Monday, December 4, 2017

The Zen Stalker

"The Zen Stalker" my latest meditative experimental contemporary contemplative short film is now available on Vimeo. Click here to watch. 
Special thanks to Inga Palme for her kind contribution.

Sunday, December 3, 2017

The Path (experimental contemporary contemplative slow cinema)

Dear slow cinema fun. Thanks that you're visiting my blog. Please click here to watch my short contemplative film I recorded in a beautiful pagoda in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Hope my film helps you to disconnect from the daily circumstances of our rush life and provides you a natural self repair mechanism.

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Tribute to Holocaust Victims of Nazism and Fascism on Tao-Films VoD

Tao-Films VoD is an online distributor service based in France and specializes in previously undistributed independent and art-house cinema, Contemporary Contemplative Cinema (CCC) "Slow Cinema". All the films are curated by Nadin Mai PhD.

For independent avantgard filmmakers like myself Tao-Films VoD is a great opportunity to show their films. Avantgardel filmmakers are often marginalized and underrepresented. Not ease to find platforms where talented but unknown or lesser known filmmakers are able to showcase their mostly "low or no budget" art-house films. Critics are never heard about their films because no festivals, cinemas, museums, TV channels gave opportunity for the creators as individual artists. "Slow Cinema" is boring, ergo neither arouse so much interest nor makes any profit. Typical 22 catch.

Today I would like to inform my readers that Two of my Holocaust related experimental contemplative short films are available on Tao-Films VoD from this week for a limited time for free. Previously I wrote an article about the two films and If you are interested please click here.

"Fear" was entirely filmed in Auschwitz I. and Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland and "Requiem for the Forgottens" in Budapest, Hungary. Both films pay tribute to the memory of the Holocaust Victims. Before you start to watch the films I suggest you to pump up the volume or use headphone and turn off the light, even close the shutter on the window. It takes only a few minutes from your life to watch these two films, but maybe can change your entire life.

If you think my films can arouse other people, critics, NGO, museum, festival, school, library, etc... interest, please let me know. I would appreciate if you can help to shout out and share my films on social media ( Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc... )

Please visit and watch great films from fellow filmmakers on Tao-Films VoD the only curated platform providing opportunity for underrepresented international avantgard filmmakers devoted to Contemporary Contemplative Cinema (CCC) "Slow Cinema".

Thank You!



Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Homage to Chantal Akerman

I shot an hour long experimental contemplative film as a homage dedicated to Chantal Akerman. My film contains two long tracking shots. Each of 30 minutes long. The film was shot entirely at the suburb of Siem Reap, Cambodia just a few minutes drive from the world famous Angkor Wat.

The title is "Route 60" click here to watch Part I. and Part II.

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Filming in Cambodia

As a Field/Line Producer and Fixer with a decade of experience shooting in Cambodia I would like to suggest to all the directors and producers that please start the pre-production as early as possible. Even the most experienced line producers, fixers need time to do the research and double check the information, securing interviews, scouting locations, obtaining all the permits, transportation, logistics, accommodation for documentary, reality, short, feature, music video or TVC.

Pre production is the most important phase of the film-making process. The carefully selected Line/Field Producer will save you a lot of time, money and hassle.

Usually takes 10 working days to obtain the general filming permits for example for documentaries at the Ministry of Information or/and Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts in case if you want to shoot at Toul Sleng Genocide Museum (S21) or Killing Fields in Phnom Penh. If you are planning filming inside Angkor Archaeological Park you must have a permit obtained by Apsara Authority in Siem Reap. They only obtaining filming permit if you provide them the authorized and obtained permits from Ministry of Information or/and Ministry of Culture and Fine Art. So you must add an extra 5- 10 days. Managing the custom clearance documents also takes 2-4 days.

Do not hesitate to contact me if you need an experience professional on the field. In the past 10 years I've been honored to work with both Asian and European production companies for example Mediacorp / Channel News Asia, Vasantham, Vertigo Pictures (Sg) Sputnik Production (B), History Channel (D) with both award winning and upcoming directors, producers. I am here to help you to reach your goal at your next project in South East Asia. I'm working with skilled and experienced local freelancers and able to enlarge the numbers of crew. I am an out of the box thinker with a degree in Cinematography and able to work all over in South East Asia. I have an extensive connection with experienced film professionals.

I can supply reliable camera and lighting equipment with professional skilled crew.

Feel free to contact me at your earliest convenient.

..... below a few behind the scene shots taken during filming for History Channel in Cambodia about destruction and protection of cultural heritages.












Sunday, February 26, 2017

Contemplative Holocaust short film


70 years after the Nazism far Right is rising and anti-Semitism is back in Europe. As a "Visual Artist" used my camera to make two Short Contemplative Holocaust Films to educate the younger generation and make them think. I try to reach as many people I can especially but not only Art film and Slow Cinema lovers. I decided to choose real historical locations because I wanted my audience not simple just watch my film, but deeply think about what the Holocaust was in Europe during the WWII. Though the murdered people "many of them were children" not appearing directly in the film but indirectly their spirits and memories are there. Their bodies were shot into the icy Danube River or gassed in the morgue beside the crematorium.


These two films paying tributes to the Victims using an unusual film language. I hope my film can reach different nations and generations and arouse the interest especially for the the younger generations and they start asking questions from their parents, grandparents, relatives, etc... where were they and what did they do during the WWII. There are still a lot of secrets and taboos families don't talk about. I believe if people creates taboos around everything that was linked to the Nazism, they cut themselves off from their own history. Keeping these taboos unrevealed, helps those who are trying to falsify history and dividing nations for their own political interest. On the other hand all the people have to understand what Jewish people went through and why most of the survivors don't want to talk about.

Nationalism, xenophobia and antisemitism are raising again and we are All responsible to Stop it.

My first film "Requiem for the Forgottens" was filmed at the Danube bank in Budapest nearby the Hungarian Parliament. The shoes on the river bank are important elements of the film while pointing toward the huge chunk of floating ice.

"The Shoes on the Danube Bank is a memorial in Budapest, Hungary honor the people (mainly Budapest Jews) who were killed by fascist Arrow Cross militiamen in Budapest during World War II. They were ordered to take off their shoes, and were shot at the edge of the water so that their bodies fell into the river and were carried away. It represents their shoes left behind on the bank."

The second film "Fear" was entirely filmed in Auschwitz I. and Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland. It's a "Trilogy". I used "No camera movement" and long takes as in all of my previous films. It was minus six (-6) degrees Celsius outside and heavy wind. The film footage contains the outside view of two Crematoriums on both locations and also the view of the farther part of Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, nearby the so called "Mexico section". I tried to shoot discreetly to connect the past to the present via my camera lens. The air was crisp and cool and strong wind was blowing across the snow covered Death Camp.

The first part of trilogy is about "Crematorium I. in Auschwitz". The second "middle" part was filmed in Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. You can see the chimneys of the destroyed barracks through the electric barbed wires. The last part of the film is focusing on the Crematorium II. in Auschwitz-Birkenau. The sky is blue like probably at that time when the camp was operated under the German Nazi regime, but you can still feel the burnt smell of the bodies and hear the endless screaming of the people via the whistling wind.

Though in the previous years I visited the Yad Vashem, The World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Israel and even the Killing Fields and S21 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, making the decision to film in Auschwitz was not an easy task. That was the first time I visited the death camp. I tried to light a candle but was very windy, so I mourned for the Six Millions of Jews and for All the victims of the Nazism.

Click here to watch Requiem for the Forgottens  

 and click here to watch"Fear" 

Monday, February 13, 2017

Frozen souls / photo were taken in Auschwitz-Birkenau

I took this photo inside Auschwitz-Birkenau nearby Crematorium II. about one of the frozen pit where Nazis shot Jews after they were force to dig their own graves.


Frozen Souls

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Writing synopsis

I just finished writing a synopsis actually the"first episode" of a trilogy. The scenes will contain minimal dialogue and/or narrative, slow acting and more visual. The stories in a nutshell: The first episode is about a man who lost his will to live after his family died in a car accident. The second episode is about the last day of an old painter and the third one is about a lonely disabled or blind woman and her dog.