For indie movies, things just got from bad to worse
Independent movies continue to languish without backing from distributors and, recently, because people have changed their entertainment preferences due to the pandemic.
In January « Vo Sinh Dai Chien » (Martial Art Students’ Fight), a film about some young people with a passion for traditional martial arts, was pulled off cinemas by its angry makers after just six days for the shabby treatment it got.
Its director, Thai Ba Dung, and producer, Ba Cuong, their brainchild, claimed that though it was appreciated by critics, distributors and cinemas gave it the cold shoulderbecause the cast and crew were newcomers.
So the movie was screened at odd hours like early morning and lunchtime, when few people would come to watch, they said.
At the same time several other movies like « Chi Muoi Ba » (Sister Thirteen, co-produced by actress Thu Trang and Galaxy cinema chain) and « Nguoi Can Quen Phai Nho » (actor Charlie Nguyen and South Korean film production and distribution company Lotte Entertainment) were released and did much better.
« With many movies being released at once, distributors will of course prioritize those they invest in or produce, » Dung said.
His movie lost nearly VND24 billion ($1.04 million). But his is not the first independent movie to suffer this fate nor will be the last.
In September 2020, when ‘Rom’ was introduced to Vietnamese audiences after its triumph at the Busan International Film Festival in South Korea and earned nearly VND60 billion at the box office, a wave of new indie movies started hitting cinemas.
Apart from « Vo Sinh Dai Chien, » there were « Sai Gon Trong Con Mua » (Saigon In The Rain) and « Hoa Phong Nguyet Vu » (The Crawler), while some others like « Song Song » (Parallel) and « Vo Dien Sat Nhan » (Faceless Murderer) have been postponed and will hit cinemas some time in 2021.
But film distributors are skeptical.
Phan Dang Di, director of « Bi, Dung So » (Bi, Don’t Be Afraid), said « most distributors are not interested in this kind of movie » when talking about the difficulties in releasing indie movies.
Ngo Thi Bich Hanh of the BHD cinema chain explained: « Vietnamese movie companies do not have the advantages as foreign ones do. We have to pay all kinds of taxes while international companies can get exemption from import taxes. Finding funding is also very difficult for us. »
The crew of « Troi Sang Roi, Ta Di Ngu Thoi » (Good Morning and Goodnight), in 2019, wrote on their Facebook pages, « Oh God, our movie does not want to die! » and pleaded with the public for support after the movie flopped.
In 2020, films such as « Dinh Mu Suong » (The Foggy Mountain), ‘Thang May’ (Elevator) and ‘Sai Gon Trong Con Mua’ lost badly.
However, a recent new factor, a change in audiences’ entertainment preferences, means even the major studios are struggling.
Director Nguyen Quang Dung said, « Because of the financial situation, people choose movies they most want to watch rather than watch all like they did in the past. »
Thus, even a mainstream movie like « Lat Mat 5: 48h » (Face-Off 48 Hours), directed by Ly Hai, could have few takers.
« I only wish to break even, » Hai said before its release during the Lunar New Year in mid-February.
By Long Nguyen – VnExpress.net – February 2, 2021
Articles similaires / Related posts:
- Vietnam in Western cinema: Lack of identity in the gaze of foreign directors The long-standing tradition of warped, misinformed representations of Vietnam by foreign filmmakers is present yet again in Spike Lee’s latest Hollywood feature Da 5 Bloods, which leads us to one question: what gave rise to this distorted view of Vietnam ?...
- Two Vietnam film directors get grants from South Korea festival Two Vietnamese directors’ projects are among those to win funding from the Busan International Film Festival’s Asian Project Market....
- ‘Bo Gia’ becomes first Vietnamese film to rake in VND200 bln on domestic circuit « Bo Gia » (Old Father) has become the highest-grossing Vietnamese movie by earning VND200 billion ($8.69 million) in nine days....
- Banned movies spark debate about film censorship The banning of a few films has provoked ideas about how to improve local film censorship, from better classification to eliminating censorship altogether....
- Why Vietnam’s online propagandists are disowning Ke Huy Quan’s Oscar win Ke Huy Quan’s mention of his journey ‘on a boat’ in his acceptance speech likely singled him out for a backlash and media censorship in Vietnam . Vietnam’s state-sponsored cyber troops are unlikely to stop any time soon, as the ruling Communist Party expands its defence-security ideology wings....