Halving the Bones: A film by Ruth OzekiPosted in Asian Diaspora, Autobiography, Media Archive, United States, Videos, Women on 2013-05-22 20:08Z by Steven |
Halving the Bones: A film by Ruth Ozeki
Women Make Movies
1995
70 minutes
Color/BW, DVD
Ruth Ozeki, Filmmaker, Novelist, and Zen Buddhist Priest
Skeletons in the closet? Halving the Bones delivers a surprising twist to this tale. This cleverly-constructed film tells the story of Ruth, a half-Japanese filmmaker living in New York, who has inherited a can of bones that she keeps on a shelf in her closet. The bones are half of the remains of her dead Japanese grandmother, which she is supposed to deliver to her estranged mother. A narrative and visual web of family stories, home movies and documentary footage, Halving the Bones provides a spirited exploration of the meaning of family, history and memory, cultural identity and what it means to have been named after Babe Ruth!
AWARDS, FESTIVALS, & SCREENINGS
- Sundance Film Festival
- International Documentary Association Award Nomination
- Sydney & Melbourne Film Festivals
- Margaret Mead Film Festival
- San Francisco Asian American Film Festival
- Montreal World Film Festival