Saturday, March 22, 2014

Sayang Disayang official trailer

If music be the food of love, play on;
Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting,
The appetite may sicken, and so die.
[Shakespeare]

Announcing the official trailer for my debut feature film, Sayang Disayang.



Sayang Disayang will screen at the 4th edition of the Southeast Asian Film Festival. I am honoured that the film has been selected to close the festival. The screening took place on 4th May 2014 | 5.30pm | Singapore Art Museum. This will be its Singapore premiere.

UPDATE: The film opens on Singapore's National Day (Aug2014). Get your tickets at www.bytes.sg

Synopsis #sayangMovie
Live-in nurse Murni works for Pak Harun, a lonely and bitter elderly man who continually harangues his caregiver. Murni tries to cook a Sambal Goreng dish that is exactly like the one cooked by Harun's late wife but success seems to elude her. Despite this, she sings all day in the kitchen, which serves only to irritate Pak Harun further. What is the elusive ingredient that can unlock the tension between Murni and Pak Harun, remedy these damaged hearts and bring them together to sing the same tune?

Statement
I want to tell a story affecting all Singaporeans and the Southeast Asian region, especially of the elderly and the domestic caregivers by observing the dynamics where families are increasingly depending on the “outsider” to take care of their elderly parents while the respective adult children are out at work or totally absent in the household.

It is also to celebrate the various ethnicities that define the Nusantara (Malay Archipelago) in Southeast Asia - we may share the same food and evergreen songs, but our perceptions to one another differ because of the language, geography and (cultural and national) politics.

In developing the theme for Sayang Disayang, I used the Sambal Goreng. Sambal Goreng is a signature Javanese dish made of the chilli condiment, or sambal and traditionally is stir-fried, or goreng, with livers and gizzards. Like many dishes of the Nusantara, flavour is achieved by the individual's preference and the amount of ingredients is never exact, but usually estimated and simply thrown in.

Growing up, I watched a lot of Malay films by legendary filmmakers such as P. Ramlee, Hussein Haniff and M. Amin whose socially-aware films had influences from classic Bollywood films, where music and dance are used as segues in their narrative. Sayang Disayang, also pays homage to these film genres - but with a contemporary twist.

Kindly visit Sayang Disayang on facebook for details on this film's journey.

Friday, January 3, 2014

The LOVE Trilogy


Take away love and our earth is a tomb. ~ Robert Browning

The LOVE Trilogy comprises of the films LOST SOLE, à la folie and AMEEN آمين. Each of these films addresses the universal theme of love. The residing characters echo various interpretations, personifications and manifestations of love.

Ten years have passed since my dad, Haji Olek bin Bakar left us in the February of 2004. His passing inspired me to write a short film about his real-life experience when he was leaving the mosque after a Friday noon solat. This inspiration had led me to write about LOST SOLE that eventually became my first short film. This film was also produced about 10 years after I left film school. I have been working on television making programmes of various genres prior to this film. Subsequently, the 'success' of LOST SOLE re-ignited the filmmaker bug in me. Not one to be satisfied with just doing television, the subsequent divergence to return to filmmaking has also been a self-imposed personal challenge if I still have that elusive cinematic eye. After all, I was a trained as a filmmaker.

I have decided to put these short films online to coincide with the completion of my first full-length, feature film, Sayang Disayang, in late 2013. It is also to commemorate the 10th anniversary of my dad's passing that triggered me to return to filmmaking. Sayang Disayang marks the beginning of another phase.

LOST SOLE was inspired from several personal experiences. When I was about 8 years old, my late father arrived home from a Friday noon solat at the mosque bare-footed. The thought of him walking home with no footwear for about 2 kilometers from Masjid Assyakirin, the nearest mosque, awed me as a child. The image of him at the house doorway looking exhausted, frustrated and helpless inspired me. As I grow older, I discovered that missing footwear at the mosque is a regular occurrence and often wonder the circumstances that would have allowed such occurrences in the "house of God". LOST SOLE was filmed in 2005, ie post-9/11, at time when I realized having Mohamad in my name - unfortunately - stood as a dangerous "badge of honour" at airport immigrations in western nations. I faced irony head-on as the profiling made me fear for my being and getting anxious with the western notion of freedom


à la folie "like crazy", is a story of love, manipulation and revenge that was loosely inspired by the classical Ramayana text. It was produced from my desire for a less structured filmmaking style. I had just completed 6 months of shoot for a television drama series - a process that was largely structured by the needs of commercial television and scripted narrative. I chose to deconstruct the Ramayana - the greatest love story ever told - and jazz it up with rock-and-roll as the catharsis. With just a concept, a camera and no script, I devised with my actors over 2 nights. Furthermore, this process allowed me to be in a filming technique where I can be intimate with my actors. In tune with the origins of the original text, Singapore's Little India district at Serangoon Road became the set-up for this improvisation.

As a child, I attended six years of Islamic madrasah education while concurrently attending secular education at a public primary school. Subsequently, I attended secondary education at an all-boys, Methodist missionary school. Upon reflection, I feel blessed to have the privilege not many boys at that age could experience with these diverse education. I remember that in all these institutions, a consistent religious strain persisted - to love a fellow human being and accept one another unconditionally. In classes at both institutions, I often pondered if sexuality and spiritually can co-exist, while watching the lovely Ustazahs (female Islamic teachers) recited the Quran verses and then listening to the very melodic hymns during weekly chapel services. It was with these ideas in mind that the concept for the final film AMEEN آمين was realised.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

#sayangMovie first award



They say that good things come to those who wait.

Truly, after more than 5 years in film process hell hole, this award came as bittersweet victory for my debut feature film Sayang Disayang. If you have been following my thoughts throughout the journey of the film process on this blog, you might have sense how this little gift at the end of 2013 came as a huge sparkle. This is only the beginning of Sayang Disayang's new phase.

This award is a testament to the perseverance and will to tell an important story of the human condition.

The films showcased in the main competitive section at the festival are multi-genre with respective diverse narratives. All the films are exceptional in their own way. I came to the SalaMindanaw International Film Festival 2013 with zero expectations other than wanting to tell a story affecting all Singaporeans and this region, especially of the elderly and the domestic care. It is also to celebrate the various ethnicities that define the Nusantara. We may share the same food and songs, but our perceptions to one another differ because of the language, geography and (cultural and national) politics.

This is the first major film award for Sayang Disayang. I hope that it will open more doors for the film to be seen by more international audiences because of its universal appeal.

Sayang Disayang has a unique Singaporean voice that needs to be heard to the rest of the world.

Cheers to 2014 and beyond!

BERITA HARIAN (4 Dec 2013, Singapore Press Holding)

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

'Sayang Disayang' in the Philippines

So yeah, after more than 5 years, my debut feature, Sayang Disayang, will have its World Premiere at the SalaMindanaw International Film Festival 26 - 30 Nov 2013. It will compete with 7 other feature films in the main section for Best Feature and the NETPAC award. 

This article is reproduced from SPH's Berita Minggu (10 Nov 2013).

POTENSI FILEM MELAYU SINGAPURA
'Sayang Disayang' di Filipina
Oleh HARYANI ISMAIL


PEMBIKIN filem setempat mana yang enggan hasil titik peluh mereka ditayang di negara sendiri?

Bagaimanapun, selagi pengendali pawagam masih beranggapan filem-filem tempatan tiada ruang masuk pawagam kerana kurang nilai komersialnya, maka hajat itu terbiar tidak kesampaian.

Yang mampu pengarah filem berwibawa seperti Sanif Olek lakukan buat masa ini adalah menyertakan filem-filemnya ke pesta filem antarabangsa.

Ternyata, penat lelah Sanif, 43 tahun, menyiapkan filem Sayang Disayang yang dibintangi pelakon prolifik dari seberang, Datuk Rahim Razali, berbaloi.

Filem yang turut dijayakan Alin Mosbit, Rafaat Hamzah dan Asnida Daud itu terpilih sebagai salah sebuah daripada lapan filem utama yang dipertandingkan dalam Pesta Filem Antarabangsa SalaMindanaw di kota General Santos, Filipina.

Sebuah lagi filem Singapura, Liberta, arahan Kan Lume, juga terpilih bersama filem-filem dari Filipina, Kazakhstan, Thailand dan Sri Lanka.

Ini kali pertama Pusat Kesenian Filem Socsksargen dengan kerjasama Pusat Imej Bergerak Mindanao menganjurkan pesta filem dari 26 hingga 30 November ini.

Ketika ditemui Berita Minggu baru-baru ini, Sanif tampak lega bahawa filem yang diusahakan sejak 2009 dan pernah tergendala pembikinannya kerana tidak cukup dana akhirnya ditayang dan dipertandingkan.

Beliau mengharapkan filem itu juga akan mengembara jauh seperti filem pertamanya, Lost Sole, yang ditayangkan di Amerika Selatan, Amerika Utara, Australia, Eropah dan Afrika.

"Saya terharu filem ini dipilih dalam kalangan ribuan filem serata dunia. Tentunya impian semua pembikin filem adalah melihat filem mereka ditayangkan di pawagam setempat.

"Cuma kesukarannya terasa sebab ia filem Melayu. Timbul juga tanggapan, selagi ia belum mengembara ke pesta filem besar-besaran seperti Cannes atau memenangi anugerah antarabangsa, ia kurang berpotensi ditayang di pawagam setempat," jelasnya.

Ditanya apakah kemajuan filem Melayu setempat juga dihambat dek pendirian penonton yang sudah terbiasa dengan filem Hollywood, Sanif tertawa dan berkata:

"Kebanyakan warga Singapura melihat filem sebagai satu unsur hiburan sahaja tanpa mementingkan nilai-nilai kebudayaan.

"Justeru, mereka puas setakat menonton DVD atau YouTube. Pembikinan filem macam proses menghasilkan bahan bacaan - ada tabloid dan buku sastera.

"Orang lebih suka tabloid yang padat dengan bahan gosip yang santai dan ringan berbanding buku sastera yang menuntut mereka berfikir tentang plot, persoalan dan perutusan."

Sayang Disayang, misalnya, lebih seperti bahan sastera kerana mengupas isu-isu nilai kekeluargaan dan penjagaan warga senja oleh orang yang tiada kaitan darah dengannya.

Justeru, apa lagi yang diperlukan bagi membangkitkan semula industri filem Melayu agar tidak tenggelam ditelan zaman?

Kata Sanif: "Pertama, seandainya filem Melayu dianggap sebagai filem Singapura dan bahasa tidak dijadikan isu.

"Kedua, alangkah baiknya jika ada usaha serantau mempertandingkan filem-filem Nusantara (Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapura dan Brunei), semacam Anugerah Planet Muzik (APM), yang dapat menjana semangat pembikin filem ini."


Monday, September 16, 2013

Social engagement..?


On short film 'competitions'. I was just having a conversation with a friend from the industry last weekend and the topic of short film competitions came up. I have been noticing how, in the last 2-3 years, short film competitions have mushroomed in Singapore. Many of these have been organized by local corporations/organisations and interestingly, many of these organisations are statutory boards.

In the last 6 years I have been invited to judge (which I hugely appreciate and deeply humbled) diverse film competitions organized by various bodies and for two consecutive years, this include one organized by a very large organisation. We live in very interesting times and it is interesting to watch how these events that effect us as Singaporeans are being translated into the visual medium. The intention of accepting these gigs has been purely to look out for new voices in the medium and identify diverse perspectives.

However I have noticed a few points…

It seems suspect that statutory boards are organizing these competitions. I’m not denying that these competitions are good at filtering the good storytellers who tell their respective stories best via the visual medium. However perhaps in the long run, it would be detrimental to the art of storytelling itself. It might remove the joy of telling stories and making films about them.

I wonder when The Ugly Duckling, The Emperor’s New Clothes or The Princess And The Pea were conceptualized, would Hans Christian Andersen be good enough for competitions. I would have imagined if Snow White & Seven Dwarves failed a storytelling competition, would The Brothers Grimm have lived to tell Cinderella and Little Red Riding Hood or even Sleeping Beauty?

Consider this, in the last couple of years I have been invited by several organisations to conceptualise short films based on their corporate brief. These films basically need to fulfill certain checkpoints of these respective briefs. These short fims are not the hardsell type of messages but essentially corporate messages supposed to be hidden wrapped in subtle emotive, human stories. In due course, these processes have spun into drawn-out processes where the journeys of characters are amended at the whim and fancy of those folks in suits and ties. The process would have been much enriching if the folks assigning these projects themselves have knowledge about the filmmaking language.

Organising short film competitions by engaging the public to fulfill corporate KPIs is not healthy in the long run. There are legit advertising and PR agencies to voice the KPIs of these respective bodies. “Social Engagement” has been overly used these days and it’s not healthy to get the public to participate in their corporate messages on the disguise of public “engagement”. If you want a succinct corporate voice, you will have to spend that six-to-seven dollar figure budget - not some glass/easily-corrosive metal trophies.

Films essentially come with that emotive punchlines. Each filmmaker has different life journeys which shaped his world view.

Friday, September 13, 2013

A very special #Eid #telemovie


I’ve never considered myself a pro at making ole sappy sandiwara dramas, especially for Hari Raya. I have always wondered why most Hari Raya dramas telecast during the joyous season need to be all sad and filled with tears.

But hey there’s always a first time for everything.

The moment arrived when I was tasked to direct a telemovie for Eidul Fitri this year. Never one to turn down challenges, I grabbed the opportunity to do this special drama.

But perhaps before you jump to conclusions, this drama is indeed special.

If Christmas has It’s A Wonderful Life, a very special film about redemption, Eidul Fitri 2013 has a special treat.

The drama I was called to direct is called 'Raya Bersama...'. While studying the script, I reflect upon the essence of Hari Raya, especially among the Malays. Besides victory at self-restrain against all sinful activities during Ramadhan, it is tradition to seek forgiveness from one another. To an outsider, it might seem unconventional to literally seek forgiveness, ie, to go on one's knees et al, but it seems natural to do such during the festive season. For many, it would be an emotionally-charged occasion to observe among families, siblings and relatives. Hari Raya is also an opportunity to return to family values.

Thus I focused at those elements to make this Hari Raya telemovie special. Your tears will not be in vain.

'Raya Bersama...' was first telecast on 14 August 2013, 8.30pm on MediaCorp's Suria channel.

Please watch it. It's in the Malay language, no subtitles. It's not a difficult programme to follow after all it's television. Furthermore, I was taught in film school that a good film do not really need any dialogues. Let me know how many boxes of tissues you've dispensed by the end of the telemovie


Monday, September 9, 2013

Dear... am I, really?


I’ve been pondering on this situation very much the last couple of years – in my capacity as “director for hire”, meeting many producers of production houses and being told I’m too expensive to hire.

Does my glorious portfolio accumulated since 1996 suggest that my rates should go the opposite way? Is this the state of the television creative industry in Singapore? Or perhaps many production houses out there are run by business managers more intent to beef up their bottomlines than pursuing high programme content with real production values? Hopefully many are not resorting to wide-eyed interns to justify their costs (as mentioned in my previous posts). To say that I’m disturbed is an understatement.

It irks me more that my "costs" are mentioned and circulated falsely within the industry. Where is the decency to pick up that phone and negotiate? Just in case you are not aware, I may do pro bono work if I feel strongly about the cause. 

Let’s think about ex·pen·sive /ikˈspensiv/

When does an item or product become expensive? Here is a very interesting article about products and the assignment of their respective prices from Harvard Business Review.

Now before I go further, here's my standard professional bio (mid 2013), albeit a brief one.

A graduate of Film & Media Studies dept (Film, Sound & Video) from Ngee Ann Polytechnic and Media & Communications from Murdoch University in Perth, Australia, Sanif Olek is one of the most accomplished and versatile Singaporean-based, television and film director. Since 1996 Sanif received multiple ‘Best Director’, ‘Best Drama Series’, ‘Best Magazine Series’ awards for his television work (ie, Kaki Borak, 1988...Segaris Sinar, Ayah @ Rumah, Soo Lazat, etc). His films have been screened internationally at major film festivals, won a NETPAC film award and showcased at international museums, ie the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) New York, the Singapore Art Museum (SAM) and National Museum of Singapore (NAMoS). He works closely with the Singapore museums for commissioned works, residency and public outreach programmes. He is the head consultant at reeljuice, a collaborative creative agency actively promoting effective storytelling as means to enlighten the human condition. He is currently juggling between full-time commercial television work and lecturing. Sanif has just completed his debut feature film SAYANG DISAYANG, and completing another feature film, VOLUPTAS. 

It is odd to consider me expensive when television budgets have generally been raised. The programmes in the PSB funds have generally increased 3-5 fold within the last 5 years, yet I've quoted for a rather constant rate during the last 6 years for local television production. You might not be aware but most of the time, I'm responsible at improving on the original concepts, amending the scripts during filming day itself, repairing callsheets for APs during production and sitting-in during post-production (because many times the video editors these production houses have engaged are either overworked or creatively devoid of soul, or both).

…and oh, I should also add that I’m in this full time.

Furthermore I do not take up any other production on the side while being involved in an ongoing production. With all due respect to the other folks, kindly do not tag my rates to other directors who may be involved in filming as a sideline to their more lucrative 9 to 5 day jobs.

Also, may I add that it won't do any harm to the product if I choose to be hands-on. The results speak for itself.

Here's a thought - if you're gonna pay peanuts, you get monkeys.



The #sayangMovie completed.


In the morning of 30th May 2013, I posted the following tweets,
  
So yes, my first debut indie feature film, Sayang Disayang (previously called Ramuan Rahasia as its working title) is completed. Between the conception of the film in 2001, getting funding, yo-yo national film grant schemes, professional/personal learning curves, shifts in local film scene and 30th May 2013, it has been a long colourful *journey.

No additional filming was done, nor additional funding been received since the Konsert Ramuan fundraiser project in 2011 or efforts in online crowdfunding. My co-writer, Gene Sha Rudyn and myself relooked hard at the script and reworked a narrative outline without leaving out the magic we had set out to achieve when we first collaborated on the screenplay. But just before you jump to any conclusion, this exercise was more to refine the narrative, focussing on the characters and their human condition while keeping the essence of our story - than taking the easy way out to get it “over and done with”. Desperate times call for desperate measures.

In future when the opportunity permits itself, we shall share the journey of making the film itself.

The next phase of Sayang Disayang’s journey begins with getting this film - a voice from the center of the Nusantara - be seen by as many people as possible internationally. It will be another exciting journey.

For future updates, you might want to “Like” its page on facebook, follow it on twitter or search the web with the hashtag #sayangMovie.

*Kindly do “Ramuan Rahasia” in this blog’s search column to read all about this film’s bittersweet journey since 2009.


Thank you so much for your unequivocal support for this film, and for simply being there every step of the way. This means so much to everyone involved.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Perspectives updated

It's already coming to the second week of May and guess what?

I just realised I have not been working on any television projects since beginning of the year! There were the promising proposals and like many television projects in the past, these have either been postponed due to concept re-writing - could someone tell these know-all television executives to quit being clueless hesitant about what they think the audience really want to watch - or that the potential collaborators involved themselves been suddenly tied up in something else. I wouldn't call these hurdles but in my mind (after being in the industry for more than 15 years) consider these moments allow the ideas to mature.

Innovative series like LOST, GLEE or CSI wouldn't have seen the light of day if some gutsy television executives had not followed their winning instincts. And now you're getting television programmes (especially the local channels) which are either a copy or mutation of these. Furthermore, how long do you think your audience would buy into the so-called, reality/factual-formatted shows? Importantly, do popularity votes really translate into development of real talent?

And yet, you complain about falling ratings. You need to trust a writer for programme concepts that are more in tune with the ground. When your programmes start to look like the other programmes, something is wrong! One should innovate, not imitate. Before you programme your content, I would advise you put yourself as your own audience. Television audiences are becoming more discerning.

...Oh well, nothing's lost for me. I would rather focus my energy on ideas that appeal to the appreciative international audience.

So...

If you have been following my progress with two films, namely VOLUPTAS and RAMUAN RAHASIA, you might have wondered when I would eventually complete these.

My apologies but when it comes to my films, I have been a terrible, obnoxious perfectionist! You see, those of you who have worked with me would know that I would not do more than one television projects at one time, ie I would not undertake another television project while filming is still being done on another, or post-production is at its early stages for one. I truly respect my peers who can manage such multitasking but my priority and focus lies on one project at a time, most of the time.

Going back to my films - the self-imposed hibernation has allowed me to revisit these films. I have been watching a lot of films and stage plays. I have to admit it has not been easy to switch to the Cinematic Mode in between/after doing television for so long. VOLUPTAS was already shot and in the can since 2010 while RAMUAN RAHASIA was originally shot (and meant to be completed as a feature-length) in 2008. My last film, a short, was AMEEN and this was in 2010. And I've meant to release a film every 2 years - it is already 2013! I emphasize that I am very thankful to all the cast members (if you're reading this, you know who you are) who have been trusting in my vision and patient, for without them these films would not have been made.

But hey, perhaps it was a blessing that completion for these films are delayed. So much has passed since these films were shot. In the film VOLUPTAS, the cast members have gone on to win various industry awards and I should mention that they are now artistes at the pinnacle of their trades (and I'm very proud to have spotted them while no one was looking, so to speak), while in the film RAMUAN RAHASIA, I have gone through so much personal + professional awakenings and steep learning curves, among others. Heck, some ideas from the trailers were even erm, adapted! Nevertheless a good friend reminded me - they can take my ideas but they can never steal my soul - Ameen to that.

Getting creative gets better with age. These films deal with human relationships and I have to admit that returning to these films has been a sobering experience. These films would have been edited differently - I would have looked at human relationships in a different manner. The absence and then coming back has given me that third eye. At the moment I am looking at the footage as a creative editor than a filmmaker who would want to salvage all the footage shot. This might sound brutal - I know hehe!

In regards to RAMUAN RAHASIA, I have discussed with Gene Sha Rudyn, my co-writer, and we have decided to to rename the film SAYANG DISAYANG. Personally, this represents a new chapter, a fresh eye in storytelling, among other things. Furthermore SAYANG DISAYANG sounds rather, romantic and soulful. After all the hurdles, it gives me a chance to relook at the film in a new perspective.

At the moment I am giving myself deadlines - to finish VOLUPTAS and SAYANG DISAYANG in less than 2 weeks. Wish me luck!

Saturday, May 11, 2013

A moving tale


A 24 year old boy seeing out from the train’s window shouted... 

“Dad, look the trees are going behind!”

Dad smiled and a young couple sitting nearby, looked at the 24 year old’s childish behaviour with pity, suddenly he again exclaimed...

“Dad, look the clouds are running with us!”

The couple couldn't resist and said to the old man...

“Why don’t you take your son to a good doctor?”

The old man smiled and said...

“I did and we are just coming from the hospital, my son was blind from birth, he just got his eyes today.”

ما شاء الله