong, but I'm getting more comfortable and confident about speaking, which is always a good first step.

As for my jumpshot, it's pretty much shot after my long hiatus. But I can still get by with a lot of fakes and totally anachronistic spin moves that I picked up as a kid from oldtimers at my home court back in Jackson Heights. God, I sometimes miss playing ball back in NY so much...

Anyway, I hope this video gives you a sense of some of the antics that make playing ball in Hong Kong fun, a lot of which is the off-court shenanigans. I know it's juvenile male bonding stuff, but there's something to be said about that. It's why I'd rather play ball any day than just go to the gym.

**NOTE: I've fixed the English subtitles on the clip. There was a portion I couldn't understand, but a very helpful and informed reader (thank you!) filled me in on what one guy was actually saying: "Cheating is allowed..."

I'm going to go out on a limb and say that this is likely a universal truth that applies to all oldtimer games be they in Harlem, Hong Kong, or Honduras... **

***I'm not sure why the Comment link below doesn't work. If you really want to write a comment, please click the individual link for this post under the BLOG ARCHIVE on the right-hand column (you need to scroll down a tad). It will take you to another page for this post, in which the Comment function works. I have no idea what this glitch is about.... Sorry.***

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

WRITING STEP OUTLINE and Talking to Actors

I've started getting more inquiries about film collaboration in Hong Kong. Most are from actors/artists/performers. Some with experience. Others with just enthusiasm, which can make up for so much. But many who are contacting me are doing so from far away. It's difficult to collaborate w/ actors who don't share proximity. Exchanging e-mails is okay for a short while, but making films requires face-to-face interaction.

I've also gotten some inquiries from people telling me they are IT specialists, computer effects guys, or management consultants asking me if they can be of some help toward my "project."

I am grateful for this interest and support, but their particular skill set doesn't really fit my needs right now, so I tell them I'm looking for actors, people who want to act on camera, or people who can show up and hold the camera or microphone, so if they're willing to do something physical and concrete, then they're welcome.

I think this is a good way to separate people who are focused and really interested in making a film from those who just have a general vague interest and like the idea of being affiliated with something creative and would like to just be there to watch. That's fine and dandy, but a bare bones production like mine really can't afford to have the extra weight.

I remember back when I was shooting my first film, I always had 10-12 people just hanging around the set doing nothing. Thinking back, I think I invited and welcomed that as a kind of security blanket and chorus just so I'd feel more secure about making a movie.

Now, I know better. I'm looking for people who can get behind the camera and/or in front of the camera and so something real and physical. The truth is that most filmmakers can also act. Once you do a couple of these things, the whole process becomes demystified. Shooting, lighting, recording audio, acting, writing... all these things become activities that one can do, and not some complex thing that only experts can do.

A major lesson that I learned back in film school was from Lorenzo Semple Jr., who taught a screenwriting class. I'm not sure if he's still alive. He was quite old even back when I was taking his class. He wrote the screenplay for various classic movies from the 60s and 70s, including one of my all-time favorites, PAPILLON. He also wrote the scripts for the campy TV show BATMAN, for which he told us he got death threats from hardcore purist fans who didn't like how he'd camped up the superhero and sidekick.

One of the coolest things he did for us students besides being completely blunt about whether what we'd written was good or not was to let us vote on his behalf for the Academy Awards. He was an Academy member of long standing, but no longer thought much of the direction movies had gone with their increasing emphasis on special effects and decreasing emphasis on story. Whatever the reason, he let the class (there were about a half dozen of us) pick the selections on his ballot for that year and had us mail it in. It demystified the whole film industry machine for us. It also taught us that a certain amount of irreverence was healthy.

Back to my present struggle. So far, I've exchanged e-mails w/ a couple of interested actors and have run into the same familiar difficulties of scheduling meetings w/ interested people. In comparison to the response I would have gotten back in New York, the HK response is a mere trickle. The same amount of postings about an indie feature production in NYC would have gotten me 30-50 headshots easy.

Here, I've gotten only about a half dozen. Again, this is simply an observation and a factual accounting, not a gripe that HK is not NY. I'm so over that. I don't even get worked up now about crowds and people encroaching on my personal space. In fact, all the usual trivial gripes that nearly all foreigners have about HK no longer faze me at all. This is HK, and it needn't be a carbon copy of NY or London or what have you.

In the meantime, I've got an original story for the film and am writing a step outline, with specific situations and parameters from which actors can come up with their own dialog. Improvisation is difficult without goals and guidelines. It's like when people do "brainstorming" sessions without specific parameters and end up with nothing. Ditto for actors and improvisation. You have to have a start and a finish to a scene.

I'm now focused mainly on polishing the story and looking for actors that can fit the pieces of the puzzle together. I'm very excited that this is starting to come along.

More imporantly, I've had a breakthrough in the way I look at my situation. I guess it's somewhat perverse, but I'm actually very pleased that so few film productions (be they industry or independent) are going on in Hong Kong and so very few good films came out of Hong Kong in 2008.

Why?

Because all this will make our film stand out even more and provide even greater sense of accomplishment once it's all done. I'm feeling great about this film. I can't wait to start shooting.

I've also been getting renewed inspiration from Melvin Van Peebles, a Chicagoan whose first feature film LA PERMISSION (1968) was made in France, after years of not being able to make a film in the U.S.

The road I face is much less arduous than his. He had to write and make films in French. HK is much more English-friendly, though I definitely plan to work some Cantonese into the film. Thank you, Mr. Van Peebles!!! You are a true independent!