Arab Times

Locarno opens doors for filmmakers from SE Asia, Mongolia

Syndicado nabs world rights to ‘Ivana the Terrible’

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LOS ANGELES, Aug 6, (RTRS): In order to increase the impact of its industry support efforts Locarno Film Festival is doubling down on – and in fact trebling the duration of – its Open Doors activities. Instead of an annually revolving country focus, starting this year the section will pick projects, producers and film-makers from one region for three consecutiv­e years, before moving on.

South-East Asia, plus Mongolia, is the first region to benefit from the extended spotlight. The region is diverse and there is much ground to cover, especially as several South-East Asian countries are now reaching a level of economic and technologi­cal developmen­t that is allowing the film and TV industries to accelerate.

“South-East Asia has produced some of the greatest directors of our time, and now a new wave of talent, of young people with astonishin­g creative energy, is emerging today despite all the obstacles,” says Lili Hinstin, Locarno’s artistic director.

A total of 17 projects will be pitched and eight features screened through Open Doors’ three-pronged approach: the Open Doors Hub, featuring full-length projects seeking internatio­nal partnershi­ps; the Open Doors Lab, dedicated to supporting emerging producers; and the Open Doors Screenings, playing a mix of features and shorts on the big screen.

“At the risk of sounding obvious, this kind of event is about building the network, building the community,” says Aditya Assarat, an experience­d director and producer from Thailand, who appears in Open Doors as director of “The Thonglor Kids”, a childhood memory drama. “It is especially useful for South-East Asia, where a lot of directors are young and need to work with good producers. We don’t have enough producers in the region. This event can help (directors) take the next steps.”

Record

Assarat travels at the behest of Fran Borgia, a Singapore-based Spanish producer whose track record makes him one of South-East Asia’s more experience­d. In addition to last year’s Locarno Golden Leopard winner “A Land Imagined”, his filmograph­y also includes Boo Junfeng’s “Sandcastle” and K. Rajagopal’s “A Yellow Bird”.

Back home in Asia, Assarat is also putting his money where his mouth is on project and producer developmen­t. His Purin Pictures fund is not only directly financing into regional art-house films, it also provides support for SEAFIC, a year-long producer education lab, run by Raymond Phathanavi­rangoon (also heading to Locarno), and who was in 2017 named as Asian producer of the year at the Busan festival. Assarat says his other objective in Locarno will be to seek out potential festival-level partnershi­ps for his fund.

“Labs are useful for developmen­t,” says Nandita Solomon, an establishe­d producer who appears in the Open Doors Lab with a selection of projects from Malaysia and Singapore. Underlinin­g the point that SouthEast Asia’s script and developmen­t apparatus is immature, she says that labs “provide the chance to talk things out loud, and receive feedback that might be hard to come by.”

But the financial and support patterns are not uniform “Everyone is currently focused on genre film – supernatur­al, horror and action – which are relatively easy to fund. On the other hand (Asian and global) streaming platforms are all looking for Asian series. Not features,” says Solomon. “We still need help for drama films, which is what I’m pitching at Locarno.”

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Toronto- based sales agent Syndicado Film Sales has acquired world rights to “Ivana the Terrible”, the second feature by Ivana Mladenovic, ahead of its world premiere at the Locarno Film Festival.

Mladenovic writes, directs and stars in the acerbic comedy about a woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Inspired by true events and shot in her hometown of Kladovo, Serbia, it features her real family and friends portraying themselves on screen. The film is a co-production between Romania’s microFILM and Serbia’s Dunav 84.

“‘Ivana the Terrible’ is a film that reaches new heights of self-reflection,” says Aleksandar Govedarica of Syndicado, a world sales and production company establishe­d in 2016 that specialize­s in authorial, cinematic and character-driven narratives. “We are thrilled to work with Ivana Mladenovic on her second feature film.”

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