2009-07-26, 11:38 | Link #1 | |||
Moving in circles
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Singapore
Age: 49
|
Yasmin Ahmad, film-maker (July 1, 1958 - July 25, 2009)
The making of Funeral
Her interracial love story Sepet (2004) was accorded the Best Film Award and the Best Original Screenplay Award at the Malaysian Film Festival 2005. It also bagged the Asian Film Award at the Tokyo International Film Festival 2005, and the Grand Prix Award at the Creteil International Women's Film Festival in the same year. Her other films included Gubra (2006), Mukhsin (2006), Muallaf (2008) and Talentime (2009). Born in Muar, Johor, Yasmin began her career as a copywriter with Ogilvy & Mather before joining Leo Burnnett, where she rose to become its creative executive director. Award-winning actress Azean Irdawaty, who worked with Yasmin on Talentime, told theSun she was in Singapore when she heard about the film-maker's death. She rushed back just in time for the funeral. "I am glad that I managed to see and kiss Yasmin for the last time," said Azean, who, in her rush to make it to the mosque, ended up leaving her luggage at the airport. Fellow director Othman Hafsham was effusive in his praise for Yasmin. At the funeral, he said: "She is a director who speaks her mind and her films reflect this. It's only in this country that her movies are considered controversial. But in international film festivals, they all accept her movies. Indeed she has became a role model for many aspiring directors out there." So popular was she that Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong requested the country's Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports to engage her to direct two of its pro-family advertisements, with the most recent one depicting an Indian widow paying a moving tribute to her Chinese husband at his funeral (see above videos). Yasmin herself is no stranger to interracial marriages. She was married twice, first to an Indian and subsequently to a Chinese, Mr Abdullah Tan Yew Leong. Singapore film director Wee Li Lin, who had sought Yasmin's opinions on her debut film, Gone Shopping, two years ago, said: "Yasmin was incredibly friendly and funny. She enveloped everyone in her maternal glow." - theSun, my paper |
|||
2009-07-26, 14:48 | Link #2 |
Banned
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Hell
Age: 38
|
I was surprised it is a Singaporean made this thread much sooner than any Malaysian. Actually most Malaysians hate her, not to mention how many controversies she made in her movies. Malaysian reaction is much like "She died and that's good. Let's forget about it.". What I like about her and Most Malaysian didn't is she never made horror and "biker gang" movies.
What if Mawi or Siti Nurhaliza died instead and I'm sure my country will have another Micheal Jackson style of funeral. |
2009-07-26, 19:47 | Link #4 |
Sugar_Prayer <333
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Living on a remote island somewhere in the South Pacific
|
I haven't watched all of her movies, LOL
But I don't see why is there to hate about her. Interracial relationships are common these days. I'm Malay-Arab and I used to have a Chinese girlfriend. And we broke up not because of race, mind you! |
|
|