Screened as part of NZIFF 2013

Ilo Ilo 2013

Ba ma bu zai jia

Directed by Anthony Chen

Winner of the Camera d’Or for Best First Feature at Cannes this year, Anthony Chen’s finely observed family drama pivots on the relationship between a wilful small Singaporean Chinese boy and his Filipina nanny

Singapore In English, Mandarin and Tagalog with English subtitles
99 minutes DCP

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Ang Hwee Sim
,
Anthony Chen
,
Wahyuni A. Hadi

Photography

Benoit Soler

Editors

Hoping Chen
,
Joanne Cheong

Production designer

Michael Wee

Sound

Zhe Wu

With

Yeo Yann Yann (Hwee Leng, mother)
,
Tian Wen Chen (Teck, father)
,
Angeli Bayani (maid)
,
Koh Jia Ler (Jiale)
,
Peter Wee (discipline master)
,
Jo Kukathas (school principal)
,
Naomi Toh (Mrs Ong, English teacher)
,
Delwin Neo (fat boy)
,
Jo Kwek (Lisa, mother’s colleague)
,
Gim Goh (Jimmy Goh)
,
Pamela Wildheart (salon owner)

Festivals

Cannes (Directors’ Fortnight) 2013

Awards


Caméra D’Or (Best First Film), Cannes Film Festival 2013

Elsewhere

Winner of the Caméra d’Or for Best First Feature at Cannes this year, Anthony Chen’s finely observed family drama pivots on the relationship between a wilful small Singaporean Chinese boy and his Filipina nanny. The impact of the 1997 Asian financial crisis is pushing hard on the Lim household and both parents are working long hours in precarious jobs to maintain their modest apartment lifestyle. Teresa is hired to take care of young Jiale, whose stunningly bad attitude clearly owes something to tensions at home – and just as clearly feeds right back into them. Teresa has her work cut out. 

The mutating truce she strikes with the young hellion is never quite what you expect. The film’s lifelike absence of easy resolutions makes its cumulative emotional impact all the stronger. The performances are flawless and beautifully nuanced. Every dysfunctional moment in this pressured family feels dead right – and completely understandable.

“To tell his story of a not so far away past that says a lot about the present, Anthony Chen has chosen to focus on characters with a very welcome sense of ‘democracy.’ As Renoir’s motto went: ‘Everyone has his own reasons.’ The father looks weak? He has the bravery to accept any job that comes. The mother nags more than the average? Despair and anxiety lead her to well-intentioned illusions…

In a time when ‘vintage’ has affected so many productions, making most look like trendy antique shops on screen, Anthony Chen’s reconstruction of the late 90s, thanks to his sense of colors, locations and faces, feels like a heartfelt, lived-through vision.” — Marie-Pierre Duhamel, Mubi.com