Cinema of Bhutan
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The cinema of Bhutan is a small[1] but emerging industry,[2] having started in the mid-1990s.[1] It has since been supported by government officials and different businesses.[3]
Bhutan's film industry is highly influenced by neighboring India's Bollywood, with most Bhutanese films being adaptations of Indian ones or based on the Bollywood format.[1] In the 21st century[4] there have been calls by local filmmakers for a tilt towards originality in Bhutanese cinema. Many films have started to blend Indian cinema with local Buddhist teachings and traditions, and Bollywood films are now rarely seen in Bhutanese cinema halls after more than a decade of domination.[1][2] Storytelling based on Buddhist oral history and supernatural beliefs are increasingly influencing Bhutanese cinematic structure.[5]
As of 2011[update], Bhutan's film industry produced an average of thirty films a year.[3] By 2012, Thimpu had six cinema halls.[6]
Some voices are confident that Bhutan's film industry is expected to grow and innovate in the future.[7]
History
In 1989, Ugyen Wangdi directed Gasa Lamai Singye, the first, pioneer Bhutanese feature film.[8] Gasa Lamai Singye, a tragic love story reminiscent of Romeo and Juliet, had a remake in 2016, directed by Sonam Lhendup Tshering.[9] Wangdi went on to direct several documentary films[10] His Yonten Gi Kawa (Price of Knowledge, 1998) was the first documentary made in Bhutan, and followed the daily life of a 11-year-old boy at home and school. It was followed by Yi Khel Gi Kawa (Price of A Letter, 2004), where Wangdi tells the story of a postal runner who worked throughout Bhutan for 26 years.[8].
In 1999, Tshering Wangyel released the first commercially successful movie in Dzongkha language, Rewaa (Hope), a love story where two college boys fall for the same girl. As one critic put it, "the commercial Bhutanese film industry was born."[4] Wangyel went on to produce some 50 movies and died of pneumonia while making his last film.[11][12]. In 2007, he had produced Bakchha, the first Bhutanese horror movie.
Buddhist monk Khyentse Norbu directed four award-winning films, The Cup (1999), Travellers and Magicians (2003), Vara: A Blessing (2013), and Hema Hema: Sing Me A Song While I Wait (2016).[4] Travellers and Magicians was the first feature film to be entirely shot within Bhutan. Hema Hema, which tells its story by following a mysterious ritual in the forest where all participants are masked, was praised by critics for "its portrayal of complex Buddhist themes like transgression, by juxtaposing them on to modern topics like anonymity on the Internet."[4] A pupil of Norbu, Neten Chokling, another Buddhist lama, directed in 2006 Milarepa.
The BBS narrative The Cost of Climate Change (2009) won the United Nations Correspondents Affiliation (UNVA) worldwide prize for Climate change. Dorji Wangchuk won a universal grant in 2003 for his film School Among Glaciers (Bhutan 2003). From that point forward this title has won 15 national and universal honors in radio and TV.[13]
The Holder, a short film, coordinated by Jamyang Dorji, debuted at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival and was screened in Brussels together with Original Photocopy of Happiness by Dechen Roder,[14] a young director from Bumthang who went on to direct in 2016 the mystery film Honeygiver Among the Dogs. The movie was described as "a genre-bending work, blending elements of neo-noir with Bhutanese mysticism."[4]
in 2014, Karma Dhendup directed Ap Bokto, a 3-d computer-animated fim based on a Bhutanese folk tale. In 2016, Drukten: The Dragon's Treasure was the first Bhutanese 2-d animation movie.[8]
Female directors are rare in Bhutan. One is Kesang Chuki, who produced ten documentaries, docudramas, and short movies, including Nangi Aums to Go-thrips (Housewives to Leaders, 2011), about the problems of Bhutanese women who assume public roles, and A Young Democracy (2008), where Chuki accompanies two candidates in their campaigns for the first ever democratic election in Bhutan.[10]
The Bhutan Beskop film celebration (2010, 2011) was a significant event for the local film industry. Financial specialists and sometimes banks fund new productions that are screened in one of Bhutan's seven cinemas, of which the Lugar Lobby in Thimpu with 880 seats is the biggest.[15]
A sum of 152 Bhutanese movies were created in the main decade of the 21st century. Bhutan has two distribution houses. Business movies are periodically in light of an "affection" subject, here and there joined with a social issue (HIV, urbanization) taking after a customary script with exchanges, tunes, dances, complicated relations and a battle. Spending plans change from $15,000 to $50,000. Compensations for performers and vocalists have gone up from $1,000 (2006) to $10,000 per film for top on-screen characters in 2011. Real uses for film preparations are coordinations, gear and compensations. The brut income for a well known film (up to 90,000 onlookers) may reach up to $140,000, while less well known movies may raise half of it and unpopular movies hazard shortages.[16]
Main issues
Market
The Bhutanese market is small. In the 20th century, leading Bhutanese director Tshering Wangyel recalled in 2015, "distribution was an ordeal, requiring filmmakers to carry generators, fuel, and screening equipment from village to village." Much has improved in the 21st century but, according to Wangyel "distribution continues to be a slog, handicapping the industry's growth." Despite these problems, Wangyel said, "the industry is thriving, with audiences in one of the most remote countries on earth flocking to homegrown movies."[17]
Production
Bhutan's film industry has a limited number of studios, with incomplete equipment.[18] Most directors contribute money to the their own productions,[17] although in the 21st century international funding has been occasionally available.[8]
Quality
A few Bhutanese movies have won international acclaim.[8] Others are seen as repetitious, returning time and again on Buddhist legends and the "clash between tradition and modernity, with conservatism getting the last word as characters hold forth on the importance of prayer and background chants urge viewers to be good Buddhists."[17] However, change is slowly emerging. In 2017, R.C. Chand's filn Thimpu was hailed as "doing away with the notion that all independent Bhutanese movies draw upon the country's Buddhist mysticism," as it presents the life of Bhutan's capital through different characters, including an alcoholic family, a transgender woman, and a young singer with problems of career and love.[4]
Dissemination
Although regular movie theaters now exist in all the largest cities, it is still necessary today to "lug a makeshift cinema from village to village to reach Bhutan move-loving population," renting school auditoriums or setting up a tent in each venue. According to director Wangyel, "it takes a year to cover the country for screenings."[17]
Piracy
Piracy has been a worldwide issue and influences the Bhutan film industry. DVDs are effortlessly duplicated in Nepal/India and retailed through shops in the urban areas. Anti-theft measures are regarded as largely insufficient.[19] "The long wait for screenings" has been blamed for the flourishing of a piracy industry servicing "impatient audiences eager to watch illegal copies of Dzongkha-language films."[17]
Future
The government of Bhutan regards cinema as important, and has committed itself to promote the local production with adequate studios and support, and more effective policies against copyright infringement.[20]
Critical voices like director Tashy Gyeltshen are afraid that "the relentless push to promote tradition while imitating Bollywood formula risk creating a 'cultural desert' for future generations," with the most acclaimed directors just "wallowing in past glory."[17] There are also, however, more optimistic voices, persuaded that change is coming with a new generation of Bhutanese directors who "shun the influence of Bollywood and look inward," a process that has been rewarded with prizes in international festivals.[4]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d Stancati, Margherita (23 May 2011). "Does Bhutan Love Bollywood Too Much?". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 27 January 2015.
- ^ a b "Mountains, makeshift cinemas: Bhutan's battle to make movies". Egypt Independent. 31 December 2014. Retrieved 27 January 2015.
- ^ a b "Bhutan film industry – report December 2011" (PDF). Bhutan Film Industry. 29 December 2011. Retrieved 27 January 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g Nair, Prathap (21 April 2019). "Bhutan's New Wave". LiveMint. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ Chaudhuri, Shohini; Clayton, Sue (2012). "Storytelling in Bhutanese cinema: Research context and case study of a film in development". Journal of Screenwriting. 3 (2): 197–204.
- ^ Two new cinema halls in Thimphu – BBS
- ^ "Bhutan Film Industry" (PDF).
- ^ a b c d e Tharchen (18 March 2017). "Emerging Film Industry in Bhutan". Business Bhutan. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
- ^ Zangmo, Thinley (19 July 2016). "Gasa Lamai Singye and Changyul Bhum Galem-a tale retold". Kuensel. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
- ^ a b Mohan, Reena (16 October 2018). "The Importance of Being Idyll". Himāl Southasian. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ "Popular film director dies". BBS. 8 December 2015. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ "Bhutan film director Tshering Wangyel dies at 43". BBC News. 7 December 2015. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ Source: ABU – Asian Pacific Broadcasting Union
- ^ "Bhutan Film Industry" (PDF).
- ^ "Bhutan cinemas".
- ^ "Bhutan Film Industry" (PDF).
- ^ a b c d e f AFP (January 1, 2015). "Bhutanese Cinema: A World of Makeshift Screenings and Boloywood Copies". Hindustan Times. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
- ^ "Bhutan film industry" (PDF).
- ^ "Bhutan".
- ^ "/Bhutan-Film-Industry-29-12-2011.pdf" (PDF).