Category Archives: documentary

Rice Field of Dreams

Rice Field of Dreams

RICE FIELD OF DREAMS follows the journey of Cambodia’s First National Baseball Team as they prepare for and participate in the 24th Sea Games, an Olympics-like sports competition between South East Asian nations to be held in Bangkok. For the 22 young players Joe assembled and trained over the previous five years it is their first venture outside of their farming villages.

Along the way we experience the texture of daily life in these villages; meet the American coaches who have donated their time; and travel with the team to the culture shock inducing city of Bangkok for the competition.

But most of all, we experience the drama of the team’s five games. No one expects these rookies to best the competition their first time out, but nonetheless emotions run high. How well will they do? Will they even get a hit? How many hits? How many runs? They are representing their country and they want to succeed.

This film has it all: drama, humor, an exotic location and an athletic competition. A “West meets East” dynamic and an engaging cast of characters. But most of all RICE FIELD OF DREAMS has heart. As the final shots of the film assert, baseball is a gift to upcoming Cambodian generations and Joe Cook, complicated as he is, should be commended for offering such a gift.

Rice Field of Dreams

Indian Summer : short film

Indian Summer : short film

The short documentary “Indian Summer” follows Indian American kids aged 9 to 16 at the Hindu Heritage Summer Camp near Rochester, New York as they pursue a course that offers exposure to meditation, yoga, and the opportunity to learn how to practice Hinduism in a largely Christian country. Campers come from all over the country and many are the only Indian person in their school. They long to make other “brown” friends, to express their religious identity, and to learn from older counselors who are “just like them.”

Through a lively and entertaining weave of footage shot by young campers, interviews, animation, and verite footage, the film brings together first generation Indian American kids with similar experiences to document their religious and cultural point of view. They demystify the basic tenets of Hinduism for themselves and for us, they express a deep need for community, and they show us what it takes to be a Hindu in America.

Indian Summer is the first in a trilogy of short films about Indians in America by filmmaker Mridu Chandra.

Indian Summer : short film

More about Mridu Chandra
Mridu Chandra is a filmmaker and writer based in New York. She has produced award-winning documentaries and narrative films that premiered at the Sundance, SXSW and Hot Docs Film Festivals, aired on national PBS, screened for members of US Congress and the United Nations, and showcased at Museums and film festivals worldwide. Documentary credits include Electoral Dysfunction (co-producer, PBS), The Canal Street Madam (producer, SXSW), Women, War & Peace (coordinating producer & post production supervisor, PBS series), Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin (co-producer, Sundance/ITVS/ POV), and Let the Church Say, Amen (producer, Sundance/ITVS/Independent Lens).

Indie feature credits include Love, Ludlow (line producer, Sundance), Punching At The Sun (associate producer, Sundance, Tribeca), and Poundcake (producer, AFI-LA). She taught graduate level film classes at The New School Department of Media Studies and at New York University in their School of Continuing and Professional Studies. As a writer, her first screenplay The Tennis Partner was awarded the 2011 Tribeca Film Institute’s All Access development grant. Most recently, she wrote and directed the critically acclaimed multimedia film and musical performance Himalaya Song, premiering at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. The film was chosen as one of the “Ten Best Music Films” by Rolling Stone magazine.

Fukushima Now : 2 years after Japan tsunami

 Fukushima Now : 2 years after Japan tsunami

The traffic lights are still working; but just about nothing else is in the ghost town of Fukushima. Two years after the Japanese tsunami, the consequences of the nuclear disaster continue to define the residents’ lives. Radiation is an unseen force affecting the people, the land, and their livelihood. Life hasn’t been easy for those who stayed or those who left.

“Everyone is worried about the radiation,” says the mother of seven-year-old Chie. Children from the surrounding areas are not allowed to play outside, and cattle have developed a new disease. In one of the most contaminated places on earth, the continued fears over health risks mix with a sense of a betrayal by the government. “Japanese government policy is very strange. We have been deceived.” Despite voluntary efforts to revitalize the area by its residents, it seems there is little hope of reversing the fate of this radioactive wasteland. Is rebuilding Fukushima a reality or just a dream?

Fukushima Now : 2 years after Japan tsunami

Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey : Theatrical Trailer

Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey : Theatrical Trailer

The people behind the film DON’T STOP BELIEVIN’: EVERYMAN’S JOURNEY has released a new trailer. The documentary follows the real life rock ‘n’ roll fairy tale of Filipino Arnel Pineda, who was plucked from YouTube to become the front man for iconic American rock band Journey. In this Cinderella story for the ages, Arnel, having overcome a lifetime’s worth of hardships, must now navigate the immense pressures of replacing a legendary singer and leading a world-renowned band on their most extensive world tour in years.

This film transcends generations.  On one hand, this is a documentary for the post-YouTube, post-American Idol generation.  It is an aspirational, rags-to-riches story set against the backdrop of some of the most anthemic songs of recent rock n’ roll history.  This generation may not necessarily know the provenance of the songs, but they know they’ve heard it somewhere before – at a ball game, as a soundtrack to a movie, TV show (including the last episode of the Sopranos) or a commercial, on their parents’ Ipod. On the other hand, it is for their elders – their mothers and fathers and aunts and uncles – whose memories dance with images of Camaros, platform shoes, and Miami Vice.

Look for it in theaters coming soon.

Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey : Theatrical Trailer

Raskal Love Documentary trailer

Raskal Love Documentary trailer

Coming in Summer 2013 is the documentary “Raskal Love”. Vanna Fut was just a baby when he escaped from the killing fields of Cambodia to settle in Pomona, California. He was initiated into the neighborhood Cambodian gang TRG (Tiny Raskal Gang) at the age of 11 years old. Taking us down memory lane, he tells us about his experience during the gang wars in the early to late 90’s gangster era in Pomona and Seattle Washington.

Yet through being homeless and witnessing the deaths of loved ones, Vanna aka “Lazy”, overcomes great adversities to pursue dreams in the Arts- becoming a pioneering b-boy in the Seattle Hip Hop scene during the 90’s, to landing an acting role in a 2011 cult gangster-genre film.

This is the inspiring true story of a man who has the will to pursue his dreams against all odds. This is an unflinching honest look at three generations of the biggest Asian gang in America as seen through the eyes of someone who lived it, and is still involved. It is the story of family, the strength of the human mind, and of the power of love — Raskal Love

Raskal Love Documentary trailer

The Defector official trailer

The Defector trailer

The official trailer for THE DEFECTOR: ESCAPE FROM NORTH KOREA, a feature and TV documentary that follows the perilous journey of Sook-Ja and Yong-hee who escape North Korea and meet with Dragon – a broker who guides North Korean defectors to their freedom. Dragon smuggles North Korean defectors across borders for a living, and his latest undercover trip with Sook-Ja and Yong-hee takes an unexpected turn when they are left stranded in China. This is just the start of an extraordinary 5,000 km journey. Their escape reflects the reality of tens of thousands of North Koreans currently in hiding in China. Filmed undercover by a Korean-Canadian filmmaker, Ann Shin gets intimate access with these 3 individuals in this dramatic POV film. Beautifully shot, with a compelling high-stakes story, THE DEFECTOR poses broader questions around human rights and the pursuit of freedom.

THE DEFECTOR will also be released online as a first-person POV interactive web documentary, enabling audiences to experience first-hand what it’s like to be a defector. Canadian film audiences will have opportunities to see THE DEFECTOR in upcoming festivals and broadcast on TVO, Canal D and CTS in 2013.

The Defector official trailer