Miao (Hmong) Movies from China I want to watch

herokitty

sarNie Egg
I'm trying to find these movies because I really want to watch them! If anyone knows how to find them. They are not on yesasia.com yet.

Anayi

Anayi is a name of a girl,in miao's language,'a' means girl,'nayi' means peony.
Anayi is a Ordinary and virtuous girl,her parents died when she was a baby,and she lives with her grandma.By the influence of miao's culture,she began to learn singing and making embroidery from her grandma when she was 5 years old.She use her true heart,sweet voices,dexterous hands and graceful dance to show her love to her people.She's beautiful, kind-hearted, dedicated, enthusiastic and sincere,so a Dong youngster fall in love with her.

Clips of the movie on youtube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hw7fzAJnr00
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQTrUp8Eg9A




Bird's Nest







New world records are being created in the National Stadium, but a "Bird's Nest" built on camera is also catching the eyes of audiences.

Ning Jingwu is the director and playwright of the film, "Bird's Nest." He says he shot the film to interpret the Green Olympics and to remind people to live healthy lives.

"This film is not related with physical contest directly. It stresses more on healthy life style. We want to show healthiness not only in physics but also in lifestyle."

The film takes place in a Miao Village in Guizhou Province with a beautiful natural landscape. A letter breaks the quiet lives of the children there. Jia Xiangma's father says in the letter that he is busy building the Bird's Nest in Beijing, but his friends don't believe him. The villagers even don't know what the Bird's Nest is used for. The elderly people are busy showing off, while the businessmen connect it with coffee advertising. Only Xiangma trusts his father and makes up his mind to see the Bird's Nest with his own eyes. Xiangma and his friends go cut trees to buy the train ticket, but they soon find that it is impossible to make enough money. Xiangma instead finds a way to sell the town's rice wine and earns enough money to go to Beijing. With the blessing of the villagers, Xiangma sets off to see his father and the Bird's Nest. Xiangma accidentally stumbles into the marathon and wins with his bare feet.

The director tells us that his inspiration comes from Miao culture, from a particular story in Guizhou Province.

"There was a woman of Miao nationality whose husband worked away from home. She thought her family was incomplete without her husband, so she borrowed a video camera to record her daily life. She wanted to show it to the men who worked far from home so they would come back. In her eyes, living happily and healthily is most important. I wanted to shoot a film to inspire people to think about their lifestyles."

The children in the village don't know what the Bird's Nest is, but Ning explains why the Bird's Nest was important as the setting of the film.

"The name of the National Stadium represents people's dream of returning to nature. We have done a great deal to improve the air quality and traffic conditions, but our lives are still far beyond satisfactory. People all over the world should seek healthier and purer lives."

Many films with the theme of the Beijing Games have been released in the Olympic year, but Ning's film, unlike the others, focuses on the individual.

"I think everybody should take part in the Olympic Games. It's a physical contest that raises the question of what life should be."
http://eng.wcetv.com/1/2008/08/22/126s4282.htm

http://exp.chinafilm.com/Movies/indexnr.ph...0081216172151/4




Lala's Gun


An offbeat coming-of-ager set among one of China's biggest minorities, the Miao, 'Lala's Gun' makes up in verismo detail what it lacks in narrative drama. Shot entirely in the Hmong language, pic doesn't romanticize its non-Han cast, making this of interest to specialist webs and ethnographic auds. Careful packaging, plus a 10-to-15-minute trim, could bounce this onto the fest circuit.

A labor of love by Chinese writer-director Ning Jingwu ('The Birthday'), the film centers on the Miao of Guizhou province in southern China, where custom dictates a boy will receive a gun from his father on his 15th birthday. Problem is, Gun Lala (newcomer Wang Jishuai, likable), who lives with his grandma (87-year-old Shi Mingma), has never seen his father. Armed with the knowledge that dad is a crack hunter and has a dragon-claw birthmark on his back, Lala sets off to find him. Boy's odyssey is a fascinating if leisurely one; a subplot involving a friend (Gun Dangyuan) who leaves for Guangzhou 'to see the world' provides some perspective on Lala's local journey. Ning's straightforward helming is enhanced by natural lensing of Guizhou's mountainous southeast around Basha.

Camera (color), Wu Lixiao; editor, Jia Cuiping; music, Chen Changfeng, Xu Xiangrong; art director, Shi Qiurong. Reviewed at Beijing Screenings, Sept. 24, 2008. Hmong dialogue. Running time: 103 MIN.







 

lady_sati

sarNie Adult
THANK YOU!
they all seem soooo good to watch.
wow.
i never knew there were Miao focused films out there.
THANKS!!!!!
 

sofarsogood

sarNie Egg
WoW!!!!! I want to watch to, but so sorry I have no idea where to find it. if you do

or anyone knows where we can buy these movies let me know too. I been trying to find

other movies too but I stop looking for it cause it leads me no where.


Herokitty if you find it better let me know too............thanks.........
 

pyang

sarNie Egg
are these actual hmong-suav/hmong people in china? i was expecting them to speak hmong-suav/hmong but it's all in mandarin.
 

swt_anjo559

sarNie Egg
are these actual hmong-suav/hmong people in china? i was expecting them to speak hmong-suav/hmong but it's all in mandarin.
The hmong-suav who lives closer to the city don't speak hmong anymore. However, there are still many who mix mandarin & hmong and some who can still speak Hmong without a problem. I actually want to visit the Hmong in China, it is really the core of our culture! ^_^
 

herokitty

sarNie Egg
I'll let you all know if I am able to find these movies to watch...




The movie "Anayi" is all in Mandarin. I think it's up to the director if he wanted the movie all in Mandarin so that non-Miao speakers would understand the movie since a lot of the audience would be Chinese. Or if he wanted to be all authentic like the director of "Lala's Gun".


I'm not sure about "Bird's Nest" if it's in Mandarin or not. It says that "Lala's Gun" is all done in the Hmong language. The director of "Lala's Gun" is the same director as "Bird's Nest" so it might be all done in the Hmong language. But "Bird's Nest" was made to co-incide with the Olympics so it probably is all Mandarin for the Chinese audience. Not that we would be able to understand them very well though if it was in Hmong... because they are probably speaking a different dialect of Hmong Suav.
 

pyang

sarNie Egg
The hmong-suav who lives closer to the city don't speak hmong anymore. However, there are still many who mix mandarin & hmong and some who can still speak Hmong without a problem. I actually want to visit the Hmong in China, it is really the core of our culture! ^_^
Me too. I went to Kunming last summer but I didn't see any Hmong. Then I youtube some stuff and a guy from the US went and interview some Hmong people in Kunming, so they are probably everywhere but we just didn't know. I could've probably walked past a few and just didn't know. I kindof figured that the hmong-suav who lives closer to the city don't speak hmong anymore, you can kindof tell in the those interview videos but they still understand though. The guy speaks fluent hmong to them and they answer in hmong-suav and he understand all of it when I could only catch a few thing they say.

I want to see Lala's gun. Please share if you find it. ^_^
 

max

sarNie Elites
Me too. I went to Kunming last summer but I didn't see any Hmong. Then I youtube some stuff and a guy from the US went and interview some Hmong people in Kunming, so they are probably everywhere but we just didn't know. I could've probably walked past a few and just didn't know. I kindof figured that the hmong-suav who lives closer to the city don't speak hmong anymore, you can kindof tell in the those interview videos but they still understand though. The guy speaks fluent hmong to them and they answer in hmong-suav and he understand all of it when I could only catch a few thing they say.

I want to see Lala's gun. Please share if you find it. ^_^
I am actually going to go to China this year to study abroad, and my research project will be on the Miao. I am absolutely dumbfounded by the Miao, so this is actually like a dream come true for me. I am quite excited! I have been watching a bunch of Miao videos on YouTube to see if I will be able to understand any of them, but it is extremely hard. The only one that I can KIND OF understand are the Flowery Miao, which is still very hard to understand. Therefore, I will really have to rely on my Mandarin and my translator. LOL : )
 

pyang

sarNie Egg
I am actually going to go to China this year to study abroad, and my research project will be on the Miao. I am absolutely dumbfounded by the Miao, so this is actually like a dream come true for me. I am quite excited! I have been watching a bunch of Miao videos on YouTube to see if I will be able to understand any of them, but it is extremely hard. The only one that I can KIND OF understand are the Flowery Miao, which is still very hard to understand. Therefore, I will really have to rely on my Mandarin and my translator. LOL : )
Really? That's so cool. Where in China are you going? I watch Miao videos on youtube to see if I understand too but I understand their mandarin more then their hmong. :lol:
 

max

sarNie Elites
I am not quite sure where I am going to go yet. Well, I know that my university will be in Sichuan, and there are Sichuan Miao, so I guess that will be my first stop. Then I will head towards Guizhou because I want to see the Miao with the long horns. Haha.
 
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