This article was downloaded by: [University of California, Berkeley] On: 19 December 2013, At: 21:42 Publisher: Routledge Informa Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954 Registered office: Mortimer House, 37-41 Mortimer Street, London W1T 3JH, UK Visual Anthropology: Published in cooperation with the Commission on Visual Anthropology Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/gvan20 A River Changes Course Julie Thi Underhill a a Department of Ethnic Studies , University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley , CA , USA Published online: 19 Dec 2013. To cite this article: Julie Thi Underhill (2014) A River Changes Course, Visual Anthropology: Published in cooperation with the Commission on Visual Anthropology, 27:1-2, 204-206, DOI: 10.1080/08949468.2014.852944 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08949468.2014.852944 PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE Taylor & Francis makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all the information (the “Content”) contained in the publications on our platform. However, Taylor & Francis, our agents, and our licensors make no representations or warranties whatsoever as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability for any purpose of the Content. Any opinions and views expressed in this publication are the opinions and views of the authors, and are not the views of or endorsed by Taylor & Francis. The accuracy of the Content should not be relied upon and should be independently verified with primary sources of information. 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Kalyanee Mam, director, producer and cinematographer; Ratanak Leng, producer; Chris Brown, editor; David Mendez, composer and music director; Zach Martin and Angie Yesson, sound; Youk Chhang, executive producer. Produced by Migrant Films in association with the Documentation Center of Cambodia, Phnom Penh; 2012, color, 83 mins.; in Khmer and Jarai, with English subtitles. Sales: Catherine Le Clef, CAT&Docs, 18 rue Quincampoix, Suite no. 133, 75004 Paris, France; tel.: þ33 1 44 59 63 53; email: cat@catndocs.com Since Democratic Kampuchea’s collapse in 1979, most sources on the country foreground the psychological turmoil caused by Pol Pot’s regime. Yet Cambodians in the present century face new threats to their survival, a situation addressed by Kalyanee Mam’s first film. A Cambodian-born refugee raised in the United States, where she got a law degree before becoming a filmmaker, Mam returned to her homeland to direct, produce and shoot a documentary chronicling the human and ecological impact of deforested land, dammed rivers and burgeoning sweatshops. Attentive to Cambodia’s ethnic diversity, the film focuses on a Jarai woman named Sav Samourn, who forages and grows crops with her children in the remote jungles of northeast Cambodia; a teenage Cham boy named Sari Math, who fishes with his family on the Tonle Sap River in central Cambodia, before laboring at a Chinese cassava plantation in western Cambodia; and a Khmer woman named Khieu Mok, who migrates from her small farming village to work in the garment factories of Phnom Penh. While centering on diverse individuals living in different regions of Cambodia, Mam underscores their commonalities—their desire to help the survival of their families, complicated by increasing desperation as their traditional ways of life disappear, in an era of steadily diminishing returns. The film opens with footage of Sav Samourn’s family in northeastern Cambodia, foraging for food in the jungles, with children fully participating in the household economy. The setting then shifts to the Tonle Sap River where Sari Math lives and works as a fisherman, after having left school in seventh grade to help with his family’s burden. We are next introduced to Khieu Mok in her village outside Phnom Penh, where she farms alongside her mother until migrating to the capital city to work as a seamstress. The film alternates between these main subjects, shifting between their settings, eventually incorporating the cassava plantation where Math labors. Throughout the film, Samourn emphasizes the deleterious effects of 204 Downloaded by [University of California, Berkeley] at 21:42 19 December 2013 Film Reviews 205 deforestation and land grabbing, revealing how successive generations are harmed by these losses. Similarly, Math’s family laments the disappearance of fish, turning fishermen into laborers and leaving Math’s father with doubts about the self-sufficiency of future generations. For Mok, agricultural work cannot pay her family’s debts off, as she joins the generation of youth who have left Cambodia’s countryside to work as subsistence laborers in sweatshops. Throughout, the elders express concern about the next generation’s ability to care for itself, due to disappearing natural and economic resources (forests, fish and farmland), whereas their children deeply worry about their ability to alleviate their families’ financial burdens. A River Changes Course succeeds in depicting the drastic transformations in Cambodia, by chronicling the widespread economic ailments and ecological tragedies of a small, impoverished nation. Mam’s meditative cinéma vérité approach creates a slow pace and naturalness in each scene. Her establishment of trust with her subjects reveals intimacy and comfort between her subjects and also between them and the filmmaker, evident in the filming of tender events such as mothers picking lice nits from daughters’ hair, Khieu Mok ‘‘coining’’ her mother to ward off a cold, and Sari Math’s father playfully urging his young son Akai to get an ‘‘antenna’’ of an erection after a swim in the river. Despite this tenderness between family members, Mam refuses to romanticize her subjects, showing Sav Samourn threatening to hit her daughter if she doesn’t obey an order and Sari Math’s sister Om Mey similarly threatening to hit another sibling. Mam unflinchingly depicts Cambodians rather than omitting potentially unflattering actions of her subjects. Although cinéma vérité creates heightened intimacy in A River Changes Course, Mam’s absorbing film-style might challenge viewers who prefer a straightforward approach. This film is not a traditional historical, ethnographic or political documentary with voiceover narration or captioned names. Mam never identifies the distinct ethnic identities of Samourn, Math and Mok, nor does she often interview them. Rather, she encourages the viewer to learn her subjects’ concerns by observing their everyday interactions with family members and as laborers. In addition, some viewers might be challenged by abrupt edits between different locations, edits without fades or black clips. Although this editing technique reinforces simultaneity and continuity between subjects—a deliberate choice on the part of Mam and her editor—similar landscapes while rice harvesting, for instance, might challenge a viewer to locate the next scene accurately, as geographical contexts suddenly shift. However, the rich offerings of the film and the commentary about the simultaneity of problems overshadow these momentary confusions about location. Visual anthropologists and documentary film scholars would appreciate A River Changes Course for highlighting contemporary concerns in Cambodia. Those interested in indigenous media or diasporic film studies would be piqued, though, by Mam’s position as a Cambodian-American refugee-turned-filmmaker, although Mam never reveals her identity during the film, and only allows her voice to appear during her final conversation with Math. The film would be useful in anthropology courses dealing with globalization, indigenous rights, poverty, kinship, environmental destruction and internal migration, and in courses about the economy or ecology of Southeast Asia or 206 Film Reviews specifically Cambodia. The subtitles, translating Khmer and Jarai into English, make this film accessible to diverse audiences. Mam’s high-definition cinematography and crisp audio increase the value of the film. In addition to its relevance to multiple academic disciplines, the film has enjoyed a strong reception on the film festival circuit, earning many distinctions through its effective storytelling and compelling cinematography, including the 2013 Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize for world cinema documentary. Downloaded by [University of California, Berkeley] at 21:42 19 December 2013 Julie Thi Underhill Department of Ethnic Studies University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA USA jthiunderhill@yahoo.com