Los Angeles Times

All it took was a phone

- By Kevin Crust

The visually poetic, observatio­nal nonfiction f ilm “Sing Me a Song” follows a young Bhutanese monk, Peyangki, as he experience­s digital disruption. Constructe­d more like a comingof- age drama than a documentar­y, it spins a fascinatin­g tale of romantic melancholy played out against the peaceful, meditative backdrop of the Himalayas.

A follow- up to director Thomas Balmès’ 2014 f ilm “Happiness,” which chronicled the boy’s initiation into a monastery and his family’s pursuit of its f irst television set after the arrival of electricit­y in the remote village of Laya, “Sing Me a Song” continues the saga with more focused narrative drive than its predecesso­r.

We encounter Peyangki as the joyful, free- spirited 8year- old we saw at the end of “Happiness,” running, skipping and singing quietly as he makes a crown of f lowers. He confides to the camera that he hopes to become a lama and shares his excitement about one day seeing airplanes and tall buildings. He recounts the apocryphal story of how his father died of a heart attack upon encounteri­ng a bear on the day Peyangki was born.

Fast- forward 10 years and Peyangki is living in a nearby monastery, awakened by the alarm on his mobile phone, electricit­y having brought the internet to Laya.

Even during morning prayers, the young monks are as inseparabl­e from their devices as any teens — texting, gaming and watching videos — but Peyangki is particular­ly besotted.

Peyangki struggles with his studies and worries that he is not intelligen­t enough to learn, oblivious to practical concerns and the absence of a true spiritual calling. His one solace? Listening to love songs on the WeChat app on his phone. Online, he meets a bar singer named Ugyen who lives in the capital city of Thimphu, and the two embark on a tentative relationsh­ip — though neither is entirely forthcomin­g with the other.

Balmès artfully moves between the two young people, withholdin­g commentary and judgment, as they navigate the onset of adulthood, the limits of their environmen­ts and the vastness of the world that rests in the palm of their hands. Even with the low- key nature of the subjects, it is a genuinely riveting story as we wait to see what happens when these worlds collide.

The f ilm works equally well on an ethnograph­ic level. In continuing with Peyangki’s reluctant existence as a monk, Balmès bears intimate witness to someone teetering on the edge of monastic life.

It’s a challengin­g path, but the f ilm also presents a more whimsical side, including an apparent shoutout to Bhutanese filmmaker Khyentse Norbu’s charming 1999 movie “The Cup.” Balmès’ juxtaposit­ion of hardscrabb­le rural existence and urban life where anything can be commodifie­d — even dreams — presents a captivatin­g portal into a less familiar culture.

Ultimately about things greater than the impact of technology, “Sing Me a Song” inevitably leads us back to an assessment of the earlier f ilm’s title: What is “Happiness”? With 2020 in our collective rear- view mirror and the tentative promise of 2021 upon us, you could do worse than kicking off the new year with this brief meditation.

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