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Exploring a new world

The Seashorts Film Festival returns with future elements that showcase technologi­cal advances in storytelli­ng.

- by ROUWEN LIN lifestyle@thestar.com.my

WELCOME to a world that goes beyond what you can touch and feel.

The annual Seashorts Film Festival, which celebrates South-east Asian short films, returns as an on-site event this year after two years of virtual programmin­g to keep the series going due to the pandemic.

The upcoming festival will take place at Multimedia University (MMU) in Cyberjaya from Sept 21 to 25.

Its theme, Future, captures the spirit of exploratio­n and forward thinking, nudging viewers to go boldly where no individual has gone before.

There will be over 70 films to catch at Seashorts 2022 across multiple festival sections, including the sixth annual Seashorts Competitio­n where the winner will be announced during the festival’s closing.

Apart from screenings, workshops, and forums, this year’s event sees a series of updated features, including a special focus that explores potential new cinematic technologi­es, such as the usage of Virtual Reality (VR) and Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) in developing film content.

Filmmakers, industry practition­ers, artists and fans of film and South-east Asian cinema might be the usual Seashorts demographi­c, but this year, the organising committee aims to attract a mainstream audience, especially the Tiktok generation and people who are keen on learning about how the lines between storytelli­ng and technology are now blurred.

The “screen time” phenomenon during the pandemic has shifted how many people view film.

“In this age when a one-minute video is too long, let us ask ourselves, what is film? Why should a film be 100 minutes long? I think film is alive and kicking, but you do need to discover it again. Come watch films in Seashorts – in the cinema, or in VR, or watch a 10-hour silent film accompanie­d by musicians and sound artists,” says Tan Chui Mui, artistic director of Seashorts 2022, who is also the festival’s founder.

“If you want to further challenge yourself, check what is happening at Open Screen, where there are performanc­es and screenings beyond what we expect of ‘cinema’ or join an AI Generative Art workshop (by Eddie Wong) where you learn how to create speculativ­e fiction with AI art,” she adds.

Technology, trailblazi­ng tales

Seashorts’ first-ever VR exhibition is also set to be a crowd draw. Titled Beyond Mirage, this programme is curated by Dr Lim Kok Yoong and co-curated by Dr Roopesh Sitharan and Dendi Permadi. It features 12 works from South-east Asia, South Korea and Taiwan.

“This exhibition tests and measures the boundaries of our reality. It is made up of installati­ons that provide attendees with a head-mounted device that transmits stereoscop­ic 360° visuals. The device reads our head movement to sync the stereoscop­ic visual, giving us the impression that we are physically present in a scene,” says Lim.

“However, the feeling of our feet still touching the ground reminds us that we are still in the real world. This gives us an option to choose between reality or a simulated experience.

“If the virtual world could provide you with all the experience you could ever want, would you embrace the simulation and neglect the physical world? Would you want to wake up if you were told that your life up until now has been an illusion? Or would you continue to live in Zhuangzi’s dream – a butterfly fluttering about, happily doing as it pleases?” he adds.

If you have had a taste of what wandering around in a VR environmen­t feels like, it would not be a stretch to imagine wanting to stay there forever.

A few works at Beyond Mirage are interactiv­e pieces, allowing the audience to move around the virtual world and handle virtual objects to help move the film’s narrative.

“During the pandemic, many filmmakers had to become more resourcefu­l and find ways to continue developing their craft. This opened them up to more possibilit­ies in filmmaking, pushing them to incorporat­e new technology in order to tell stories,” says Goh Lee Kwang, Seashorts 2022 festival manager, who is also a multi-disciplina­ry artist.

“Furthermor­e, they became more introspect­ive with their storytelli­ng, perhaps as a result of time spent in isolation. VR can remove the barriers that separate a film from an audience member. It is a highly immersive form of storytelli­ng which has the ability to create highly impactful experience­s,” he adds.

Goh describes them as a new breed of storytelle­rs and the future of Malaysian filmmaking, adding that

Seashorts is the one place this year to experience all these VR films, including four films by Malaysian filmmakers, in a single sitting.

“It might surprise audiences to see how each of our filmmakers have a unique approach to VR storytelli­ng. For instance, Mahen Bala and Zarif Ismail’s Cep bah hep (To Enter The Forest) is a VR documentar­y on the Batek indigenous people (scattered across the deep jungles in Pahang and Kelantan). Meanwhile, Fariz Hanapiah and Idril Mihat’s Pickup horror VR experience places you as a highway patrol personnel on the Karak highway who decides to help a stranded woman before all hell breaks loose,” says Goh.

Malaysia’s Vimala Perumal’s Rojak Cow Cow puts the muhibbah blend in a tale of an Indian family who requests blessings from a ceremonial cow for their house-warming prayers, Sojung Bahng’s (South Korea) work Anonymous, a 3D realtime rendered cinematic VR experience that applies gaze-based interactio­n, invites the viewer to access the perspectiv­e of objects in a domestic setting where an old man living alone goes about his day under the gaze of his dead wife’s portrait.

Taiwanese artist Singing Chen’s Afterimage For Tomorrow builds on the intriguing premise of memory, space and time.

“We perceive the world through our eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind. This sensory informatio­n is stored as memory in words, pictures, sounds and moving images. With fractions of the transcribe­d memories, we are capable of returning to a specific point in time, which is an act of distortion and overlaying of time and space. However, memories aren’t always reliable. A man wakes up in an unknown dimension of consciousn­ess. What is it that he sees, hears and feels? Is it memory, virtual reality or terminal lucidity?” reads the statement for Afterimage For Tomorrow.

Step into the “Afterlife Memory Trust” where you will select three pieces of your memory to relive when you die.

Time to experiment

A few films in Beyond Mirage will have their Malaysian premiere at the festival, such as Great Hoax: The Moon Landing by John Hsu and Marco Lococo and Home by Hsu Chih-yen, two films that were officially selected for the Tribeca Film Festival and Venice Interna-tional Film Festival in 2020.

Other special highlights are Whose Hand Is Playing That Sound, curated by Chloe Yap, which features young artists and filmmakers and their personal approaches; and

Sea What Is Inside curated by Jacky Yeap, a selection of cheeky screenlife shorts from Japan and Southeast Asia exploring the medium’s playful and inventive potential for cinematic storytelli­ng.

The workshops, talks and forums in this festival are also skewed towards introducin­g new technologi­cal approaches in storytelli­ng,

Chloe Yap Mun Ee, programmer of Sea shorts 2022, notes that in programmes such as such as Beyond Mirage, Sea What Is Inside and

Whose Hand Is Playing That Sound, the artists and filmmakers take nuanced and thoughtful approaches with their chosen tools, which allows us to not just reconsider familiar modes of cinema or the moving image, but also to consider what is so uncomforta­ble about the feeling of “newness” when thinking of using these tools.

“These programmes would hopefully shift our expectatio­ns from not only looking at the future as represente­d by the ‘advent of technology’ and the glittery ‘newness’, but instead looking at it as basically a point in time, lifting up the lid of the box to see if the cat named Future is in there. And everyone alive right now is just having a little fun, doing our little experiment­s, and hoping for the best,” concludes Yap.

 ?? – Seashorts Film Festival ?? Afterimage For Tomorrow by Singing Chen (Taiwan).
– Seashorts Film Festival Afterimage For Tomorrow by Singing Chen (Taiwan).
 ?? ?? The Vr short film Rojak Cow Cow by Vimala perumal is inspired by a story told by her father, about a new neighbour who brought a cow up a flight of stairs to the flat for the blessing ceremony of a new house. — Photos: Seashorts Film Festival
The Vr short film Rojak Cow Cow by Vimala perumal is inspired by a story told by her father, about a new neighbour who brought a cow up a flight of stairs to the flat for the blessing ceremony of a new house. — Photos: Seashorts Film Festival
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Rasa Dan Asa by Okui Lala and Nasrikah follows the activities of pertimig (Indonesian migrant domestic Workers associatio­n in malaysia) and its members during the pandemic, with most of the film’s footage shot remotely.
Rasa Dan Asa by Okui Lala and Nasrikah follows the activities of pertimig (Indonesian migrant domestic Workers associatio­n in malaysia) and its members during the pandemic, with most of the film’s footage shot remotely.
 ?? ?? a scene from the Vr project To Enter The Forest by Zarif Ismail and mahen bala, which takes viewers deep into the malaysian jungles to learn about the batek tribe.
a scene from the Vr project To Enter The Forest by Zarif Ismail and mahen bala, which takes viewers deep into the malaysian jungles to learn about the batek tribe.
 ?? ?? Great Hoax: The Moon Landing by marco Lococo and John Hsu (Taiwan), which is part of seashorts 2022’s internatio­nal programme.
Great Hoax: The Moon Landing by marco Lococo and John Hsu (Taiwan), which is part of seashorts 2022’s internatio­nal programme.

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