In celebration of the diverse voices and stories of underrepresented
communities, Netflix organized its first Asia-Pacific screening and panel
discussion titled “My Story, Our Story” to showcase programs that have been
supported through the Netflix Fund for Creative Equity. Since its inception in
2021, the fund has empowered more than 150 filmmakers in the region to tell
their stories, including the three short films screened at the event in Bangkok
last Thursday.
Dear You, a Thai drama about a single mother coping with the COVID-19
pandemic by Muendaw Kamontum, was funded by Purin Pictures’ Short Film Camp
supported by Netflix in 2021.
Soul-Kadhi, a fantasy drama that explores the uncanny bond between a
daughter-in-law and her mother-in-law by Sameeha Sabnis, was funded in 2022 by
Take Ten, a short film workshop and competition by Netflix and Film Companion
in India.
Pao’s Forest by Nguyen Pham Thanh Dat, which follows a Mong man torn
between love and family responsibilities, won a short film competition powered
by Netflix’s Cinema Beauty – Vietnam Creative Economy Grant in 2022.
Attended by more than 90 guests, including creatives, members of
LGBTQIA+ organizations and program partners, the half-day event featured a
dance performance and a Pride Month screening of All in My Family, a 2019
documentary about the experiences of a gay Chinese-American director.
More than a gathering of like-minded industry folk, the event provided
a platform to discuss representation in the TV and film industry with Sameeha
Sabnis, director of Soul-Kadhi, filmmaker Keith Sicat, and Lee Chatametikool,
director of post-production SEA/Taiwan at Netflix.
When moderating the panel discussion, Amy Sawitta Lefevre, the
Asia-Pacific Head of External Affairs at Netflix, noted the historical absence
and misrepresentation of minority communities on screen.
“For decades, historically underrepresented communities were either
defined by a single story or worse, entirely absent from our screens,” she
said. “At Netflix, we believe that everyone deserves to see themselves
represented on screen, and we are committed to creating content that reflects
the diversity of our audience.”
At 23, Sabnis is well aware of the “immense responsibility” of
filmmakers to work together to bring alternative perspectives to the table. “As
filmmakers, we are in the business of generating empathy,” said the
Mumbai-based actor and director. “Seeing yourself represented makes you feel
that you are seen and are a part of the world around you. At the same time, it
has to be true representation and not just tokenism in front of the cameras,”
she added.
Sicat, the program director of Indiegenius, the first Philippine film
project lab funded by Netflix, explained: “When you have more people from those
communities behind the scenes, you are emancipating storytellers to tell their
own stories and it’s such a powerful way to open the world in that way.”
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