Angkor Wat International Film Festival
  • Home
  • On The GROUND
  • Selected Films (A - H)
  • Selected Films (I - Z)
  • Schedule
  • Photo Display
  • Press
  • Our Mission
  • About Us
  • Sponsorships
  • Advisors
  • Contact Us
  • About Siem Reap
  • Images From The Temples
  • Sofitel Hotel Photos

Press Articles - Thank you!

 

Flicks from around the world to screen at Angkor Wat Film Festival
(Click Photo below to go to Online Article)

Picture
Posters for three movies screening at the Angkor Wat Film Festival – Milking The Rhino, Soul Surfer & Climate Refugees.
Claire Byrne Friday, 03 February 2012, The Phnom Penh Post
  
Cannes, Venice, Hollywood, step aside and make way. Siem Reap is the latest destination to become a movie Mecca, as the inaugural Angkor Wat Film Festival comes to town.

The Sofitel Resort will screen 31 films from February 17 to 19, welcoming guests and visitors to the viewings for free. Showing from 1pm to 11pm and including both shorts and features, all schedules and attention spans will be catered for.

The festival is the work of Emmy-awarding winning filmmaker, Tom Vendetti. Vendetti, who lives in Maui, Hawaii, said he was encouraged to bring a festival to Siem Reap by newspaper publisher Bernie Krisher. “I had met Bernie several years ago after working with him building a school in Cambodia,” he said.

“This is the first international film festival in Cambodia with the primary goal of preserving culture and the environment”.

With this idea in mind, most of the films on the program carry an element of environmental or cultural awareness, like Climate Refugees, which explores the impact of climate change on society, or Kipuka, a detailed study of Hawaii’s cultural identity.“Siem Reap appeared to be the ideal setting for our event considering the monuments and profound history in the area,” Vendetti said. “Also, ecotourism is taking off in Siem Reap, which is promoting the culture and preserving the environment.”

Along with the movies there will be opportunity to meet some of the filmmakers in the flesh and hear them discuss their work on the final night, at a poolside dinner showing of one of Vendetti’s own works, “When The Mountain Calls; Nepal, Tibet, Bhutan.”

Vendetti, who also works as a psychologist, said he brings his two passions together to create his style of filmmaking. “I try to combine my interest in psychology and filmmaking to explore wisdom presented in ancient cultures and share the wisdom to promote happiness.”

He said one of the highlights of the program will be the Opening Gala which will feature Soul Surfer, a highly acclaimed true story about teen surfer Bethany Hamilton. The toast of Cannes last year, the film follows Hamilton, who lost her arm in a shark attack at just 13 but went on to become a professional surfer.

The festival is truly global, featuring films shot in Fiji (Vendetti’s Fiji Firewalkers), the Serengeti (Milking The Rhino) and Iceland (Dreamland) to name but a few.

But of course, the host country takes centre stage with a number of Cambodian-made or based productions.

Born Sweet by Cynthia Wade is an award-winning documentary about a Khmer teen poisoned by arsenic who dreams of being a karaoke star.

Years of Darkness is another film by Vendetti, which tells of story of Sam Khong. After fighting for the Vietcong as a young teen, Khong was marooned in the US when the Khmer Rouge took power. The film follows him on his return to his birthplace in Cambodia almost thirty years later.

And no Cambodian film festival would be complete without the Kingdom’s own iconic filmmaker, Norodom Sihanouk. Two of the King Father’s works will be shown, La Cité Mystérieuse and Une Paysanne En Détresse. The latter, Peasants in Distress, is a love triangle set against the backdrop of war, political upheaval and UN intervention in the early 90s. Mysterious City was shot in 1988 during his time in exile.

The King Father is in good company. Many of the films in the festival have received accolades and acclaim. For a town with no formal cinema, the notion of becoming a destination for touring top films will be a hit with locals. As for the organisers, they’re hoping the Angkor Wat Film Festival will put Siem Reap on the map for more than just its temples.

Sofitel Angkor Phokeethra
The luxurious Sofitel Angkor Phokeethra Golf and Spa Resort hosts the Angkor Wat International Film Festival event, inspired by the Angkor Wat temple complex
Angkor Wat temple complex
Angkor Wat temple complex

Mauians launch film fest in Cambodia
Focus on culture, spirit, environment at inaugural event
August 28, 2011 - By RICK CHATENEVER - Features Editor (scene@mauinews.com) , The Maui News
  

WAILUKU - A Maui-based group headed by Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Dr. Tom Vendetti has announced plans for the inaugural Angkor Wat International Film Festival, coming to Siem Reap, Cambodia, Feb. 17 to 19.

Home base for the festival will be the award-winning Sofitel Angkor Phokeethra Golf & Spa Resort.

"We will be presenting selected international films free to the public and we invite everyone to attend," says AWIFF founder Vendetti. "This is an excellent opportunity to view films from their own countrymen, as well as international cinema about culture and environmental preservation."

Vendetti, a mental health administrator/worker as well as award-winning filmmaker, has personal experience working in Cambodia.

He filmed "Years of Darkness" there in 2003, telling of a Cambodian patient on Maui suffering from mental illness , and the successful effort to return him to his home 29 years after he left it.

Working with his longtime collaborator, Maui producer Robert C. Stone, Vendetti and company won two Emmys for "Bhutan: Taking the Middle Path to Happiness."

Their next project, "When the Mountain Calls: Nepal Tibet Bhutan," will have its world premiere at 7 p.m. Nov. 5 in the Maui Arts & Cultural Center's Castle Theater.

Both films are part of the schedule of free screenings, as is the Maui-made, film festival award-winner, "Get a Job," and "Soul Surfer," celebrating Hawaii's surf culture.

The festival will open and close with two movies by Cambodia's king-father, Norodom Sihanouk, who also happens to be a filmmaker: "Paysan, Paysanne En Dtresse" and "La Cit Mystrieuse."

Other award winners from around the world include "A State of Mind" (North Korea); "Milking The Rhino" (North Africa); and "Heart of a Dragon," "Amongst White Clouds" and "Ready Made" (all from China).

Also featured are several award-winning environmental documentaries, such as "Dirt! The Movie," "Bag It," "Climate Refugees" and "Home."

The festival takes its name from the nearby Angkor Wat, a magnificent temple complex dating from the 12th century. Originally Hindu and now Buddhist, it is the largest religious building in the world.

"Angkor Wat is a testament to the majesty of an ancient culture preserved in stone for the world to experience as well as a symbol of pride for the Kingdom of Cambodia," according to a festival release. "It is also a testament to the culture and people of Cambodia who, having gone through the horrors of the Khmer Rouge and Pol Pot, have persevered and are rebuilding their culture, lives and country with strength and bravado."

Vendetti said the festival will help Cambodia's ecotourism. Its mission is to showcase works in a variety of media "whose subjects and themes deal with the preservation of culture and environment," he said.

"This is an important focus in a world where the pressures to homogenize cultures through enculturation and globalization are seen as progress - and inevitable. This results in traditional indigenous ethos and values being replaced by new beliefs that fuel consumerism and materialism, placing both the traditional cultures and our planet's ecosystem at risk."

* Contact Rick Chatenever at scene@mauinews.com.

© Copyright 2011 The Maui News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 VISIT WEBSITE HERE

© Copyright 2011-12 - Angkor Wat International Film Festival