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      Dreaming Lhasa

      Released Apr 13, 2007 1h 30m Drama List
      41% 17 Reviews Tomatometer 60% 500+ Ratings Audience Score In India for her latest project, a filmmaker (Tenzin Chokyi Gyatso) of Tibetan descent returns to her ancestral country to help a man accomplish a personal mission. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

      View All (15) audience reviews
      Audience Member Life of a Charm Box Dreaming Lhasa is technically a road movie; its story essentially about searching. At the heart of the film is the mystery surrounding a Ghawu:Who does it belong to? What story and what history would the revelation unearth, about what person and which people? And more immediately, what bearing the answer would have on the life of Dhondup, who has come to Dharamsala from Tibet to fulfill a wish he had granted his mother on her deathbed, minutes after she had handed him this relic from an unknown past? Ghawu is a charm box, blessed by high lamas, traditionally worn for good luck and protection. The amulet has been made legendary by its life-saving power through real-life experiences of CIA-backed Tibetan resistance fighters in the sixties and seventies, and the Bangladesh Tibetan war veterans in 1971. The Ghawu here is more than a cryptic puzzle screaming for resolution. It is a metaphor for the very plight daunting the Tibetans today: the violence that Chinaâ(TM)s military occupation has wrought on a people both sides of the Himalayas: in the uprootedness of a generation now all but vanishing, and with them a way of life; in the identity crises of their children, younger by age, weaker by faith, and enfeebled by circumstances; and in the multifarious versions of flight, both in mind and physical space, that occupation and exile entail. And it is this twin impetus â" occupation and exile â" that makes people leave homes, undertake journeys and cross borders. Some as in the case of Karma, the woman documentary filmmaker from the United States, to reconnect with her past, the place of her origin, Tibet, by inhabiting an idea of it which is Dharamsala. Some as in the case of Dhondup to find answers to a mystery that death had bequeathed him and which during life had kept hidden from him. And some as in the case of Jigme, a local vagabond, with all his ready charm and inborn rebelliousness, to just be somewhere else, anywhere else, but here. Karma too is on a mission of her own, to make a documentary about former political prisoners. After each interview, with nuns who had been arrested for shouting slogans, with monks who had been imprisoned for distributing flyers; after each remembrance and recounting, of blows and humiliation: hands across face, cattle prod inside vagina, it is like unto the US-returned expatriate is passed, in the solitude of her sparse hotel room, the impact, the wound, the damage. It shows in the silence and in the sigh, and in such insignificant and asymmetrical shot as her glasses resting on a camera tripod. Despite her pain, there is about Karma a certain purpose, which as she sets about her business takes on the form of an unmistakable resoluteness; a will to accomplish. And it is this quality that makes her want to throw her lot with Dhondup, in who she finds everything which is pure and right, as if he were not a person but the very embodiment of her vast unseen country, the id of her idealism. Her emerging detail, as a mother of a girl with an American man with who her relationship is strained, only adds to the poignancy. Her at-will assistant, an adept navigator through the psychedelic corridors of Dharamsalaâ(TM)s Mcleod Gunj, is a local chutzpah-laden youth, Jigme. With long disheveled hair and a rock star swagger, clad in vintage denim Jacket and torn jeans, he is the quintessential exile youth. Having his fancy set on Karma, it is for obvious reasons that he is irked by her growing fondness for Dhondup. But it is also because in life if he has learnt anything it is to be skeptical, to not give in to appearances, while belying his own with a ready smile. For a place the smallness of Dharamsala, he appears cosmopolitan, so much so he even wears his handicap, his limp, almost like an accessory. The characters having been established, the film now takes us on the road. It leads us to Delhi and the Tibetan settlement of Clement Town and the desert city of Jaipur, where resides an elderly and ailing Tibetan sweater seller with his family, their rented quarter cramped with garments in squeaky plastic bags. One finger points to another, one clue to next, before they finally locate the owner of the Ghawu, and it is his identity and his back story and the circumstances under which the amulet came to be in the hands of Dhondupâ(TM)s mother that renders the filmâ(TM)s climax portent and powerful and profound. The film has been shown and lauded at thirty-plus film festivals around the world, including the prestigious Toronto Film Festival where it made its international debut, alongside such critically-acclaimed fares as Ang Leeâ(TM)s Brokeback Mountain and Deepa Mehtaâ(TM)s Water, and in many it has won the audience favorite vote. It takes little to understand why. For one, the film refuses to dabble in hysteria (Take note, makers of Pun Anu Thanu and Milarepa). The narrative thread is contained within a structure that is impeccable, and throughout one observes a certain economy of words, gesture, shot duration, which is but the result of a finely-executed storyboard, and because of which every frame becomes worthwhile, every scene inevitable. The characters here actually talk, not rant; they perform, not exaggerate; the emotion is here subdued and not a contortionistâ(TM)s spectacle; and instead of letting jargon-filled winding monologues do the job, the filmmakers let the interaction among characters and the dynamics of their situations establish and move forward the story. Dreaming Lhasa is imaginative without being preposterous and realism is its biggest USP, a strength that owes to the filmmakersâ(TM) background in documentaries. Former political prisoners play themselves; their brutal past is portrayed simply through close ups and voiceovers, as captured on a video camera. For all her anguish and awakening, when the time comes, Karma returns to America, the country which had inscribed upon her identity a million questions, leaving behind Dharamsala, her idea of Tibet, without Dhondup or Jigme; without love, without absolution. For all his past, of courageous resistance and blood-dripping sacrifices, Dhondup makes no affectations of a grand plan for the freedom struggle which in exile he finds has become a subject for sweeping, sometimes mocking, commentaries by his counterparts, the likes of Jigme and company. He indulges in no reprimands; instead he minds his own business and trudges onward, with his eyes set backward on his enslaved land where lives his wife with his newborn child, the only future he has and he knows of. On the surface, Jigme is a typical Dharamsala delinquent, full of amorous streaks and if not bedding Westerner tourist women, then smoking pot, drinking beer and shooting pool. A hybrid between a fractured past and fleeting present, one conversant beyond detection in the affectations of accent and attitude, the very disguise with which to give his self relevance and visibility. But when inspiration strikes him, he takes to the guitar and belts out an anthem of his own, âZugu ruko naza tangwa, nying la sugpo gangda du, ga dang dukpo gangda du, sosoe mitse kyipo duk pe (I play till my finger joints hurt, tell me how deep I strike in your heart, how much of pain and joy do you feel, are you happy with your life?)❠It is to the filmâ(TM)s great advantage that the filmmakers incorporate Jigmeâ(TM)s character with his real-life nemesisâ(TM) passion and profession. Actor Tenzin Jigme is part of a popular three-member band âJJI Exile Brothersâ, all real siblings, whose music combine Western rock and traditional Tibetan influences. In the age of effeminate vocals, their hand-me-down lyrics stilted in honorific vocabulary of the yore, which proliferate the modern Tibetan music scene, JJIâ(TM)s in-your-face, donâ(TM)t-take-no-prisoner, fart-if-you-feel-like-it, variation is a refreshing departure. The filmâ(TM)s innovative soundtrack also includes such jarring accompaniments as a Bollywood oldie âAghe bhi Jaane na tu, peeche bhi jaane na tu, jo bhi hai, bas yahi ek pal hai (what is in front of you, you do not know; what is behind you, you do not know; what there is to it, is this just one moment)❠and a strange fusion genre, Dub. A fitting ode to the ambivalence that is exile experience. Among the actors, Jampa Kalsang who plays Dhondup is phenomenal. He is perhaps a true movie actor we have in the Tibetan world, one with a face an actual reminiscent of the countryâ(TM)s anguished fate. From Windhorse to Dreaming Lhasa, the artist has come a long way, and somebody ought to give him an Achievement Award already. Tenzin Jigme is a delightful revelation and Tenzin Chokyi Gyatso, who plays karma, holds her own admirably. Finally, the filmâ(TM)s greatest achievement is its deep meditation on that enduring measure of loss, beyond occupation and exile, in the labyrinthine thicket of which we thrash everyday and yet we sometimes so easily overlook, called time. It pays a fitting homage to the sacrifices made by our fatherâ(TM)s generation, especially those who were part of the CIA-backed Tibetan resistance fighters, that soldiered on amid a barrage of Chinese bullets, with a hope of leaving behind for us, a living struggle, a fight not yet surrendered. It plays on their real experiences, their hard won wisdom, and their vanishing turn as an ancient generation; and it asks of the younger lot a most strident question: what end are we going to give to their sacrifices? Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/24/23 Full Review Audience Member interesting & informative doc Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Audience Member This is a really great movie, that anyone who has struggled for identity and meaning in life can relate to. It was also a surprise to learn about the C.I.A/US involvement training and militarizing Tibetans for guerrilla war. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/15/23 Full Review Audience Member well done movie inter-twining both personal stories as well as the frustration facing Tibetans today. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/13/23 Full Review Audience Member Helps you empathize with the plight of Tibetans and understand that people across the world feel loss and loyalties, love and pain just like you. Makes you want to do something, not just watch it and say 'next'. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review walter m [font=Century Gothic]In "Dreaming Lhasa," Karma(Tenzin Chokyi Gyatso) is in the city of Dharamsala in Northern India to film a documentary with the assistance of Jigme(Tenzin Jigme) of Tibetan exiles detailing their ordeal at the hands of the occupying Chinese.(Karma herself is of Tibetan heritage.) One of her interviewees is Dhondup(Jampa Kalsang) who has been charged with returning a charm box to a fellow Tibetan whose current whereabouts are unknown. Sensing a story, Karma helps Dhondup, even accompanying him to Delhi...[/font] [font=Century Gothic][/font] [font=Century Gothic]"Dreaming Lhasa" is a well-meaning movie with a paper thin story and amateurish performances. Still, this is an honorable try at depicting the heartbreak of a people watching their country slowly disappear under the weight of oppression and deciding what to do next. Some simply move on while others fight in whatever way they know how, be it to return to their native country and an unknown fate or to begin a hunger strike. [/font] Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

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      Critics Reviews

      View All (17) Critics Reviews
      John Hartl Seattle Times Whenever the filmmakers stray from Dhondup's story (and the tales of other refugees), they tend to lose their way. Rated: 2/4 May 4, 2007 Full Review Andrea Gronvall Chicago Reader The fictional story incorporates harrowing documentary testimony from former Tibetan political prisoners, but essentially this is a hopeful look at a resilient people keeping their traditions alive as they move into the digital age. May 4, 2007 Full Review Ty Burr Boston Globe Dreaming Lhasa goes a long way on the strength of its exotic visuals and gently urgent narrative, but in the end it doesn't go quite far enough. Rated: 2.5/4 May 4, 2007 Full Review Marc Mohan Oregonian Rather than offer more information or documentation, the film uses a fictional framework to explore the human-scale effects of exile on those Tibetans who've escaped their homeland. Rated: B Jul 13, 2007 Full Review Bill White Seattle Post-Intelligencer The script is undone by confusing romantic developments, a convoluted murder mystery and a facile and maudlin resolution. Rated: C May 4, 2007 Full Review Phil Hall Film Threat It is among the dullest and least confident movies to unspool this year. Rated: 1/5 Apr 19, 2007 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis In India for her latest project, a filmmaker (Tenzin Chokyi Gyatso) of Tibetan descent returns to her ancestral country to help a man accomplish a personal mission.
      Director
      Ritu Sarin
      Producer
      Richard Gere, Raj Singh, Jeremy Thomas
      Screenwriter
      Tenzing Sonam
      Distributor
      First Run
      Production Co
      White Crane Films
      Genre
      Drama
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Theaters)
      Apr 13, 2007, Limited
      Release Date (DVD)
      Sep 18, 2007
      Box Office (Gross USA)
      $21.3K
      Runtime
      1h 30m