14TH NATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF VIETNAM
Log in
Life

Berlin Film Festival award-winning motion picture premieres in Vietnam

After inheriting a pygmy slow loris from her long-estranged husband, a woman clings to dwindling ties to her past while her niece prepares for her wedding and worries about the future.

After winning at the Berlin Film Festival, Cu Li Never Cries by Hanoi-based director Pham Ngoc Lan will be screened in Vietnam starting November 15.

According to director Pham Ngoc Lan, the film crew will set up a special 120-seat screening room for the audience with disabilities.

 A scene from the movie. Photo courtesy of producer

Director Pham Ngoc Lan said he has seen the artistic originality and potential for involvement of people with disabilities. They are someone he and his staff want to meet and get to know. Lan portrays people with disabilities as having ordinary beauty in the story Cu Li Never Cries. For the filmmaker, this is a way to fulfill the social responsibility of an artist and a creative person.

The film crew also made an additional Vietnamese-subtitled version of the production, alongside the previous English-subtitled version.

The plot revolves around a middle-aged woman named Nguyen, played by People's Artist Minh Chau. After picking up the ashes of her long-estranged husband in Germany, Nguyen returns to her home in Vietnam. In her luggage is a pygmy slow loris, a species of primate from the Vietnamese rainforest, which she inherited from the deceased. The woman's young niece, who lives with her, is preparing for her wedding. 

The young couple anxiously ponders their uncertain future together. The present in which the characters live and the complex echoes of Vietnamese history intertwine in a contemplative and poetic way.

The film won the Best First Feature from the Society for the Management of Film and Television Rights (GWFF) at the Berlin Film Festival in February. This is the first time a Vietnamese film has won in this category.

To date, the film has been submitted to 18 film festivals, won five awards and is expected to be screened at more than 10 other prestigious film events by the end of 2024.

 People's Artist Minh Chau presents at the Berlin Film Festival in February. Photo courtesy of film producer

"The Berlin premiere of the movie evoked a lot of nice feelings in us. However, I believe that the underlying cultural allusions of the film were not fully understood by international audiences. Cu Li Never Cries was meant for Vietnamese audiences from the very beginning. I hope that the Vietnamese people will be receptive to our movie and a variety of other new cinematic genres that they are not used to seeing.  I also hope that people won't label the films in the festival as difficult to watch," Lan said.

Cineneuropa critic Susanne Gottlieb commented that the film brings a new perspective on Vietnamese society, creating a thoughtful reflection on the changes of the times.

In The Film Verdict, writer Clarence Tsui noted that the film is attractive and beautiful, depicting the nostalgia of a retired woman and the uncertainty of a young couple's future. He also praised the performances of the actors.

Before the debut feature film Cu Li Never Cries, Lan directed some short films including The Story of Ones (2011); Another City (2016); Blessed Land (2019); The Unseen River (2020). His short films Another City and Blessed Land were screened at the Berlin Film Festival. 

Reactions:
Share:
Trending
Most Viewed
Related news
Film about Hanoi to be aired on Liberation Day

Film about Hanoi to be aired on Liberation Day

10 Sep, 22:00

The film hopes to bring a multi-dimensional view of a police officer by exploiting his details of life, thereby describing a Hanoian with intelligence, talent, kindness, and full of love for the city and its people.

To Lich River’s revival reshapes Hanoi urban life

To Lich River’s revival reshapes Hanoi urban life

The transformation of the To Lich River goes beyond environmental restoration, reflecting Hanoi’s broader drive to build a cleaner, more livable and better-connected city.

Festival gathers ethnic communities in Hanoi for three-day cultural showcase

Festival gathers ethnic communities in Hanoi for three-day cultural showcase

The 2026 “Spring Colors Across the Nation” festival brings together hundreds of artisans and community representatives, highlighting living traditions from across Vietnam while reinforcing efforts to preserve cultural heritage in a rapidly modernizing society.

Culture at the core: A new governance mindset for Hanoi

Culture at the core: A new governance mindset for Hanoi

Vietnam’s capital is placing culture at the heart of policymaking and urban planning, positioning itself as a test case for Resolution 80’s vision of development driven not only by economic growth, but also by identity, social cohesion and human well-being.

Disguise and drums mark sacred rite in Hanoi village

Disguise and drums mark sacred rite in Hanoi village

At Trieu Khuc’s annual spring celebration, young men in silk blouses and lotus bras perform a centuries-old dance born of wartime strategy and preserved as living heritage.

Hanoi tourism gains momentum in February, aims for 36 million visitors in 2026

Hanoi tourism gains momentum in February, aims for 36 million visitors in 2026

Vietnam’s capital has reported a 28.5% jump in monthly arrivals and rising tourism revenue, bolstering its ambition to make travel a key economic pillar this year.

Explore Van Phuc Village’s sacred water rite

Explore Van Phuc Village’s sacred water rite

Each spring in Hanoi’s outskirt commune, villagers gather along the Red River to perform a centuries-old water offering ceremony, an enduring prayer for fertile fields, favorable weather and communal prosperity.

Hanoi's young men fuel centuries-old rice cooking tradition 

Hanoi's young men fuel centuries-old rice cooking tradition 

A centuries-old ritual, equal parts endurance and homage, keeps Thi Cam’s communal spirit alive each spring.

Northern Vietnam village parades ancient texts in tribute to scholarship

Northern Vietnam village parades ancient texts in tribute to scholarship

Residents of Duong Lieu Village in Xuan Hoa Commune on Hanoi’s outskirts marked the Lunar New Year of the Horse with a ritual that gently blends Confucian reverence with a strong sense of community identity.