CTFF 2019 Official Selection: Last Night I Saw You Smiling

LAST NIGHT I SAW YOU SMILING
2019 | Documentary | Cambodia | 78 min | Khmer, English subtitles 

Screening: Sunday, September 15th, 4:00pm at Art Theatre Long Beach
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Note: This screening contain one Feature Documentary and one short film by Anti- Archive

Synopsis: One decade after Cambodia’s independence and amid a movement of New Khmer Architecture, Cambodian architect Lu Bun Hap and Soviet architect Vladimir Bodiansky constructed the Municipal Apartments, also known as the White Building. The housing block bore witness to a tremendous series of events: the young nation’s Golden Age; a traumatic breakdown under a radical regime; decades of cultural revival centered within its walls; and, the rapid pace of capitalist development that would ultimately lead to its demise.

When director Kavich Neang learns the 493 families of the White Building, an architectural landmark in Phnom Penh where he lived since birth, have agreed to vacate for a condo development, he decides to document the last days, starting by following his parents and family. His father, a sculptor with the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts, and his mother arrived to the White Building when the government gathered surviving artists to live there after 1979. They express satisfaction with the compensation, but they argue amid the pressure of the move-out process. By the time that they leave, they cannot contain their emotions anymore. Sophanara Dy, 68, moved into the White Building after the Khmer Rouge fell in 1979. She first refused to leave but accepted after pressure from her neighbors. She shares the stories of love and tragedy she has witnessed inside the building and in the movies from the past which she still treasures dearly.

Sandap Suos, 60, arrived in 1981 but sold her flat in the 1990s, but after her husband died, she came back to rent it alone. Although she will not receive compensation for the flat, she feels no regret: it’s her destiny, she claims. Her dream was to become a singer, so she sings a pop song alone in her home for the last time. After 54 years, the building returns to brick, metal, and concrete once more. Only memory remains.

Kavich Neang (director and cinematographer) was raised in Phnom Penh’s landmark White Building. His first two shorts were documentaries produced by Rithy Panh: A Scale Boy (2010), and Where I Go (2013). In 2013, he joined Busan’s Asian Film Academy, and in 2014, he co-founded Anti-Archive. In 2015, he directed two short fictions, Three Wheels (premiere: Busan), and Goodbye Phnom Penh. In 2018, his short fiction, New Land Broken Road, premiered in Singapore. Kavich has joined Talents Tokyo, Visions du Reel’s Docs-in-Progress, and Cannes Cinéfondation’s Residency. His feature-length documentary Last Night I Saw You Smiling holds its premiere in January 2019 in IFFR’s Bright Future competition. He is simultaneously preparing to shoot his first narrative feature, White Building.


DIRECTOR & CINEMATOGRAPHER: Kavich Neang

PRODUCERS: Davy Chou, Daniel Mattes (Anti-Archive, Cambodia),

Marine Arrighi de Casanova (Apsara Films, France)

EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: Ulla Simonen, Niels Pagh Andersen

ASSOCIATE PRODUCERS: Steve Chen, Park Sungho

EDITOR: Félix Rehm

PRODUCTION MANAGER: Danech San

SOUND DESIGNER & MUSIC COMPOSER: Vincent Villa

SOUND RECORDISTS: Sokha Hun, Sarith En

POST-PRODUCTION: White Light Post Co., Ltd.

POST-PRODUCTION: Lee Chatametikool

COLORIST: Nuttacha Khajornkaitsakul

FOLEY & FINAL MIX STUDIO: Kantana Sound Studio Co., Ltd.


A MILLION YEARS
2019 | Narrative Short | Cambodia | 20 min | Khmer, English subtitles
Written and Directed by: Danech San

Synopsis: A young woman relaxes at a riverfront restaurant and recounts stories of her past experiences finding enchantment in the flows of the river and the trees on the mountains nearby.

Screening: Sunday, September 15th, 4:00pm at Art Theatre Long Beach
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE TICKETS: GET TICKETS NOW
Note: This screening contain one Feature Documentary and one short film by Anti- Archive