Brilliant Malaysian film director U-Wei Bin HajiSaari was in town recently for the world premiere of his short film My Beautiful Rambutan Tree in Tanjung Rambutan at the Singapore International Film Festival. The dark and bittersweet film, about sibling rivalry that turns horribly wrong, will next show at the Cannes Film Festival this month. The controversial and elusive U-Wei, who first came to our attention with his assured debut film Woman, Wife and Whore—about a wayward woman who stirs up various desires in a conservative village, way back in 1993—is arguably Malaysia’s best filmmaker. He tells Terry Ong what makes him tick.

I’ve always been a film buff, even during my primary school days. Growing up in a small town in Mentakab, Pahang, there were only two cinemas there. In Primary Two, especially, I remember escaping studies so that I could attend some of the films screening at the time—from Hindi films, to Westerns, etc.

At that time, I was already very attracted to films, but I didn’t know that I could make films, especially as a career. Then I realized, without sounding pretentious, that I knew more about films than most of my friends and relatives from the village that I grew up in. While most people were watching them for entertainment and the actors, I began to notice the sets, costumes, music etc. of the respective films. Only during my higher education, did I realize that one can study filmmaking, and I did. My relationship with film first started as an attraction, which later turned into a desire.

I love making films, but I also find it very difficult. Which is why I know I’m a filmmaker.

It tickles me when I think about all the controversy surrounding Woman, Wife and Whore. I felt that the story was very natural, and I don’t think I was being obscene at all, although some scenes from the film have been cut. I didn’t want to be controversial. I was just making a film with “real issues” that I wanted to deal with. I am still amazed and amused by the reactions to the film, especially the women who attacked it. I find them stupid.

I have done some commercial projects and TV dramas because I have to work, after all. But in whatever I do, I must be true to myself … doing stuff that I believe in. Even if I have made some mistakes, I think I made interesting mistakes. But most of my works center on themes of alienation, and being an outsider. I know how that feels like. It is something that I can identify with.

The new wave of Malaysian filmmakers is very aggressive and interesting. With digital videos, making films is cheaper now. But I worry that Malaysian filmmakers are trying to be “cute” these days. When I say “cute,” I mean they try too hard to be hip, sleek and stylish. It’s a dangerous thing to be “cute” as filmmakers need to find their own voices, and not try to be another Wong Kar Wai or Hou Hsiao-hsien.

I am still wondering when to slow or settle down. My next immediate projects are the play Wangi the Witness, to be staged in KL, and the feature film Sax and Telephone.
I would love to retire on a beach, somewhere in Trengganu, Malaysia.

There are quite a number of filmmakers that I would like to meet and have dinner with, such as British filmmaker Nicholas Roeg and Japan’s Kohei Oguri.

As a kid, I always thought that actors do their own stunts in films. I really thought they could fight! I wish I still believed that.

In whatever we do, we must always look beneath. That’s where the gems are.

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