Los Angeles Times

A poetic elegy to Phnom Penh

‘White Building’ offers a beautifull­y sad farewell to a city that is rapidly gentrifyin­g.

- By Robert Abele

Demolition is a state of mind in “White Building,” Cambodian filmmaker Kavich Neang’s sad, beautiful feature debut, an urban elegy about what’s thick in the air when the home one has always known is not long for the world.

In this case, an iconic low-income housing complex in Phnom Penh that had outlasted Khmer Rouge purges when government workers lived there, and in later disrepair became a haven for artists, but which wasn’t cut out to survive the 21st century pace of modern city gentrifica­tion.

Even if you didn’t know that Neang grew up in this location, which the filmmaker captured in its last days for a 2019 documentar­y (“Last Night I Saw You Smiling”), something intensely personal emanates from his doleful tale of a teen boy named Samnang (Piseth Chhun) coming to grips with the displaceme­nt of his family, the limits of tradition and a turning point for his sense of self.

Kind-eyed and ambitious, young Samnang is a hip-hop dancer in a performing trio with his best pals and building mates Ah Kha (Chinnaro Soem), a handsome brooder, and easygoing Tol (Sovann Tho).

Readying themselves for an upcoming competitio­n, they make the most of a pulsating Phnom Penh nightlife to dance for donations, marvel at the city’s colors, sounds and mouthwater­ing aromas, and talk girls and dreams.

At home, however, where the building’s decrepit condition goes unattended, it’s reality with an expiration

date, which has created an atmosphere of stifling pressure. Samnang’s dad (Sithan Hout), a sculptor and retired government employee with a passive mien, represents the residents in their negotiatio­ns with the company eager to force them out. But his sleepy optimism for a miracle renewal isn’t holding this worried, angry and fearful bunch together; many dwellers are scared about where they’ll

be able to afford to live (certainly not in Phnom Penh anymore), but ready to bail with a guaranteed check.

A misplaced faith in old ways also doesn’t bode well for the black toe that Samnang’s diabetic dad won’t get medically treated, preferring painkiller­s, honey, tamarind and a wait-andsee approach. You could argue that a rotting toe is a tad on the nose for a visual tied to a story about decay. (The movie was written by Neang and Daniel Mattes.)

But Neang’s trust in perspectiv­e, cinematogr­apher Douglas Seok’s evocative imagery and the meditative strengths of slow cinema end up complement­ing this narrative element. The toe becomes a signal to Samnang, as much to us, of greater wounds in need of addressing. Later, when Samnang’s father enters one of his dreams, it’s a figure in a

dank, dark hallway, standing tall in a nice suit, but then turning and walking away, becoming smaller and smaller.

One of the co-producers of “White Building” is filmmaker Jia Zhangke, and it’s a show of support that immediatel­y makes cosmic sense — you can feel the connection between Neang’s semiautobi­ographical, fully poetic act of mourning about a fast-changing Cambodia and the Chinese master’s vivid epics about the upheavals transformi­ng his own country.

It’s there in the emptied spaces and tableaux of constructi­on, in the contrast between a city’s buzzy new vibe and its quieter, alienated corners, and in the idea that through developmen­t projects such as these, history too is being cleared away with each brick, packing box and evacuee.

There’s an incredible, heavy tracking shot toward the end of Neang’s movie that I can only imagine came from the White Building’s final days — it follows along the rundown facade until it reaches one end, where a demolition crane is picking away like a big, hungry praying mantis.

It’s a shot without his characters, perhaps because it comes from Neang’s documentar­y footage before “White Building” described a movie, but just a place where people lived until 2017. But in this context, the shot sure does feel like something out of his young alter ego’s head: not only a towering home but also a heavy memory, one as susceptibl­e as a neglected structure or forgotten soul to being chipped at or leveled.

Movies like these, one realizes, are why people pick up cameras.

 ?? PISETH CHHUN, KimStim ?? left, Chinnaro Soem and Sovann Tho play pals in performing trio in “White Building.”
PISETH CHHUN, KimStim left, Chinnaro Soem and Sovann Tho play pals in performing trio in “White Building.”

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