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Filmstill An Asian Ghost Story

An Asian Ghost Story

An Asian Ghost Story
Bo Wang
International Competition Documentary Film 2023
Documentary Film
Hong Kong,
Netherlands
2023
37 minutes
Cantonese,
English
Subtitles: 
English

Narrated by the incarnate ghost of a deceased real hair donor. In the post-war era, the export of real hair wigs contributed to Asia’s economic development, with Hong Kong as a major hub. In its heyday in the 1960s, “Asian real hair” was popular with wealthy U.S. women, but then the USA imposed an embargo on the product, now classified as “communist hair”. This is where the intricate and innovatively realised story begins: Starting with complex economical and sociopolitical contexts, it weaves a thread that runs through various historical and dreamlike staged levels.

Hong Kong was and is a space of in-between-ness – between East and West, between communism and capitalism. Perhaps that is why there are so many spooks in the city, one protagonist speculates. Just like the well-travelled ghost, an eternally wandering entity and contemporary witness of an imperial and colonialist past.

Annina Wettstein

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Bo Wang
Script
Bo Wang
Cinematographer
Yavuz Selim Isler, Fai Wan
Editor
Bo Wang
Producer
Ruoyao Jane Yao, Jia Zhao
Sound
Franco van der Linde
Sound Design
Jeroen Goeijers
Narrator
Jia Zhao, Hamza Junaid, Tommy Tse
Winner of: Golden Dove Short Film (International Competition Documentary Film)
Zwei tätowierte Hände mit dunkel lackierten Fingernägeln tippen auf einer Computertastatur.

Exit

Documentary Film
Germany,
Norway,
Sweden
2018
80 minutes
Subtitles: 
English

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Producer
Eirin Gjørv
Director
Karen Winther
Music
Michel Wenzer
Cinematographer
Peter Ask
Editor
Robert Stengård
Script
Karen Winther
Sound
Yvonne Stenberg, Gisle Tveito
When Karen Winther comes across a few old boxes during a move she finds herself confronted with her past. On top are some swastika stickers, next to a tape labelled “Blitz” and “Hits”, and a lot of stuff decorated with the imperial eagle. Twenty years ago she joined a right-wing extremist organisation in Norway, looking for adventure and like-minded people. “It’s embarrassing to look at,” she comments in the voice over.

“Exit” is her film, her story, and yet the plot soon points in other directions, refuses to be constrained by its own structure. Winther travels to the US to meet women who also used to move in right-wing extremist circles. She sits in the car with a former left-wing extremist activist, talking about a formative encounter many years ago. She meets Ingo Hasselbach, “The Führer of Berlin”, whose career in the East German neo-Nazi scene is the subject of Winfried Bonengel’s film “Führer Ex”. And she meets a former jihadist who served a sentence in a Paris prison. In addition to surprisingly similar motivations and experiences, what they all have in common are the difficulties caused by their “Exits” – feelings of guilt, but also threats from still active members.

Carolin Weidner


Awarded with the Goethe-Institut Documentary Film Prize, the Young Eyes Film Award and the Gedanken-Aufschluss Prize from the Jury of juvenile and yound adult prisoners of JSA Regis-Breitingen