The National - News

Female Malaysian director shoots action film for Miu Miu’s Women’s Tales

- Sarah Maisey

Since its founding in 1993, Miu Miu, the sister brand to Prada, has focused on handing control to women of all ages. Driven by one of fashion’s great intellectu­als, Miuccia Prada (nicknamed Miu Miu), the brand is consistent with its pro-women messaging, played out via the distinctiv­e beauty of its clothes.

Another core element of this commitment is the Women’s Tales project, which has been inviting two women directors a year since 2011 to create short films, which are then revealed during the spring/summer and autumn/ winter Miu Miu shows.

While the directors offer diverse voices and perspectiv­es, the films are united through themes of life, femininity and the shared experience­s of being a woman.

Over the initiative’s 13 years, 26 women have taken part, including Ava DuVernay, So Yong Kim, Chloe Sevigny and Hiam Abbass.

This year, Malaysian director Tan Chui Mui was tapped as number 27. Having made her first film in 2006, the award-winning Love Conquers All, Tan has made a film called I Am the Beauty of Your Beauty, I Am the Fear of Your Fear for the Women’s Tale initiative.

It unfolds with the protagonis­t, Gita, leaving her home in China to move to Malaysia. There she finds a tribe of female fighters who teach her how to use her anger for good, while a flower seller introduces her to Kali, the goddess of change, destructio­n and death.

Miu Miu explains: “Through wrestling with what we fear the most, we find our inner strength and our beauty.”

Told as a coming-of-age story, Tan’s film is uplifting and ultimately, empowering.

“Last August I got the call from Miu Miu Shanghai. I was in China where one of my films was doing a tour and I felt honoured because I know they pick women directors with distinctiv­e styles,” Tan explains.

Tan is known for capturing an intimate, personal mood in her work, and while she often takes moments or elements of her life as a starting point, her films are far from biographic­al. “It is more a fictional biography. It doesn’t make sense for me to make a film about where I am now and about my real life, I have no interest in that, but maybe I like the fictionali­sed version of myself. It gives me the opportunit­y to explore other paths, other lives, other fantasies.”

However, one aspect of her life did influence the film. “I practise Brazilian jiu-jitsu. I go to the gym, and I have a lot of other women around me, so it is something that I am familiar with and I was imagining an undergroun­d fight club.”

The only stipulatio­n from Miu Miu was that her characters must be clad in its pieces, but Tan admits to being apprehensi­ve about what the chosen collection might offer. “My instructio­n was to wait until the new collection was out, and then based on the collection I should make the story. Because we were shooting in Malaysia, I was worried the clothes would look out of place. But the collection suits the story very well.”

With a sporty theme running through the collection, with plenty of layered shorts, tops and jackets, the filmmaker knew it would fit with the story she wanted to tell. “In some of the other films, the Miu Miu collection became a character in itself, it became part of the story. For my story, because it is set in a women’s gym, the clothes were perfect for them – they give depth to each character.”

Having spent October 2023 writing the story, Tan scheduled the shoot for the end of November. “Apparently, I had the longest shoot schedule compared to the other directors,” she says.

Part of that generous scheduling may be down to Tan who, in addition to being the director, decided to try her hand at choreograp­hing the action scenes.

“For this short film, the most challengin­g thing was to design the action. It was my first time as action director,” she admits. “I spent a long time training with the cast before the script was fixed – it was a lot of fun.”

Of course breaking boundaries is what Women’s Tales is championin­g, as well as shining a light on talented women directors. While she is one of relatively few directors in Malaysia, Tan explains that it can often work to her advantage.

“In general, of course, we see fewer women directors but, for me, as soon as you cross the threshold and actually make a film, you are accepted to a lot of film festivals, because they want to see a film made by a woman. But the threshold is harder for women, to start making films, to get the funding.”

The success or not of female directors is not only down to studios and funding, Tan explains, but also the need for women to be expressive in their support for one another. “We give a lot of attention to women directors, but we also need a woman audience that wants to see a film directed by a woman.”

The only stipulatio­n from Miu Miu for the director was that her characters must be clad in its pieces

 ?? ?? A scene from Tan Chui Mui’s film I Am the Beauty of Your Beauty, I Am the Fear of Your Fear for Miu Miu
A scene from Tan Chui Mui’s film I Am the Beauty of Your Beauty, I Am the Fear of Your Fear for Miu Miu
 ?? Photos Miu Miu ?? Director Tan Chui Mui, left, during filming of her short film
Photos Miu Miu Director Tan Chui Mui, left, during filming of her short film

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