Shangdrok
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Synopsis: Tibetan people not only live in Tibet but spread out all over the vast Tibetan plateau in western China. Shangdrok means northern nomads in Tibetan language. Yaks and sheep accompany Tibetan nomads for thousand years, offering not only companionship but providing the materials needed for survival in every aspect of life. However, even on this remote high-altitude plateau, life today becomes increasingly complicated. The green fields of the nomads are gradually disintegrating, and the nomadic lifestyle is fading. There is a small workshop set up in an inconspicuous village on Tibetan plateau that tries to work with the nomads. As a social enterprise, to regain their traditions of yak wool textile craftsmanship, to help the villagers who used to be nomads before lost all their yaks can earn their livings, and make them proud of themselves again. Through this film, we could stand closely by the side and capture the moments objectively. How Tibetan people cherish their traditions and nomadic lifestyle, however losing them gradually at the same time, while facing and embracing rapid modernization.
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Director's Statement
This relatively backward village on the remote high-altitude plateau is like the intersection of past and future, tradition and modern. Most of the people in this film were nomads but lost their yaks, now settle down in the village, living in basic life. While they are used to live with unstable water quality and electricity in the village. Not far away across the river, a small city which the government builds for tourism, there are hotels, shops, restaurants, and supermarkets to buy everything they need. They might be not far away from their tradition yet are losing it gradually now. Perhaps it is to capture the moments they are going toward the modern and losing parts of their tradition for me. For them, it’s just living their lives and keeping the good old nomad days in their memories.
Director's Bio
Born in 1981 in Taipei, Taiwan. Jared Yeh started working in film festivals after finishing the filmmaking program at New York Film Academy. Film festival working experience helps him know more about the whole picture of filmmaking as well as leads him into the filmmaking industry. Soon after that, Yeh participated in his first film production in 2008. As an art director and standby art director, he has worked in numerous well-known and award-winning Taiwanese films and international cooperation movies. With his sense of art and enthusiasm in photography, Yeh also works as a director and cinematographer for many commercials, music videos, and short films.