Get Reel | Umbrella movement protest in Hong Kong spawns short films
The umbrella movement inspired an artistic flowering among Hongkongers. Creative street art abounded at pro-democracy protest sites in Admiralty, Causeway Bay and Mong Kok. Songs were composed for the political movement, including , which went on to be named "favourite song" of 2014 at Commercial Radio's annual music awards on January 1.
Film personalities were spotted in the protest areas, too — and cinematographer Christopher Doyle, for one, has announced that his short film about the civil disobedience movement should be completed by the time this year's Hong Kong International Film Festival opens on March 23.
First off the blocks, in terms of getting their films screened in a theatrical setting, are the five female directors of the documentary shorts in the Umbrella Movement Shorts Selection at the latest edition of Ying E Chi's Hong Kong Independent Film Festival.
City University assistant professor Shannon Walsh's (pictured) looks at three young women recording their perspectives on the protests. Creative media student Wang Jingjing, 21, is a Shanghai native who had only been in Hong Kong two months when the pro-democracy protests began. Social work student Ansah Malik, 29, is a fourth generation Hongkonger.
Wang is more of an observer of the umbrella movement, but Malik is an active participant at the protest areas — and the latter's discussion of the way she and her fellow ethnic minorities were treated by other pro-democracy supporters are likely to get viewers tearing up.
Although well aware of her foreign status, 24-year-old Vietnamese graduate student Vicky Do backs the umbrella movement, as shown in Walsh's work and her own offering, — one of two shorts in this selection made by Walsh's students. The other is Moscow-born Daria Marchenko's less than two-minute-long (aka ).