Mak CK | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Singaporean |
Other names | Mak CK |
Occupation | Filmmaker |
Years active | 2002-present |
Known for | One Taxi Ride, Buying Happiness, Little People Big Dreams |
Mak Chun Kit, or Mak CK, is a Singaporean filmmaker. He has filmed in 30 countries across 5 continents directing documentaries for international broadcasters including National Geographic, Discovery, History, Lifetime, BIO, Disney, MTV and Channel NewsAsia. [1] He had won multiple times at the New York Festivals Television and Film Awards, inclusive of a Documentary Gold World Medal for This Is What I Hear (2019) and a Best Direction Silver World Medal for China Close-up (2014). [2]
Mak's debut feature-length documentary film, The World's Most Fashionable Prison (2012), about fashion designer Puey Quiñones's rehabilitation programme in the Philippine's largest maximum security prison, was an official selection at Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival 2012. [3] It won the Audience Award for Documentary Film at the Lighthouse International Film Festival 2012, [4] and the Gold Kahuna Award for Documentary Film at the Honolulu Film Awards 2012. [5] Jennie Kermode of Eye For Film wrote, "For a film that contains so much suffering, with so many of its protagonists living grim lives, it's impressively buoyant." [6]
His second film, Little People Big Dreams (2014), about a little people theme park in China, [7] was regional broadcaster Channel NewsAsia's first original feature film production. [8] The documentary was selected for the 2014Sundance Institute Documentary Film Program | CNEX Workshop and Documentary Summit and won the Best Pitch Award at CNEX Chinese Doc Forum 2014. [9] It made its world premiere at the 2014 CPH:DOX Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival. The film made the Youth Jury shortlist at the 2015 Sheffield Doc/Fest. [10] It had also won various awards, such as the Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary Feature at the Lighthouse International Film Festival 2015, [11] Best Social Awareness Programme at the Asian Television Awards 2015, [12] and a Gold World Medal for Documentaries at the New York Festivals Television and Film Awards 2016. [13] Gary Arnold, President of Little People of America, wrote, "The beauty of Little People Big Dreams is that it shines a light on the dwarf theme park in China, and it lets the dwarf performers tell their own story, and it allows viewers to reach their own conclusion about the theme park."
Mak's third film, One Taxi Ride (2019), documents the journey of a male survivor in Mexico City who tries to reclaim his life 10 years after being sexually assaulted. It has screened at over 35 film festivals, [14] received 17 Best Film nominations and won 5 Jury Awards [15] including Premio Maguey Best Film Award [16] at the Guadalajara International Film Festival 2019. The film spearheads a social impact campaign to support male sexual assault survivors. It is used to educate prosecutors working with victims of sexual violence at the General Attorney's Office in Guatemala. An online petition addressed to the Mexican government has garnered over 3000 signatures to date. And the documentary secured distribution targeting universities, high schools, public libraries, community groups and governmental educational institutes across US and Canada. San Francisco Bay Times wrote, "this film is important and necessary" [17] and the Irish Film Critic called it, "an amazing documentary, so honest, real and powerful” [18] and “a deeply intimate documentary” according to GLAAD. [19]
In 2016, Mak started working on his next film, Buying Happiness, documenting his two-decade-long friendships with a few orphans whom he met through a volunteering stint in Tanzania. [20] He also started a crowdfunding campaign in May 2016 to raise money to support the projects of the orphans. Funds raised would go to the projects before covering the film production. [20] [21]
Year | Title | Ref |
---|---|---|
2012 | The World's Most Fashionable Prison | |
2014 | Little People Big Dreams | |
2019 | One Taxi Ride | |
TBC | Buying Happiness |
The International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) is the world's largest documentary film festival held annually since 1988 in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Sheffield DocFest is an international documentary festival and industry marketplace held annually in Sheffield, England.
Christian Frei is a Swiss filmmaker and film producer. He is mostly known for his films War Photographer (2001), The Giant Buddhas (2005) and Space Tourists (2009).
Hao Wu is a Chinese film director, producer and writer living in the US. Wu was also a blogger known as Tian Yi. He is otherwise best known for his feature-length documentary, People's Republic of Desire, winner of the Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 2018 South by Southwest, All in My Family, a Netflix Original Documentary, and 76 Days, about the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan, China. In 2021, Wu won a Peabody Award and a Primetime Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking for 76 Days.
Yan Yan Mak is a Hong Kong based female award-winning director.
Arthur Dong is an American filmmaker and author whose work centers on Asia America and anti-gay prejudice. He was raised in San Francisco, California, graduating from Galileo High School in June 1971. He received his BA in film from San Francisco State University and also holds a Directing Fellow Certificate from the American Film Institute Center for Advanced Film Studies. In 2007, SFSU named Dong its Alumnus of the year “for his continued success in the challenging arena of independent documentary filmmaking and his longstanding commitment to social justice."
Artists and Orphans: A True Drama is a 2001 American documentary film documenting a group of American artists traveling to the Republic of Georgia for an art festival, and their subsequent effort to provide humanitarian aid to a group of local orphans. Directed and written by Lianne Klapper McNally, upon its debut in 2001, the Daily Nexus described it as "heart-wrenching and eventually heart-warming," as well as "short, gritty and brilliantly scored." The film won Audience Choice Award for Best Documentary at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, and it was nominated for Best Documentary Short Subject at the 74th Academy Awards. Artists and Orphans had won multiple film festival awards by 2002, debuting on television several months later through WE tv.
Marshall Curry is an Oscar-winning American documentary director, producer, cinematographer and editor. His films include Street Fight, Racing Dreams, If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front, Point and Shoot, and A Night at the Garden. His first fiction film was the Academy Award-winning short film The Neighbors' Window (2019).
Najibullah Quraishi is an Afghan journalist and filmmaker.
A Long Haul is a 2010, documentary film about Montauk, NY charter boat captain Bart Ritchie and his struggles with the effects of a declining economy and governmental regulations on the fishing industry. The film was produced and directed by Nathaniel Kramer, who, in addition to being a filmmaker, is a photographer and recreational fisherman. The film has been well received, screening as an official selection in numerous festivals including: the Astoria/LIC International Film Festival, DocMiami International Film Festival, Connecticut Film Festival, EdinDocs, Lighthouse Film Festival, New Filmmakers New York, Philadelphia Independent Film Festival, The IndieFest, Accolade Festival, and won Best Documentary Short Film, Best Director, and Best Cinematography for a Short Documentary at the Los Angeles Movie Awards.
The After Party: The Last Party 3 is a 2011 documentary feature film about a cinematographer who is caught in a mass arrest while filming 2004 Republican National Convention protest activity near ground zero at the World Trade Center.
The DisOrient Film Festival or the DisOrient Asian and Pacific Islander American Film Festival of Oregon, is a film festival that was started in 2006 and is based in Eugene, Oregon. According to their website and mission statement, the organization is "a grassroots and volunteer-run film festival committed to presenting honest portrayals of the diversity of the Asian and Pacific Islander American experience" and when "selecting new and exciting films for our festival" the W.E.B. Du Bois standard of "for us, by us, or about us" is used to select recent and undistributed works. It was founded in 2006 by Jason Mak.
Lindsey Dryden is a British film director, producer and writer.
Ann Shin is a filmmaker and writer based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Human Harvest is a 2014 documentary film, directed by Vancouver filmmaker Leon Lee, which follows the investigative work by Canadian Nobel Peace Prize nominees David Matas and David Kilgour on whether and how state-run hospitals in China harvested and sold organs by killing tens of thousands of prisoners of conscience, mainly Falun Gong practitioners.
When I Walk is a 2013 autobiographical documentary film directed by Jason DaSilva. The film follows DaSilva during the seven years following his diagnosis of primary progressive multiple sclerosis. When I Walk premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, won Best Canadian Feature Documentary at the 2013 HotDocs Film Festival, and won an Emmy for the News & Documentary Emmy Award.
Nanfu Wang is a Chinese-born American filmmaker. Her debut film Hooligan Sparrow premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival and was shortlisted for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2017. Her second film, I Am Another You, premiered at SXSW Film Festival in 2017 and won two special jury awards, and her third film, One Child Nation, won the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary Feature at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival. Wang is the recipient of a 2021 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Filmmaking, from the Vilcek Foundation.
Mohammed Ali Naqvi is a Pakistani filmmaker based in New York City. He is known for documentaries which shed light on the socio political conditions of Pakistan, and feature strong characters on personal journeys of self-discovery. Notable films include Insha’Allah Democracy (2017), Among the Believers (2015), Shame (2007), and Terror’s Children (2003).
Period. End of Sentence. is a 2018 documentary short film directed by Rayka Zehtabchi about Indian women leading a quiet sexual revolution. The film stars Arunachalam Muruganantham, Shabana Khan, Gouri Choudari, Ajeya, and Anita. The documentary short follows a group of local women in Hapur, India, as they learn how to operate a machine that makes low-cost, biodegradable sanitary pads, which they sell to other women at affordable prices. This not only helps to improve feminine hygiene by providing access to basic products but also supports and empowers the women to shed the taboos in India surrounding menstruation – all while contributing to the economic future of their community. The film is inspired by the life of Arunachalam Muruganantham, a social activist from Coimbatore, India.
To Kill a Tiger is a 2022 Hindi-language Canadian documentary film, directed by Nisha Pahuja. The film centres on a family in Jharkhand, India, who are campaigning for justice after their teenage daughter was brutally raped.