City
Epaper

Pawo Choyning Dorji says his Oscar submission ‘The Monk and The Gun’ celebrates innocence

By IANS | Updated: November 20, 2023 11:50 IST

Mumbai, Nov 19 Bhutanese director-writer Pawo Choyning Dorji, whose film ‘The Monk and The Gun’ is the official ...

Open in App

Mumbai, Nov 19 Bhutanese director-writer Pawo Choyning Dorji, whose film ‘The Monk and The Gun’ is the official submission for the Oscars from Bhutan, has said that the film is a celebration of innocence.

Pawo, who recently attended the MAMI Mumbai Film Festival, also mentioned that the film is a reflection of the Bhutanese culture which suddenly opened up overnight to the rest of the world, which resulted in the western nations implying that innocence is ignorance but the film makes a clear demarcation between innocence and ignorance.

The director said: “‘The Monk and The Gun’ is a celebration of the quality of innocence. A lot of the audiences when viewing the film get the feeling that it is a story of innocence which is synonymous with Bhutanese culture. It is a very foundational quality of our tradition and culture. When we as a country and as a culture opened up to the outside world overnight, television, democracy, internet, all came at the same time.”

He continued: “As we embraced that, we are suddenly told by the modern world, by the western world that being innocent is being ignorant. With this film I wanted to show that there is a difference between innocence and ignorance.”

Sharing his thoughts on what global audiences are connecting with the most with the film, Pawo said: “When I speak with people about the films I make, what I always say is that I can take something that is very exotic, like Bhutanese stories, and I can tell it with the experience that I’ve had growing up in different cultures and share the story through a medium through which it becomes relatable to the rest of the world. For example, ‘The Monk and The Gun’, it is very interesting because I have travelled with this film. American audiences seem to connect with the political aspects of the story.”

“When the film goes to a country like Korea, they relate to the cultural aspect of the story. When it comes to India, you could see that Indians connect with the film in their own way. The spiritual aspect maybe, with the innocence aspect of it. When the film screened in Bhutan, a lot of the audience were crying because it was a reminder for them of what we went through and they could relate to the impact on change on society, on family, on how the king willingly gave up his power. A lot of people got very emotional and that’s the magic of cinema, you know. It can connect with the audiences in such different ways,” he added.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentTania reveals what her last 3 months looked like post attack on her father

NationalYouTuber Mari Das arrested in Chennai over remarks on TN stampede; police intensify social media crackdown

TechnologyIPOs worth Rs 28,000 crore to hit Indian primary market next week

Other SportsImpossible to have three captains for three formats: Agarkar on Gill's ODI captain appointment

BusinessIPOs worth Rs 28,000 crore to hit Indian primary market next week

International Realted Stories

InternationalUAE presents 'Mother of the Nation 50:50 Vision' at 10th UN Global Forum on Gender Statistics in Georgia

InternationalNew ISI blueprint: Pakistan handles Kashmir, Bangladesh to take aim at rest of India

InternationalIndia, Bhutan hold talks on trade, connectivity and people-to-people ties

InternationalWitkoff key driving force behind Trump's Gaza peace plan: Putin's special envoy

InternationalUS officials deny rumors of troops returning to Afghanistan, reject claims on Bagram airbase