Event Info
Date and time
Saturday 05 October 2024 | 6:30pm |
From Oscar-nominated director Pawo Choyning Dorji comes his latest captivating film, set in the weeks before Bhutan's historic first democratic election in 2006.
It’s a moment of upheaval in this highly religious state, a former monarchy, and trouble brews when an elderly monk purchases two guns…
Is “political freedom” worth the cost of familial or social discord? When Bhutan’s king abdicates in favour of democratic reform, a strange series of events unfolds, where the old and the new collide in wondrous fashion. When young monk Tashi’s lama (Buddhist master) asks him to procure a pair of guns in advance of their country’s first mock election – to “set it right”, whatever that means – he doesn’t ask questions, he simply strolls off into the unspoiled countryside towards neighbouring Ura village. One problem: Tashi has never seen a gun before!
Balancing the contrasts between tradition and modernization, city and rural life, this film weaves a colourful tapestry of Bhutan’s relatively recent democratic transition, gilded all round with a subtle comedic edge. Forget understanding the electoral process, bemused villagers struggle to even fathom the need for the proposed changes in government, while a confused American arms dealer may get more (and less) than he bargains for. Dorji’s (Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom) satire may be gentle rather than sharp, yet The Monk and the Gun effectively skewers “democracy” and “modernity” as Western cultural constructs; exploring how an indigenous approach to applying these concepts might be taken, carrying culture and values intact into the future. — Jacob Powell
Winner of the Special Jury Prize at the Rome Film Festival and the Audience Choice Award at the Vancouver International Film Festival.
Saturday 05 October 2024 | 6:30pm |