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Singapore Film Festival Roars Into Action With Uncensored ‘Tiger Stripes’ Screening, Talk of Local Industry Transformation

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variety.com

Janine Stein “Tiger Stripes”, the opening film of this year’s Singapore International Film Festival (SGIFF), was “kind of a joke that became something very, very close to me and ended up being this film,” Malaysian filmmaker, Amanda Nell Eu, said during Thursday night’s opening ceremony.

Speaking to a packed theatre before the screening, Eu said her inspiration had been puberty mixed with her sense of humor. “I love playing with horror.

I love playing with comedy and I was like, I want to make a film about a girl who literally turns into a monster because I felt like a monster as a kid,” she said. “ ‘Tiger Stripes’ is really a story that fights for the people who feel like they don’t fit in society.” Opening the festival, Singapore filmmaker and SGIFF chairperson, Boo Junfeng, talked about the event’s “sense of community” and a “collective sense of purpose.”Boo highlighted SGIFF’s contribution to Southeast Asia’s film industry, but he failed to mention that Singapore is screening “Tiger Stripes” intact and uncensored.

That is in contrast to Malaysia, which has picked the film as its Oscar contender but where censors have cut so much out of it that Eu has disowned the local print.The festival “has become an important platform that nurtures emerging talents in Southeast Asian cinema, creating a launchpad for the region’s rising stars, helping their voices reach a global audience,” he said. “It has been a challenging year, challenging times for many of us in the industry,” he said. “It is my firm belief actually, that our best days are ahead of us,” he added.

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