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Malaysian’s documentar­y picked as festival’s opening film

- vmugu@thestar.com.my By MUGUNTAN VANAR

KOTA KINABALU: An animated documentar­y All I Did Was Smile And Say Hello by Malaysian film director Soon King Yaw has been selected as the opening film of the KQED Homemade Film Festival.

The film about rising discrimina­tion against Asians in the United States during the Covid-19 pandemic was picked out from over 500 films that were submitted.

Soon, who is from Sabah’s southweste­rn district of Tawau, said he made the animated documentar­y because he saw the need to spread the message of solidarity amid the increasing discrimina­tion against the Asian American community.

“I was alarmed by the amount of hate and violence one can inflict on others based on the colour of their skin when the real enemy is the invisible virus,” the San Francisco-based Soon said via email.

“As an artist, I try to process the pain by making art so that something beautiful can grow out of the experience,” said the 28-year-old.

As an Asian in the United States, Soon felt it was crucial that his work reflected his life experience­s and at the same time spread messages of solidarity.

His film caught the attention of Randy Myers, former president of the San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle, who described it as “soulful and poignant with its first-rate animation”.

Soon, who went to the United States on a Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study programme, is a multi-talented artist with numerous accolades under his belt.

He said his “creative journey” began in 2011 when he won “Best of the Best Gold Award” at the Malaysia Top 10 Young Artists Awards and received a full scholarshi­p to study digital animation at The One Academy, Petaling Jaya.

Soon’s first taste of film-making was in 2013 when he directed the music video FengDian for 8TV’s Ultimate Song Reality Competitio­n.

He completed his Bachelor of Arts in cinema in 2018 at the San Francisco State University.

In 2017, Soon made his first short documentar­y, Something Carved And Real, which tells the stories of human scars through the use of watercolou­r paintings.

The film won the National Best Picture at Campus MovieFest and was picked to represent Campus MovieFest at Cannes Court Metrage.

“It was a life-changing experience at Cannes, an incredibly humbling one,” Soon said, adding that his short films delved into a variety of subject matters from acceptance and belonging to family ties.

“Deep and personal stories inspire me. I believe there is tremendous strength in vulnerabil­ity. And I want my art to be a vessel for that,” he said.

In 2019, he made My Mother, Myself & I, his first narrative short film in his mother tongue. It starred Liow Yin Yin, a Johorborn actress based in California.

The film had its world premiere at the Oscar-qualifying film festival, Cinequest 2019.

Though it did not win there, it was invited to screen at Caamfest, the largest film festival showcase in the United States for new Asian American and Asian films, and many other film festivals.

The short film was later acquired by PBS KQED Film School Shorts for public TV broadcast, said Soon.

Soon is currently working on a new project, When I See The Wind, a collaborat­ion with Andrés Gallegos, an internatio­nally-acclaimed Chilean cinematogr­apher.

His dream is to write and direct a feature film in Malaysia.

“It’s either that or making a music video for Yuna. That would be an ultimate dream come true,” said Soon.

All I Did Was Smile And Say Hello is available for public viewing on the KQED website at https://www.kqed.org/ arts/13880026/all-i-did-was-smileand-say-hello.

 ??  ?? Local subject: Soon’s dream is to write and direct a feature film in Malaysia.
Local subject: Soon’s dream is to write and direct a feature film in Malaysia.

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