Friday, 4 October 2013

CURRENT UPDATE : ASIAN FILMMAKER OF THE YEAR

CAMBODIA'S PANH AWARDED ASIAN FILMMAKER OF THE YEAR AT BUSAN



Acclaimed Cambodian director Rithy Panh, whose family died in the Khmer Rouge genocide, received the Asian Filmmaker of the Year award at the Busan International Film Festival on Friday for his efforts to save his country's cinematic heritage.

The 49-year-old Panh has dedicated his life to seeking out and finding ways to save his country's film history, left mostly destroyed under the brutal 1975-1979 reign of the Khmer Rouge that claimed around two million lives. 

The award comes after his documentary "The Missing Picture", which focuses on the loss of his parents and siblings during the genocide, won the Un Certain Regard section at the Cannes Film Festival in May. 

"In a small country like Cambodia we are losing our memory every day," said Panh. "(Film) prints will last only 150 years, if you have good condition of storage. This is not the case in Cambodia. Plus the Khmer Rouge destroyed everything. So we have a small amount of footage." 

"The Missing Picture" uses film from the period and clay dolls where footage is missing to recount the horrors. Panh said the topic remained hard for many of his countrymen to face but he hoped the attention his awards were getting would be a source of encouragement. 

"You don't survive a regime like that because you are stronger or clever. You survive because people who die help you," he said. 

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