Product Description The place where the story took place is none other than my home village, where the mountains and waters have always haunted my dreams. I long to tell the true stories in my own way that have come up in my home village, to disclose the real looks of her, and to reveal the genuine conditions of life of the people there...a reciprocal infiltration between tradition and modernism. Pema Tseden Pema Tseden (The Search, Old Dog) is the first Tibetan graduate of the Beijing Film Academy, and this is his dramatic feature debut. Made on location in a village in the Amdo region, the film follows a young lama assigned for Tibetan New Year to attend to the seven-year-old Living Buddha (tulku) of a mountain monastery. The young lamas try to balance their strict training with explorations of the outside world through the novelty of television, and make some surprising choices. Like all great neo-realist films, The Silent Holy Stones has the immediacy of a documentary, and Tseden delivers a compelling and intimate insider s view of everyday life in his home town. Filmed on location in and around Guwa Monastery, Amdo. Written and Directed by Pema Tseden Cinematographer by Sonthar Gyal Tibetan and Mandarin (English subtitles) Grand Jury Prize Changchun Film Festival; Best Director Shanghai International Film Festival; Golden Rooster Award Best Directorial Debut (China); Official Selection Pusan International Film Festival; Official Selection Hong Kong International Film Festival; Official Selection International Film Festival Rotterdam; Official Selection San Francisco International Film Festival; Official Selection International Buddhist Film Festival Review A polished and enjoyable tale...delightful. --Variety
A**N
Tibetan Telling Tibetan Stories
I found this film stunning! First saw it at a festival and have been waiting forever to get my own copy to show friends who think there are no Tibetans left in Tibet. Not only are there millions of people, but among them has emerged a sensitive artistic "voice" that draws us into the feelings of Tibetan people with compassion and humor and without overly sentimental or exaggerated exoticism. Took my breath away. Have also discovered that the director - Pema Tseden from Amdo (Qinghai) - is an author, writing in Tibetan and Chinese and that translations of his works are beginning to appear in several countries (not yet in the U.S). As I read Chinese I've been able to read a few short stories of his that I found (with some difficulty) on Chinese language Internet sites. The stories were as fresh and original as his films. (See also his film, Old Dog, a recent award winner. Very different tone than this one. And there is another that will hopefully be available from Amazon eventually, The Search.) Can't wait for more from him! Can't wait to see where he will go artistically.[If you read French, Amazon Canada can supply you a recent French translation of one of his short story collections. This is Neige (Littérature grand format) (French Edition) "Niege" means "snow", the title of one of the stories in the collection.[Film info: Director/Screenwriter: Pema Tseden Art Director: Actors: Young Lama (main character) Danpei Lama; Tulku Gyapontsang as the Little Living Buddha Cast primarily non-professional local people.]Director currently working on yet another film rich with Tibetan traditions and story.
W**N
but the views of the monastery are great.
The story is very thin, plot wise, but the views of the monastery are great.
J**A
Five Stars
Nice movie
G**O
'Silent Holy Stones', a film by Pema Tseden
'Silent Holy Stones', a film by Pema Tseden'Silent Holy Stones', the debut feature by Tibetan director, Pema Tseden, wasshot on location in the Tibetan region of Amdo (in what is today part of China'sQinghai Province) in 2004. It was the first ever Tibetan language movie to havebeen filmed in Tibet and the first to feature an entirely Tibetan cast.Shot in and around Guwa Monastery, in the area where the director was bornand raised, 'Silent Holy Stones' narrates the tale of a young monk's obsessionwith watching a popular television series - an adaptation of the ChineseBuddhist classic, 'Journey to the West' - and his efforts to bring a television backto the monastery to allow his teacher to watch it with him.Television: we've all grown up with it, no doubt we all take it for granted,ubiquitous object in all our living rooms. Yet there are still parts of the worldwhere possession of a telly is something to aspire to, a status symbol thatrepresents all that is modern and most desirable. Indeed, in Pema Tseden'sfilm the television set is admired, fingered, stroked, almost as if it were a fetishobject in itself. In its own way it plays a more central role in the movie than anyof the human characters.Not only the TV set, but other every-day modern items such as motorbikes,music systems, even children's sweets and a toy monkey mask take ondistinctive roles. Familiar yet at the same time not so, they stand out incuriously sharp relief, as if their very foreignness were somehow accentuatedby the purely Tibetan backdrop of the film. In fact, it is this stark contrast thatforces us into an awareness of both the strength and durability of nativeTibetan culture and traditions and the ways in which these traditions are beingsubtly undermined by modernisation. These changes may partly reflect China'scolonial presence and policies in Tibet; they are also the more universalconsequence of challenges which face traditional societies all over the world.Indeed what makes Pema Tseden unique as a chronicler of contemporary Tibetis the non-judgemental manner in which he juxtaposes the traditional and thenovel. After all, the notion that they are losing their culture almost certainlynever occurs to Tibetans when they load a VCD into their player or turn on thetelly. The effects of this may be comical (even farcial) as when a performanceof the traditional Tibetan opera, 'Drime Kunden', staged to celebrate new year,finishes only to be immediately replaced by a makeshift disco where theperformers dance raucously to the loud thump of Tibetan techno. However,both the opera and the disco are presented as simple facts of contemporaryTibetan life. There is no suggestion we assign a greater value to one than theother.At other moments the tone of the film is more elegiac, the fragility andvulnerability of manners and customs that have endured for generations feelsalmost palpable. The death at the end of the film of an old man who lives alonein the mountains chiselling Buddhist mantras into stone as an act of piety couldalmost serve as metaphor for the passing into history of a now obsolete way oflife.'Silent Holy Stones', like the director's two subsequent films, 'The Search' and 'OldDog', portrays Tibet as a contemporary, evolving (at times rapidly evolving)culture. This places his work in deliberate contrast to much Western (andindeed Tibetan) writing and film making on Tibet which suffers from atendency to romanticize the country and its people, transforming it into afairytale land of monks and nuns realizing profound truths in picture-postcardmonasteries high in the mountains -- think Brad Pitt in Seven Years in Tibet.Such myth making comes at a cost, however, for it denies Tibetans thefundamental right to be normal - after all, to mythologize is ultimately todehumanize. Indeed Pema Tseden's Tibet is not a land of soaring peaks andpicturesque monasteries. It is a land of stark brown hills and squat featurelessone-storey houses. But, it is just this authenticity of setting which allows us awindow through which to observe the challenges faced by a deeply traditionalsociety as it grapples with the consequences of radical and irreversible change.
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