Synopsis


Tibetan Film Festival, 2009

THE TIBETANS, A LIFE IN EXILE

This documentary examines the difficulties confronting Tibetans in exile as they struggle to adapt to the increasing intrusion of the modern world.
Filmed in the colourful town of Dharamsala in the stunning Indian Himalayas, this film powerfully illustrates the growing conflict between traditional Tibetan culture and encroaching outside influences.
Featuring the Dalai Lama and several other prominent community figures who speak with passion and conviction about the gravity of the current situation.

www.sixdegreeproductions.com

BUDDHA'S WARRIOR

In the fight for freedom and democracy, their weapon in peace. Go inside the world of Buddhism with CNN chief international correspondent Christiane Amanpour.

DREAMING OF TIBET

In isolated communities around the world, particularly in India, Nepal and the United States, Tibetan exiles have created a 'virtual Tibet,' where they have endured and even flourished in the face of overwhelming adversity. DREAMING OF TIBET follows their arduous journeys from Tibet into exile over a 19,000 foot Himalayan pass. It's a flight that the Dalal Lama took in 1958 and over 150,000 of his followers have taken since then. Most have only minimal clothing and meager provisions to make the life-threatening trek. Many die along the way.
This intimate documentary is about the resilience of the human spirit under the most dire circumstances. The film looks at the lives of three extraordinary Tibetan exiles who have survived in exile and are deeply involved in working for the survival of their culture. They are, in short, Ms. Tseten Phanucharas, a political activist, who is one of the Dalai Lama's press coordinators in Los Angeles; Ms. Tsering Lhamo, a nurse working with recent refugees in Kathmandu, Nepal; and Mr. Ngawang Ugyen, a monk in the Mt. Everest foothills.
DREAMING OF TIBET captures the difficult challenges they each face and conveys the sense of hope they bring to their day-to-day lives in spite of great hardship and loss.
Also features His Holiness the Dalai Lama, and author/climber Jon Krakauer, with appearances by actors Richard Gere and Goldie Hawn.

www.bullfrogfilms.com

LEAVING FEAR BEHIND

What do Tibetans in Tibet think about the Beijing Olympic Games?
The documentary--Leaving Fear Behind--examines this question and a lot more besides. For five months, from October 2007 to March 2008, amateur filmmaker Dhondup Wangchen and his monk camerman, Golok Jigme, secretly filmed in Tibet. They were both arrested at the end of March after the protests erupted, but not before they had managed to smuggle their tapes safely to Switzerland.

www.leavingfearbehind.com


MYSTIC TIBET: AN OUTER, INNER, AND SECRET PILGRIMAGE

In 2002, a group of exceptional people from around the world signed up to explore the country that is home of the Dalai Lamas. But this was no common tourist trek. Guided by the renowned Tibetan Buddhist master Lama Zopa Rinpoche, the pilgrims found themselves engaged in a rare and powerful experience – one in which the realms of great yogis and saints were revealed and personal transformation beckoned closer each day on the trail.
This intense journey takes one directly into the culture of Tibet and its arresting, spiritually-rich landscape in a way that is not often seen. It explores the deep inner meaning of pilgrimage, which purifies the mind and creates the good heart. These pilgrims discovered more than temples and holy mountains. They touched the extraordinary potential of their minds, their enlightened nature.

DRAMGYEN: THE LUTE

The story of Dramgyen; The Lute is a short film based on a new Tibetan immigrant family. It is about the trepidation's of a simple family trying to adjust their lives in the western society.

Both parents coming from a musician background are unable to secure a good life in the west. They are unable to find "good" jobs.

Kelsang, the only daughter of the family is another musical prodigy (in traditional Tibetan instrument). Her father disapproves of her choice.

THE LOST WORLD OF TIBET

The rare treasure trove of amazing colour footage, preserved and restored by the BFI, reveals the story of the Dalai Lama and his secret Himalayan kingdom in a way never told before.

An exclusive interview with the Dalai Lama, focusing on his early life and childhood is intercut with colour archive film from the 1930s, '40s and '50s as well as revealing interviews with ordinary Tibetan people who remember life before China sent in troops.

Presented by Dan Cruickshank, this astonising film allows us to glimpse into the rich culture of Tibet, showing us ancient ceremonies, Buddhist rituals and family life, from a time before the Tibetan people lost their country, nearly 50 years ago

THE UNWINKING GAZE

The Unwinking Gaze is an astonishing film of rare historic importance. Film maker Joshua Dugdale was given extraordinary access over a three-year period showing the trials and tribulations of the XIV Dalai Lama as he faces up to the titanic challenge of engaging with China

The rising superpower of China, home to a quarter of the human race, views the Dalai Lama with extreme suspicion, but how right are they to see the Tibetan spiritual leader as 'a wolf in monk's clothing'? And what is the Dalai Lama actually saying behind closed doors? Does he really want to split Tibet away from China?


The Unwinking Gaze goes where no other movie or journalistic endeavor has gone before in tracking the daily agonies of the Tibetan leader as he tries to strike a balance between his Buddhist vows and the real politik needed to placate China. David and Goliath is played out in front of us as the world's emerging superpower and the Dalai Lama walk a tightrope over an issue of global importance - the future of Tibet and China.

www.unwinkinggaze.com

TIBET: MURDER IN SNOW

In September 2006, international mountain climbers witnessed and recorded Chinese border police as they opened fire on a group of unarmed Tibetan pilgrims escaping to Nepal.

ART IN EXILE


A film about the Tibetans living in exile in India and the role their art is playing in keeping their identity and the larger ‘Free Tibet’ movement alive. From the prolific activist poet, Tenzin Tsundue to the enigmatic, ex-Tibetan Youth Congress president / poet- Lhasang Tsering, rock band JJI Exile brothers, to the traditional institutes like TIPA and Norbulingka, the film offers glimpses into an alternate Tibetan revolution.


THE MESSAGE OF THE TIBETANS

In 1963, for the first time, the Dalai Lama allowed a Westerner, Desjardins, to film the heart of the Tibetan tradition. It includes footage of Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, the Sixteenth Karmapa, Dudjom Rinpoche, Ling Rinpoche, Chatral Rinpoche, Sakya Trizin, and the yogis Abo Rinpoche and Lopon Sonam Zangpo.

"These portraits of the legendary Tibetan masters are not simply a unique historical record, not only a stunning and moving inspiration for now and for the future, but an extraordinary testimony, a treasure." Sogyal Rinpoche.