Film
festival director about censorship in Singapore
World
Socialist website
April 24, 2000
By
Richard Phillips
SINGAPORE,
which is one of Asia's most modern cities, has a promising arts scene with
several theatres, film production facilities, and a number of contemporary
galleries and art museums. The island republic has one of the highest computer-to-household
ratios (45 to 100) in the world and Internet use is extensive-the highest
in Asia. According to some predictions, every household, school and library
will have high-speed broadband access to the Internet by the end of this
year.
These
developments are sharply at odds with the ruling People's Action Party
(PAP) government and its stifling restrictions on democratic rights and
civil liberties. The Undesirable Publications Act and the Films Act, allows
the government to ban, seize, or censor any written, visual, or musical
materials it perceives threaten the stability of the State, are pro-communist,
promote drug use or contravene public morals. Naturally, films selected
for the annual international festival come up against the country's strict
censorship laws.
This
year was no exception. Two weeks after Singapore government officials pledged
greater artistic freedom, censors banned Lies, a new film by Korean director
Chang Sun-woo about a high school girl's affair with a middle-aged sculptor,
and insisted on three cuts to In the Realm of the Senses, Oshima Nagisa's
1976 classic film about a sadomasochistic
relationship between a young female innkeeper and her employer.
Film festival organisers decided to withdraw Nagisa's classic from the
festival, after the Films Appeal Committee rejected their submission that
it be shown uncut.
Philip
Cheah, director of the Singapore International Film Festival and a leading
member of the Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema
(NETPAC), explained to the WSWS why festival organisers decided
to withdraw the film.
"In
the Realm of the Senses is a 24-year-old classic. It is discussed all the
time in film literature and to show this film cut at a festival would be
a travesty and not fair to history. We withdrew the film in order to preserve
the integrity of the film and the festival."
Cheah
briefly outlined Singapore's film classification system and the problems
it created for organisers.
"Since
1991 the censors have introduced a rating system. There is PG (Parental
Guidance) films and R(A), the category of significance. When the R(A) rating
system was introduced it allowed those aged 18 years and above to watch
more adult type films. But then there was a huge public furore that year
and so the government revised the rating and lifted it from 18 to 21years
old.
"The
rating system is important for us at the festival because prior to 1991
lots of films were cut and we had a very tough time. The filmmakers were
naturally very upset and the distributors were reluctant to show their
films in Singapore.
"My
most memorable experience was with Kira Muratova, the Russian director.
She came to Singapore before 1991 and cuts were demanded in her film the
Asthenic Syndrome. Muratova was very angry and explained that she had fought
censorship all her life in Russia and shouldn't have to come to a foreign
country and allow her film to be censored. So I told her that I agreed
and we withdrew her film that year.
"In
theory the introduction of the rating system allows us to show films uncut
at the festival. Of course this is not always the case. In general it has
been better for us with the introduction of the rating system but I really
feel that when you have the R(A) rating, even in the public cinemas, films
shouldn't be cut. Audiences in this rating are 21 and over, they are adults
and therefore should be able to take responsibility for what they see.
"Today
if for some reason the censors want to cut a festival film we, as a rule,
refuse and withdraw the film. But the next stage for us, I think, is to
have the Film Festival exempted completely from censorship. This is what
we need to work towards."
I
asked Cheah how the censorship code impacted on artists and filmmakers
in Singapore and the overall cultural atmosphere.
"You
have a situation," he replied, "where art has not caught up with
life. Usually art reflects life but if so much censorship is taking place,
then art doesn't reflect life anymore. Life is happening but art lags behind.
This kind of control impedes artistic and cultural development."
Cheah
pointed to the contradiction between government censorship and the artistic
freedom and open information provided by the Internet: "At this point
the Internet is a liberating force in that it is still not controllable.
Although there are signs that it may be brought under control and you see
all these big mergers and joint ventures and so on. If those guys have
control of this market then the differentiation that now exists will be
lost.
"It
is apparent to me today that a lot of the media is not representing or
presenting the sharp critical and cultural edge that it should and most
of the best of journalism today is on the fringe of the official media.
I've noticed that all the best rock critics have started their own e-zines
and this is the way it is going. In the media it is all happening on the
fringe and this is why the Internet is so interesting to me. You can be
on the fringe on the Net but your level of access is much better than if
you are in printed form."
Returning
to the difficulties facing filmmakers and cinema audiences in Singapore,
Cheah explained that the festival provided an alternative to the mass-market
films. "The reason why we put so much emphasis on our Asian program
at the festival is because this is something that Asians don't see very
much of.
"When
Asia began to get multiplex cinemas, and this represented the arrival of
globalisation in cinema, only certain kinds of movies started entering
the scene. The early promise of the multiplex system that you would get
more variety because there were more screens was an illusion. It wasn't
true at all. What you now have is all these screens showing exactly the
same kind of thing.
"In
the end film festivals have become the art cinemas. In fact, all the art
cinemas in Singapore have died-they have all gone in the last three years.
Our
festival is the last place in Singapore where you can see a real variety
of decent movies from around the world. We are the last holdout."