词条 | Matthew Victor Pastor | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| name = Matthew Victor Pastor | image = Matthew Victor Pastor.jpg | caption = Pastor at the 2018 Sinag Maynila Film Festival | birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1989|3|2}} | birth_place = | residence = Melbourne, Victoria | alma_mater = Victorian College of the Arts | occupation = {{flatlist|
| years_active = 2013–present | partner = | children = | relatives = | website = }}Matthew Victor Pastor is an Australian film director of Filipino heritage. His feature films explore Asian Australian identity,[1] and tell Filipino Australian stories.[2] An alumnus of the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne Faculty of VCA and MCM,[3] his feature film Melodrama/Random/Melbourne had its Australian premiere at the 2018 Adelaide Film Festival,[4] and was named Top Five Films for the week in The Age.[5] The film was also nominated for the 67th edition of the FAMAS Award (Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences Award) in the music category for his composer Fergus Cronkite.[6] Bill Mousoulis the founding editor of Senses of Cinema described Pastor as "the most dynamic young filmmaker I've come across in 35 years of indie film watching in Australia.[7] Film critic Adrian Martin has called Pastor "an energetic and prolific filmmaker worth keeping tabs on."[8] Made In AustraliaFilmed between Australia and Hong Kong, it went on to win the Best Guerrilla Film at the 2013 edition of the Melbourne Underground Film Festival.[9] The film went on to play local television in Australia. Butterfly Flower: Please Wait To Be SeatedButterfly Flower is a 70-minute experimental film produced in Australia and Vietnam. Co-directed with Vietnamese director Lisac Pham, it premiered at the 2017 Kampot Readers and Writers Film Festival in Cambodia.[10] It features the poetry of Filipino artist, filmmaker Khavn De La Cruz. The film is a love letter to independent Filipino cinema.[11] Fil-Aus TrilogyPart one, I am Jupiter I am the Biggest Planet, is a silent short film set in the red-light district of Manila. Part two, Melodrama/Random/Melbourne!, is a narrative feature film about a young feminist documentarian and her journey documenting the Men's rights movement and Seduction community PUA movement.[12] Part three, Maganda, or (Pinoy Boy vs Milk Man), is an '80s Filipino/Australian B movie throwback about a deranged killer dubbed the Milk Man who murders Asian international students & the assassin Pinoy Boy on a mission to stop him.[13] The films are thematically connected through the exploration of Filipino Australians identity.[14] In a review of Melodrama/Random/Melbourne Oggs Cruz of Rappler said: "A stunning discovery, Matthew Victor Pastor's Melodrama/Random/Melbourne! is a pastiche of many attempts—both somewhat successful or outright failures—to be something. Vague in terms of form and substance, the film, without even perusing its scatterings of plot and characters, is a brash reflection of the waywardness and captivating caprice of the unique millennial culture brought about by cross-border migration. The setting here is Melbourne, a city that the film depicts as one that is undergoing transformation into a bustling center of distinct Asian influences. However, its young and rebellious citizens, heirs of those from a generation that needed to make the city its home, are themselves repelling the waves of new migration, sowing seeds of division."[15] The film was also an honorable mention in Rappler's 12 best Filipino Films of 2018.[16] On Melodrama/Random/Melborune!, Bill Mousoulis the founding editor of Senses of Cinema said: "This is breathtaking cinema that is just extraordinary. It's one of the best Australian films of this decade." Jake Wilson of The Age said: "In the spirit of Godard and Wong Kar-Wai, local writer-director Matthew Victor Pastor throws every available idea into this wild goose chase through Melbourne after dark... An arresting introduction to a talent going places."[17] The film premiered at the 2018 Sinag Maynila Film Festival[18] and was awarded Best Original Score (Fergus Cronkite).[19] Part 3 Maganda! Pinoy Boy vs Milk Man had its premiere at Monster Fest.[20][21] Glenn Cochrane of Fakeshemp.net said, "There isn't a filmmaker in Australia as distinctive or eccentric, and what MVP puts on the screen is the entire inner-workings of his mind. MAGANDA is a culmination of his past work and serves as a self-inflicted exorcism of his mind's congestion."[22] During the release of his diverse Fil-Aus trilogy If Magazine coined him, "Australia's most prolific filmmaker."[23] When asked by The New York Times alongside fellow Asian-Australian talent Chris Pang and Charlotte Nicdao about Asian-Australian representation Pastor said, "It's about seeing those faces, it's about seeing those stories. It has a lot of weight."[24] Current projectsTo be released is Repent or Perish!,[25] an LGBT feature film about a conservative Christian Filipino family set during the 2017 Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey. He is also in post-production on a number of diverse Asian Australian films, dealing with social issues unique to the Australian landscape.[26] FilmographyFeature films
Short Films
Awards
References1. ^http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-07-07/crazy-rich-asians-is-a-breakthrough-for-asian-representation/9759136 2. ^http://kore.am/filmmaker-sheds-light-on-modern-fil-aussies-internal-struggles/ 3. ^https://2015.acmi.net.au/acmi-channel/2015/emerging-filmmakers-in-the-spotlight/ 4. ^https://www.filmink.com.au/matthew-victor-pastor-melodrama-random-adelaide/ 5. ^https://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/movies/top-five-films-best-of-the-big-screen-20181106-h17k93.html 6. ^https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/showbiz/chikaminute/688325/famas-unveils-nominees-for-its-67th-edition/story 7. ^http://www.innersense.com.au/mif/pastor.html 8. ^http://www.filmcritic.com.au/index.html 9. ^https://asianaustralianfilmforum.wordpress.com/2013/09/08/made_in_australia_matt_pastor/ 10. ^http://colourboxstudio.com/portfolio/matthew-victor-pastor/ 11. ^https://www.yomyomf.com/butterfly-flower-please-wait-to-be-seated/ 12. ^https://www.spot.ph/entertainment/movies-music-tv/72988/sinag-maynila-2018-full-length-films-lineup-a1818-20180223 13. ^http://screen-space.squarespace.com/latest/2018/12/6/features-why-pinoy-boy-from-oz-matthew-victor-pastor-is-loca.html 14. ^http://kore.am/filmmaker-sets-out-to-tell-the-fil-aussie-story-one-pic-at-a-time/ 15. ^https://www.rappler.com/entertainment/movies/198275-sinag-maynila-2018-reviews 16. ^https://www.rappler.com//entertainment/movies/220041-best-filipino-films-yearender-2018 17. ^https://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/movies/top-five-films-best-of-the-big-screen-20181106-h17k93.html 18. ^http://entertainment.inquirer.net/265173/sinag-maynila-tackles-diverse-social-issues 19. ^http://sinagmaynila.com/gabi-ng-parangal-complete-winners/ 20. ^http://cultofmonster.com.au/maganda-1/ 21. ^http://www.monsterfest.com.au/2018/guest/matthew-victor-pastor/ 22. ^https://www.fakeshemp.net/reviews/maganda-pinoy-boy-vs-milk-man 23. ^https://www.if.com.au/matthew-pastor-australias-most-prolific-filmmaker/ 24. ^https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/09/world/australia/crazy-rich-asians-chris-pang-hollywood-diversity.html 25. ^https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7905364 26. ^https://www.screenaustralia.gov.au/sa/media-centre/news/2018/09-04-talent-camp-production-funding-recipients 27. ^https://dandenong.starcommunity.com.au/news/2017-05-10/dandy-film-in-hollywood/ 28. ^http://www.interaksyon.com/entertainment/2018/03/12/122325/tale-of-the-lost-boys-allen-dizon-lead-all-winners-in-sinag-maynila-festival-awards/ External links
3 : Australian film directors|Living people|1989 births |
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