
Mr Paul Copeland:
‘I read a great deal about Burma and have seen many documentaries concerning the situation in the country. Burmese Dreaming is one of the finest documentaries I have seen on Burma. The visual images of the country in the film are stunningly beautiful and for me capture the reality of the Burma I know.
The background story of the film vividly portrays the struggles of the Karen people, the largest ethnic minority in Burma, in trying to survive against the oppression of the military dictatorship that has kept the people of Burma locked in a cruel, heartless and inhumane regime since 1962.’
Paul Copeland is a lawyer who practices in Toronto Ontario. He has been actively involved working in support of democracy in Burma since 1988, traveling to the country four times. He is on the advisory board of Canadian Friends of Burma and works closely with the Canadian Campaign for Free Burma. In 2010 he was made a Member of the Order of Canada.
‘Burmese Dreaming’ Offers a Glimpse of a Country Lost
Mizzima News, Tuesday 26th July 2011
Chiang Mai (Mizzima) – Only in dreams can Say Say La return to the life she once had in Burma. She recollects life on her family’s farm and her favourite buffalo, a simple narrative until at the age of five when the Burmese authorities imprisoned her and killed her father.
“Burmese Dreaming” tells a story about Burma through the eyes of a small girl living in a refugee camp in Thailand and the tales of other refugees who return to their homeland—but only in their dreams.
The documentary is “creative nonfiction” conveying the true tales of Say Say La and the troubles many Burmese people face—whether Burmans or ethnic people—when they find themselves in trouble with the Burmese authorities.
Say Say La managed to flee to Thailand but five years on she is unable to return home.
“Burmese Dreaming” follows the girl who was taken from her family and imprisoned, alone, by the Burmese military. It depicts the happiness and the hardship of her life, told through her dreams and reflections.
“I wake up,” she says. “I am in a refugee camp on Thailand-Burma border. I have been here for five years but still my mind is not here. It is in a life of dreams and daydreams and thoughts about my country.”
The film alternates between scenes from the refugee camps and scenes filmed throughout Burma, a country in which independent media reporting is normally prohibited.
Australian photographer and filmmaker Timothy Syrota said he was inspired to make a documentary after his first trip to Burma in 1997 during “Visit Myanmar” year.
Burma at that stage hardly looked capable of hosting tourists.
“I have travelled extensively in Asia since I was a child but had never expected to see a country as backward, in terms of development, infrastructure, corruption, oppression as Burma,” said Syrota. “So I decided then to return to shoot a documentary. When I returned to Australia after the first two trips work took unexpected turns with the publication of my first book “Welcome to Burma and Enjoy the Totalitarian Experience” (Orchid Press 2001) and also a series of photographic exhibitions of my work from Burma, so it took a while to get back —but it was always on the agenda.”
Syrota felt he had to make a film due to the dearth of information about Burma, and what he said was a “personal and quite deep-seated sympathy for the plight of so many decent people.”
Making the film was nerve-wracking at the time partly because he took the decision to film openly, using a professional camera, despite the attention that drew. Foreign journalists find it hard to report in the country and if caught are typically thrown out.
“There were two choices, film covertly as much as possible and try not to be found or film so openly as to try to allay suspicion simply because of this openness,” he said. “I went for the latter. I always suspected I would end up with problems with the authorities. I had had minor run-ins on previous trips to Burma and so had tapes taken out of the country by willing backpackers.”
Syrota said there was always the worry of getting into big trouble. “I would set what I wanted to shoot in a day but would rarely shoot more, just relieved to have got away with filming my planned shots,” he said.
“When problems did hit they were unexpectedly rapid and efficient and I had the tapes I had on me confiscated. I left the country the following day courtesy of the British embassy,” he added.
Ostrow & Company, a leading US production company based in Beverly Hills, California, that represents filmmaker Michael Moore and Meryl Streep, is supporting the film. They only take on a handful of films a year.
Syrota said he was a little concerned at first that the dream-like quality of his film might not work. “In early conferences, I expressed my concerns that this approach might be an impediment to Ostrow & Company being able to successfully market the film but executives at the company said that it was these elements that had made the company interested in the film in the first place.”
MS Jan de Kretser
‘I was so moved by your film. I thought your use of local voice to tell the story was beautiful and essential to the whole. I loved the gentle, beautiful, graceful feel to the construction of the whole – a reflection of the people, the place, the simplicity, the acceptance of what is without…? Bitterness? Some shots were so powerful and captured so much – I particularly remember the tiny children sitting on the edge of the road, their playground, with the cars flashing past and no adult in sight. I could watch it over and over. A huge project from original visualization to final ‘product’. Congratulations.’
From a letter to Timothy Syrota from the wife of the Governor of Victoria, Mrs. Jan de Kretser.
Metro Magazine, New York
Award winning photojournalist, Timothy Syrota, produced his first feature documentary/film, ‘Burmese Dreaming,’ that is scheduled to premiere at the Buffalo Niagara Film Festival.
With a background in law from the University of Melbourne, Australia and training as an actor at the American Conservatory Theatre, San Francisco, Syrota was not planning on having a career as a film director.
His passion for amateur photography and involvement in ‘bit parts’ on film and television sets led him to direct corporate video production at the University of Melbourne in 1996. In 1997, he traveled to Burma for the first time, making notes concerning his observations. These were later published as a book, ‘Welcome to Burma and Enjoy the Totalitarian Experience’ in 2001 by Orchid Press.
‘On this first trip to Burma I decided that I would return to make a film one day,” Syrota said.
When he returned to Burma, Syrota arrived with the intent of documenting the daily lives of the people of the country. Rather than focusing on the differences between people living in Burma and those living in the western world, he wanted to convey situations with which people all over the world could empathise on a simple, human level. These conditions led Syrota to compose Burmese Dreaming.
The film narrative is based on the experiences, daydreams, and nightmares of a young woman living in a refugee camp on the Thailand-Burma border. Through these, Burmese Dreaming captures the true essence of the living conditions in Burma and what life is like living under the current military regime.
When selected for the Buffalo-Niagara International Film Festival, Syrota discovered that Buffalo has one of the largest populations of refugees resettled from Burma. Says Syrota, “I really appreciate that festivals like the one in Buffalo, look for and see the merit in such films.”
Syrota is very pleased with Burmese Dreaming but says producing the documentary was not always an easy task. He often had to avoid getting harassed by the military or police, and after seven weeks in the country filming was, perhaps predictably, terminated because of the interference of the Burmese military. “It was not a pleasant experience,” he says.
Syrota is currently working on a series of films on the Thailand-Burma border which will aim to improve maternal health practices for refugees and migrants as well as villagers in the mountains of Burma.
WGRZ Media, New York
BUFFALO, NY – Burmese Dreaming is a documentary where art, music and stunning cinematography from inside Burma combine to tell a simple and compellingly humanist story about life under the current military regime.
Burmese Dreaming is the first feature film for author and international award winning photojournalist Timothy Syrota. The film makes its North American debut tonight at the Market Arcade Theatre, Screen 1, at 4:00pm.
As part of the Buffalo Niagara Film Festival, the film shows the struggles and hardships that Burmese refugees face through the eyes of the Karen people, an ethnic minority in Burma. The audience follows the Karen’s mindset as the film switches between their realities as refugees and their memories of the life they used to live in Burma.
As one of the cities in America with the highest number of resettled Burmese / Karen refugees, Burmese Dreaming has a special relevance to the Buffalo community and the public is encouraged to attend the North American Premiere of Burmese Dreaming.