What We Missed At The Beijing Independent Film Festival: A Review Of Things That Weren’t

Beijing International Film Festival

WHAT was missed: The 11th Beijing Independent Film Festival (BIFF)

WHEN things went down: August 23rd (scheduled to run through August 31)

WHERE films were to be shown: Beijing’s Songzhuang artists’ district, at the Li Xianting Film Fund

HOW MANY films were denied an audience: 76. 76!!

BIFF, as the Beijing Independent Film Festival is onomatopoeically acronym-ed, has delivered on the drama — just not cinematically, as the eight-day festival was scheduled to do.

Although 76 films were denied an audience, BIFF still offered a corporal challenging of ideologies. On kick-off day, friendly local police escorted festival organizers back to theirs, where they all had a spirited chat about the indie film scene. For about five hours. Meanwhile, back at the theater, plainclothes enforcers adopted a “please turn off your cellphones and no flash photography” approach to the screenings. They wanted to ensure that the films were given the appropriate amount of respect – by not allowing anyone to watch them. As BIFF’s artistic director, Dong Bingfeng, said last year: “Film is the most dangerous thing by far.”

This street theater might be as good as the films themselves, but we’ll never know. So how about a gag review? Because: absurdity. Here is a taste of what never was, broken down by could-be categories and awards of subversion, dreamed by yours truly, selected at random for no reason (this is what you get when the professionals are silenced):

Best Ensemble/The Porn Cup

The VaChina Monologues by director Popo Fan

Though the pedestrian titling may encourage a troublesome pronunciation for non-native English speakers, kudos to the women involved who learned to love their 阴道.

Best Animation/The Compromise of Our Children’s Innocence Award

The Chaotic Space of Nihility and Dissolving, Melting and Shattering Phenomenon of Time by director Wu Xiang

A dark-toon depicting human nonexistence. Show it to your kids next time they seem a little too well-adjusted.

Best Musical/Political Satire, Weirdness Winner

DSA XXX: Nothing Ever Changes in the Ever-changing Republic of Ek-Ek-Ek by director KHAVN

The Mighty Boosh meets dissonance about ongoing political strife in the Philippines. True to Pinoy form, everybody sings and dances.

Best Romance/HIPSTERS.

Why Spend The Dark Night With You by director Antoine Mocquet

Everything we love about Gulou. Or hate. #Whatever.

Sounds awesome, no? Get your tickets… NEVER.

For readers with acute F.O.M.O. (fear of missing out), you’re probably close to tears. What a phenomenal selection of artists and films, such potential! To the embattled filmmakers and their crews brave enough to try and take part, jia you!  Hope to catch you in a theater near us, someday. BIFF!!

Danielle Sumita writes, directs, and produces the video series Sindicator. She lives in Shanghai.

    3 Responses to “What We Missed At The Beijing Independent Film Festival: A Review Of Things That Weren’t”

    1. Chinese Netizen

      China…wielding its cultural prowess and might to show everyone its arrived to conquer the world with its soft power.
      CCP goons: Why even ALLOW things such as BIFF in the FIRST place when you know you’ll just ham fistedly slam down on it after so many people have gathered with expectations, thereby making a mockery of you?
      Isn’t it easier to just show your true colors and say “There will be no international film festival in Beijing because we’re afraid it’ll stir subversion, ignite unpatriotic feelings and further foster foreign meddling in the internal affairs of our nation.”?
      You love to insert “international” into EVERYTHING but in reality you’re just a podunk, backwater shithole in Hebei province…

      Reply
    2. rcain

      maybe hold it in Shanghai next time; better track record in getting away with civil disobedience. Idiot authorities in Beijing always far too PARANOID.

      Reply

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