Ilo Ilo: Difference between revisions
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Removed potentially pornographic extended description of a scene in the film with child nudity in, since its role in the article was dubious and it represents original research. |
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''Ilo Ilo'' received positive reviews at the Cannes Film Festival. The film was later awarded the [[Camera d'Or]] award, an award which recognizes the best debut feature film in the competition.<ref name="today20130527" /> It received six nominations at the [[Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards]].,<ref>{{cite news|title=‘Ilo Ilo’ earns 6 nominations for the Golden Horse Awards|url=http://sg.movies.yahoo.com/blogs/show-buzz/ilo-ilo-earns-6-nominations-golden-horse-awards-150549059.html|publisher=Yahoo! News|date=1 October 2013}}</ref> and won 4, namely Best Film, Best New Director, Best Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress for Yeo Yann Yann.<ref>{{cite news|title=‘Ilo Ilo’ earns 6 nominations for the Golden Horse Awards|url=http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/four-golden-horse-awards/897648.html|publisher=Channel News Asia|date=24 November 2013}}</ref> |
''Ilo Ilo'' received positive reviews at the Cannes Film Festival. The film was later awarded the [[Camera d'Or]] award, an award which recognizes the best debut feature film in the competition.<ref name="today20130527" /> It received six nominations at the [[Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards]].,<ref>{{cite news|title=‘Ilo Ilo’ earns 6 nominations for the Golden Horse Awards|url=http://sg.movies.yahoo.com/blogs/show-buzz/ilo-ilo-earns-6-nominations-golden-horse-awards-150549059.html|publisher=Yahoo! News|date=1 October 2013}}</ref> and won 4, namely Best Film, Best New Director, Best Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress for Yeo Yann Yann.<ref>{{cite news|title=‘Ilo Ilo’ earns 6 nominations for the Golden Horse Awards|url=http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/four-golden-horse-awards/897648.html|publisher=Channel News Asia|date=24 November 2013}}</ref> |
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==Nude Boy Shower Scene== |
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In the shower scene where the boy actor Koh Jia Ler was being bathed by the maid, he was forced by the director to strip completely nude for the camera when he shot that scene. The maid was in the shower room with the nude boy during the entire scene. |
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A young boy (Koh Jia Ler) with a broken arm needs help removing his clothes before showering. His youthful aunt helps him take off his shirt and pants. She then proceeds to pull down his underwear. He stops her at first, but then she convinces him to let her continue. She remarks that she has seen penises before and has also seen much bigger ones. She pulls the boy's underwear all the way down around his ankles and he steps out of them reluctantly. The boy is now fully nude in front of the camera and the maid. His bare bottom is fully visible. Shortly later, the maid is seen bathing the boy. He is standing up in the tub, fully nude and facing the camera, with his entire naked body fully visible. She lathers his body with soap, rubbing her hands all over the boy's naked body, first his hair and upper body, then she works her way down from his abdomen to his waist. As the maid bends down to lather the boy's genital area, his penis and scrotum are visible clear and close-up, in full view of the camera. The maid is looking directly at the boy's genitals and his genitals are in the centre of the camera. The boy does not cover his genitals in any way, allowing the details of his genitals to be clearly seen by the camera. |
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Koh Jia Ler is thirteen years old, with pubic hair growth. His penis is uncircumcised and erect. He ejaculates a small amount of semen due to sexual arousal of being naked on set. No attempt is made to protect the boy from having his genital and buttock area in view of the camera. The set was not cleared, thus boy's nude body was in full view of the crew throughout the scene. The view of his genitals is uncensored. |
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In another scene, the maid carries the completely nude boy actor on her back, with his penis touching her body. |
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In the caning scene where the boy actor Koh Jia Ler was being caned in school, he was forced to be whipped for real in an attempt to achieve realism. |
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The child actor was caned for real several times in two takes while shooting the scene. The scene shows him crying as a result of the pain. |
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==Awards== |
==Awards== |
Revision as of 17:57, 14 August 2016
Ilo Ilo | |
---|---|
Directed by | Anthony Chen |
Written by | Anthony Chen |
Produced by | Ang Hwee Sim Anthony Chen Wahyuni A. Hadi |
Starring | Chen Tianwen Yeo Yann Yann Angeli Bayani Koh Jia Ler |
Cinematography | Benoit Soler |
Edited by | Hoping Chen Joanne Cheong |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Golden Village Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 99 minutes |
Country | Singapore |
Languages | Chinese, English, Tagalog |
Budget | S$700,000[1][2] |
Box office | Singapore (S$1.2 million) |
Ilo Ilo (Chinese: 爸媽不在家) is a 2013 Singaporean family film. The debut feature of director Anthony Chen, the film features an international cast, including Singaporean actor Chen Tianwen, Malaysian actress Yeo Yann Yann, Filipino actress Angeli Bayani, and debut child actor Koh Jia Ler.[3]
Ilo Ilo was first premiered at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival as part of the Directors' Fortnight on 19 May 2013.[4] At the festival, the film was awarded the Caméra d'Or award, thus becoming the first Singaporean feature film to win an award at the Cannes Film Festival.[5] The film was selected as the Singaporean entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards,[6] but was not nominated.
Plot
Set in Singapore during the 1997 Asian financial crisis, Ilo Ilo chronicles the Lim family as they adjust to their newly arrived Filipina domestic helper, Teresa, (Angeli Bayani) who has come, like many other Filipinas, in search of a better life. The film’s Chinese title translates as "Mom and Dad Are Not Home".[7] The father, Teck, (Chen Tian Wen) works in sales for a glass company; the pregnant mother, Hwee Leng, (Yeo Yann Yann) works as a secretary for a shipping company that is down sizing; and the ten-year-old son, Jiale, (Koh Jia Ler) is a troubled delinquent.
At first, Jia Le and Teresa (known as 'Terry') exhibit a troubled relationship, when during a trip to the bookstore Jia Le places some unpaid merchandise in the maid's shopping bag causing her to be accused of theft. After being scolded by Terry, tensions rise, causing Jia Le to climb over the school fence at dismissal just to avoid his maid. He runs home and locks her out.
When the father loses his sales job, he conceals it from his wife, secretly smoking on the steps outside their apartment. After some time, unable to find work in a career position, he accepts a temporary job as a security guard monitoring an egg farm. As he continues to lose money in the stock market, in a moment of depression, he acknowledges their losses to his wife who lambasts him over his failure. As the family finances begin to descend deeper, familial tensions grow as Jiale continues to act out against his family and Terry. Upon the death of a neighbour who jumps from the roof of their apartment building, Jiale and Terry begin to kindle a relationship.
While the mother is desperate to stay employed as she continues to script termination letters at her job, Terry and Jiale become fast friends sparking the mother's jealousy as their relationship develops. Desperate at home, and emotionally neglected by her son, Hwee Leng attends a motivational seminar where she is moved by the optimistic words of the speaker and immediately purchases his full catalogue of motivational books and CDs. During a lunch break at work, she attempts to call the speaker using a phone number included on the seminar's flyer, and discovers the line has been disconnected and rerouted. Later that night while watching television, she learns that the motivational speaker has been arrested for fraud causing Hwee Lang to break down in the presence of her confused husband as more money is lost.
Although Jiale is a poor student and is constantly in trouble, he shows high intellect and cunning in his obsessive calculation of past winning lottery numbers, which he catalogues in his schoolbook during class. One day, after being taunted by another boy that his maid only loves him because she is paid to, he pushes the boy into the bathroom wall causing him to split his head and bleed. Threatened with expulsion, and the school's administration unable to contact his parents, Terry arrives to plead for mercy on his behalf. After some resistance, the principal appears moved as Hwee Leng arrives angrily dispatching Terry and berating Jiale. As Hwee Leng and Jiale leave the administration office, Hwee Leng aggressively reminds Terry that she is Jiale's mother before snatching Jiale and walking away. Given a punishment of public caning rather than expulsion, Terry arrives to the school auditorium, powerless, as she watches Jiale being whipped in front of the student body.
After the family car is sold for scrap, the family acknowledges they can no longer afford to keep Terry employed as Jia Le's father has been recently fired from his job due to an accident tripping over eggs while attempting to find a suspected intruder. Desperate to keep Terry, Jia Le uses his savings to purchase lottery tickets but loses. He becomes tearfully despondent, cutting a lock of Terry's hair during a tense goodbye before she is sent home.
Holding on to his cassette player, Jiale listens to music with his father on a bench in the hospital as Hwee Leng gives birth to a baby girl.
Cast
- Chen Tian Wen as Teck, the father
- Yeo Yann Yann as Hwee Leng, the mother
- Koh Jia Ler as Jiale
- Angeli Bayani as Teresa or Terry
Production
Partially funded by Ngee Ann Polytechnic and the Singapore Film Commission, the film's budget is estimated to be around S$700,000.[1]
Reception
Ilo Ilo received a 100% rating from Rotten Tomatoes.
Ilo Ilo received positive reviews at the Cannes Film Festival. The film was later awarded the Camera d'Or award, an award which recognizes the best debut feature film in the competition.[5] It received six nominations at the Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards.,[8] and won 4, namely Best Film, Best New Director, Best Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress for Yeo Yann Yann.[9]
Awards
Film
- May 2013, Camera d'Or, Canne Film Festival (Cannes, France)
- Sep 2013, Best Feature, 11th Pacific Meridian Film Festival (Vladivostok, Russia)
- Sep 2013, NETPAC Prize, 11th Pacific Meridian Film Festival (Vladivostok, Russia)
- Sep 2013, Grand Jury Prize, 10th Jameson Cinefest (Miskolc, Hungary)
- Sep 2013, FIPRESCI Prize, 10th Jameson Cinefest (Miskolc, Hungary)
- Sep 2013, International Ecumenical Jury Prize, 10th Jameson Cinefest (Miskolc, Hungary)
- Oct 2013, Best Narrative Feature Film, 22nd Philadelphia Film Festival (Philadelphia, United States)
- Oct 2013, First Feature "Sutherland Award", 57th British Film Institute London Film Festival (London, United Kingdom)
- Oct 2013, Best Feature Film, Molodist Film Festival (Kiev, Ukraine)
- Oct 2013, FIPRESCI Prize, Molodist Film Festival (Kiev, Ukraine)
- Nov 2013, New Talent Award, Hong Kong Asian Film Festival (Hong Kong)
- Nov 2013, Best Film, 50th Golden Horse Awards (Taipei)
- Nov 2013, Piaget Best Screenplay Award (Special Award), 50th Golden Horse Awards (Taipei)
- Dec 2013, Audience Award, Tokyo Filmex Film Festival (Tokyo, Japan)
- Dec 2013, Best Film, Muhr AsiaAfrica Feature section, Dubai Film Festival (Dubai, UAE)
Individual
- Sep 2013, Best Actress (Yeo Yann Yann), 11th Pacific Meridian Film Festival (Vladivostok, Russia)
- Sep 2013, Best Actor (Koh Jia Ler), 9th Eurasia Film Festival, (Almaty, Kazakhstan)
- Oct 2013, Best Actress (Yeo Yann Yann), 15th Mumbai International Film Festival (Mumbai, India)
- Oct 2013, Best Director (Anthony Chen), 15th Mumbai International Film Festival (Mumbai, India)
- Nov 2013, Best Supporting Actress (Yeo Yann Yann), 50th Golden Horse Awards (Taipei, Taiwan)
- Nov 2013, Best New Director (Anthony Chen), 50th Golden Horse Awards (Taipei, Taiwan)
- Nov 2013, Best Original Screenplay (Anthony Chen), 50th Golden Horse Awards (Taipei, Taiwan)
- Dec 2013, Best Director (Anthony Chen), 7th Asia Pacific Screen Awards (Brisbane, Australia)
- Dec 2013, Best Supporting Actress (Yeo Yann Yann), Asia Pacific Film Festival (Macau)
- Dec 2013, Best Actress (Yeo Yann Yann), Muhr AsiaAfrica Feature section, Dubai Film Festival (Dubai, UAE)
See also
- List of submissions to the 86th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film
- List of Singaporean submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
References
- ^ a b Chan, Boon (May 30, 2013). "S'pore film-maker's Cannes win 'a unanimous decision'". AsiaOne.
- ^ "Foreign interest in 'Ilo Ilo' picks up pace". Yahoo! Singapore. 4 December 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
- ^ "S'pore film gets standing ovation at Cannes". The Straits Times. asiaone. 27 May 2013. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
- ^ Dalton, Stephen (5 May 2013). "Ilo Ilo: Cannes Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
- ^ a b Loh, Genevieve (27 May 2013). "Ilo Ilo is first S'pore film to win at Cannes". Today. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
- ^ "Ilo Ilo headed for the Oscars?". Channel News Asia. Retrieved 2013-12-21.
- ^ http://variety.com/2013/film/reviews/cannes-film-review-ilo-ilo-1200488889/
- ^ "'Ilo Ilo' earns 6 nominations for the Golden Horse Awards". Yahoo! News. 1 October 2013.
- ^ "'Ilo Ilo' earns 6 nominations for the Golden Horse Awards". Channel News Asia. 24 November 2013.