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HONG KONG, Nov. 19 (Xinhuanet) -- With her creative
talent, Hong Kong student Wong Ying-ying took home the Special Jury Award for
her experimental film "We Search" at the 2nd Korea Youth International Film
Festival in Seoul, South Korea.
"We Search" is a seven-minute
improvised film exploring concepts of gender. A static camera is used to observe
the behavior of a young man and woman playing around with bits of old material
in an abandoned building, Wong said at an interview with Xinhua on Saturday.
Wong, 24, is in her third year studying for the BA in
Creative Media at the School of Creative Media (SCM) of the City University of
Hong Kong. She was overwhelmed when she heard about the good news that her work
had been awarded the Special Jury Award last month.
"The standard of the works of the contestants in
Seoul was really high," she said.
Before the shoot, Wong, the director, asked the
actors to do what they wanted in front of the camera.
"I had my actor and actress stayed alone respectively
in the same setting where they can do whatever they like, and I would like to
see how differently they would behave when being facing the same environment,"
said she.
As the film unfolds, on 12 split screens, the action
is punctuated with comments from interviews with men and women in Hong Kong
about their perceptions of gender roles and differences.
Wong said her film was more experimental than other
films at the festival in Seoul and that was the key to win recognition fromthe
jury.
The winning work is also well received by Assistant
Professor from the SCM Louisa Wei Shiyu, who is also Wong's supervisor.
Wei said that many so-called experimental films by
students were often quasi-narrative videos with no stories, while this piece
experiments with an interesting idea and presents the idea with a meaningful
form that multiplies the direct-cinema visuals with voices from interviews with
real people.
The young film maker had been trained as a secretary
before shedecided to take the plunge and sign up for the BA program.
"Before entering SCM, I worked as a secretary in an
advertisingcompany," she said. "I met many creative people there and was
heartened by their enthusiasm and efforts in doing productions."
Art-loving Wong gradually found that her job gave
little space for her to further exploit her aptitude in art and media, and
finally decided to dig into the creative profession full time.
"In the SCM, we learn about a wide variety of
different film and video techniques, so we, the students, want to use them in
ourwork to create something original, innovative and fresh," said Wong, showing
satisfaction with her studying life.
Speaking about the future, Wong said that she might
like to pursue her career in the film industry, and now, her focus is to develop
her final-year project. Enditem |