Recently shot and directed by me on Canon 7d Mark II
First clip, edited by me
Second clip edited by a professional
RemiFoundation.org from stoiQa on Vimeo.
Recently shot and directed by me on Canon 7d Mark II
First clip, edited by me
Second clip edited by a professional
RemiFoundation.org from stoiQa on Vimeo.
Posted by Ms. Catwalq at 7:07 PM 11 comments
Last month, I entered a contest for the Lexus VCAM challenge on Current TV. My team did not win but we were one of the twenty two finalists out of over a hundred submissions. Here is our submission. Please view it, vote and comment at the bottom....
Posted by Ms. Catwalq at 1:48 PM 31 comments
Last month, I entered a contest for the Lexus VCAM challenge on Current TV. My team did not win but we were one of the twenty two finalists out of over a hundred submissions. Here is our submission. Please view it, vote and comment at the bottom....
Posted by Ms. Catwalq at 1:46 PM 0 comments
Posted by Ms. Catwalq at 6:41 AM 35 comments
It has been one roller coaster of a year and for one, my blogs have received some of the most neglectful (if that is a word) treatment possible...but still, they remain for me an outlet for my musings, frustrations and experimental conversations.
I wish you a wonderful holiday and hope that I can keep my new year's resolution to reinvent my blog(s)....
Smooches
Posted by Ms. Catwalq at 2:52 PM 0 comments
Every so often, I see a movie that completely revolutionalises the way I see cinema. I have discovered Korean director Park Chan Wook, whose latest movie, Thirst is a thrilling look into the world of forbidden desire through the eyes of a priest turned Vampire.
The movie stars Song Kang Ho, an Asian cinematic heavy weight and casting favourite of Wook's paired pitted against the captivating newcomer, Kim Ok Bin whose performance had me mesmerised, tantalised and scandalised all at once.
A must see and for me, a must have on DVD
Posted by Ms. Catwalq at 7:32 PM 1 comments
The location was a remote village in 1980s Iran, where a French Iranian reporter's vehicle breaks down on his way to the border. While waiting for it to be fixed, he is approached by a Zahrah, a woman with a secret to share and whom the entire village intimates to him is unstable. Her story which takes him back over the preceding months and culminating in a most horrendous finale only the night before exposes corruption, religious manipulation and abuse of women's human rights in the country.
Starring Shoreh Agdashloo, Jim Caviezel and a graceful, Mozhan Marno, The Stoning of Soraya M is a chilling look at the treatment of women in areas where the justice system is based on a patriachal religious doctrine. What makes it more horrifying to comprehend is the fact that these practices are still being carried out today, with very little indication that there will be a change in sight. If you come from any country where Sharia laws are practiced in any form, The Stoning of Soraya M is an eye opener into the many ways that its laws can be manipulated to prey on women and those who have no rights under the law.
Not to be misconstrued as an attack on Islam or its practices, the movie starts slow, yet ends with a heartbreaking finish. This movie is a must see, for everyone, everywhere because this could very well happen where you live.
Catwalq Grade: A-
Posted by Ms. Catwalq at 9:46 PM 1 comments