Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




SINO DAILY
Dodging the censors in China
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Feb 14, 2013


With rapid economic growth transforming China, independent filmmaker Cui Zi'en is one of a growing number of directors dodging the censors in order to document the changes through the eyes of some of the most marginalised in Chinese society.

"We're a heroic, comic, lost generation. We have nothing," says one young man in Cui's documentary "Night Scene" about the lives of young male prostitutes in Beijing.

A film scholar and gay activist who has written nine novels including China's first gay novel, Cui has for the last 12 years focused on low-tech digital video (DV) filmmaking as his preferred means of expressing himself.

His 40-odd films have covered everything: from the only children produced by China's one-child policy imposed in the late 1970s, to the problems faced by millions of rural migrants who have flocked to the cities in search of work.

Cui, 54, began making films as soon as the technology became accessible due to falling prices in 2001.

Digital video was not only cheap but also had the added advantage of being beneath the radar of China's censors.

"The censors exert their rights over anything submitted to them," Cui told AFP in an interview in Paris.

"As I am part of the independent cinema movement, we do not recognise the authority of the censors," he said.

Instead, Cui and his fellow independent filmmakers bypass the censors and screen their work at gay or independent film festivals, in bars and at universities, post them online or distribute them on copied DVDs.

The social upheaval sparked by China's breakneck economic growth has given independent filmmakers a wealth of material.

The nation faces social problems ranging from an ageing population and the impact on future growth of the one-child policy, to graft and a gender imbalance due to the aborting of female foetuses.

Initially, Cui, an associate professor at the Film Research Institute of the Beijing Film Academy, concentrated on avant-garde features. But in 2007 he turned to documentaries.

"What I want to do in my films is to write another history of China, giving a voice to the marginalised, people whose rights are unrecognised and neglected through filming their way of life, of surviving," he said.

Two of Cui's films "Night Scene" and "Queer China, 'Comrade' China", which traces the history of homosexuality in China, are featured in a China season at Paris's Forum des Images in February.

Homosexuality remains a sensitive issue in China, where it was officially considered a form of mental illness as recently as 2001 and same-sex marriages or civil unions have no legal basis.

"Before I came out, I was someone who was well regarded and esteemed because I was a writer, film director and a teacher.

"But the moment that I came out, all this was turned on its head and I was subjected to repression," he said. Such treatment was a deterrent to others wanting to declare their sexuality, he added.

Experts in China estimate that there are between 30 and 50 million gay people in the nation of 1.3 billion, Cui said.

In addition to the difficulties of being gay in China, Cui added that he was also subjected to scrutiny by the authorities.

Government security officials once quizzed him after he attended a film festival in the US and he was later banned from collecting a literary prize awarded by a human rights organisation in New York.

Despite this, he says he is determined to carry on telling the stories of people at the bottom of Chinese society.

"The marginalised interest me, people who are fighting against life," he said.

.


Related Links
China News from SinoDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SINO DAILY
Tibetan monk's burning marks 100th immolation bid
Kathmandu (AFP) Feb 13, 2013
A Tibetan monk doused himself in petrol in a Kathmandu restaurant on Wednesday and set himself on fire, marking the 100th self-immolation bid in a wave of protests against Chinese rule since 2009. Police in the Nepalese capital told AFP that the exile had burned himself in an eatery near Kathmandu's Boudhanath Stupa, one of the world's holiest Buddhist shrines, terrifying tourists who were h ... read more


SINO DAILY
Indra Develops The First High-Resolution Passive Radar System

ORNL scientists solve mercury mystery

3D Printing on the Micrometer Scale

Nextdoor renovates before taking on the world

SINO DAILY
Astrium tapped for communications network

XTAR To Expand Beyond NATO As African And Asian Hot Spots Flare

How the DoD Can More Efficiently Acquire Satellite Systems and Capacity

TACLANE-1G Encryptor Certified by NSA

SINO DAILY
Another Sea Launch Failure

ILS Concludes Yamal 402 Proton Launch Investigation

Ariane 5 delivers record payload off back-to-back launches this week

Eutelsat and Arianespace sign new multi-year multiple launch services agreement

SINO DAILY
A system that improves the precision of GPS in cities by 90 percent

System improves GPS in city locations

Boeing to modernize U.S. Air Force GPS net

Smart satnav drives around the blue highway blues

SINO DAILY
Boeing and Elbit Systems to Collaborate on Aircraft Defense Solutions

F-35A Completes 3-Year Clean Wing Flutter Testing Program

E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Approved For Full-Rate Production

Major fighter jet deal, trade dominate Hollande's India trip

SINO DAILY
New materials may be computer breakthrough

Researchers create 'building block' of quanutm networks

European Investments in Advanced Computing Systems Deliver Results

A review of the rapidly evolving field of topological insulator hybrid structures

SINO DAILY
LDCM 'Doing Great' in Orbit

US launches Earth observation satellite

NightPod Images Bring Earth to Light From Space Station

Landsat Data Continuity Mission Awaits Liftoff

SINO DAILY
Anxiety drug pollution makes fish go rogue: study

Philippine development sparks 'sunset' protest

Waste Dump at the End of the World

Japan proposes pollution meeting with China




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement