Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Kings of the Sky/ Utopia: Part Three/ Dogs of Straw at UNIONDOCS

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17
7:30pm at UNIONDOCS
Suggested Donation: $7

Disparate? pieces of contemporary China: the marginalized but fiercely independent Turkic-Muslim community of Ughyurs; a failed mega consumer center; and throngs of Taiwanese together in the streets before the 2008 elections.   

Kings Of The Sky
dir. Deborah Stratman
2004, video, 68 minutes

An experimental documentary about resistance, balance and fame, Kings of the Sky follows tightrope artist Adil Hoxur as he and his troupe tour China’s Taklamakan desert amongst the Uyghurs, a Turkic Muslim people seeking religious and political autonomy. The film gracefully hovers between travelogue, ethnographic visual poetry, and an advocacy video for preserving a traditional art form.

"Kings of the Sky hovers between a traveler’s diary, a visual poem of ethnographic imagery, and an advocacy video for preserving a traditional art form. It’s as if Stratman ran off, joined the circus and learned a balancing act of her own."
- Bill Stamets, Chicago Sun Times

Utopia: Part 3, the World's Largest Shopping Mall
Directed by Sam Green
2009, video, 13minutes

More than twice the size of the Mall of America, the South China Mall in Dongguan, China, seems to have it all: gondolas, carnival rides, palm trees, Teletubbies. Conspicuously missing, however, are the bustling tenants and hordes of shoppers.  Promo pieces promised a "one-stop consumption center," but what mall developers now have is nearly seven million square feet of empty retail space.  Buoyed by a mellow yet optimistic techno-pop soundtrack, this short film takes us on a tour of this failed monument to consumerism—down its empty escalators and lonely corridors, pausing to speak with the store clerks, maintenance workers, and very occasional visitors. 

Dogs of Straw

Directed by Yin-Ju Chen & James T. Hong
2009, video, 11min

Dogs of Straw is both a portrayal of Taiwan's 2008 presidential election and a meditation on democracy, manipulation, and nationalism. In Taiwan's fledgling democracy, it is only during a presidential election when the "people exists" as a formless abstract multitude removed from concrete social structures.

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