HEMA HEMA:
Sing Me A Song While I wait

Bhutan, Hong Kong • 2016

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A man enters a clearing, dons a mask, plays a flute, and waits. He is soon joined by other masked people carrying machetes, spears, and bows. They take him to a place deep in the jungle where a ceremony is about to commence, and an elder explains the rules. The ritual takes place once every 12 years. It begins with the full moon, and no one may leave until the new moon rises. Identities beneath the masks must not be revealed. "You are here to prepare for the gap between death and birth," the elder explains. "You are here to find out who you really are."

Self-discovery lies at the heart of this mesmerizing film from Khyentse Norbu (The Cup, Travellers and Magicians). The Bhutanese lama and filmmaker, recognized by Tibetan Buddhists as the third incarnation of the founder of Khyentse lineage, imbues his films with a rare spiritual wisdom — though not at the expense of the traditional movie-going pleasures of spectacle, character, and suspense. Inspired by the concept of the bardo, a state through which departed souls pass before entering their next incarnation, Hema Hema: Sing Me a Song While I Wait is a colorful plunge into a world where ancient rites can summon our noblest and our basest instincts.

Anonymity is intoxicating, the elder warns the participants, and can provoke reckless action. Indeed, between dazzling displays of ritual dance we will witness thievery, violation, and even murder. Can there be such a thing as justice in this self-contained world beholden to the ceremonial rules? As it draws nearer to its climax, Hema Hema reveals insights into human nature and how it manifests, not just in the wild but also in the modern world of endless distraction.

Runtime
Language
Subtitles
Color
Format
Sound

96 minutes
Dzongkha
English
Color
2.39:1
5.1

Khyentse Norbu
Tshering Dorji, Tony Leung, Zhou Xun, Sadon Lhamo

Director & writer
Starring

  • "Timeless and universal. A philosophical fairytale steeped in the ceremonial traditions of Bhutan. Colorful, exotic and mysterious it will occupy the mind for quite a while."

    Dan Fainaru

    Screen Daily

  • "Art-House Bhutanese Twilight Zone. Stunning...a feast of meticulously framed movement and visual composition."

    Padma Dorje

    Tzal.org

  • "The exoticism of Bhutan and the spiritual philosophy of Buddhism combine with an eerie invented ritual by which masked anonymity allows participants to inhabit a limbo world of the present that excludes the past and future in lama/director Khyentse Norbu’s visually rich though narratively challenging 'Hema Hema: Sing Me a Song While I Wait.'"

    Jay Weissberg

    Variety

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Buddhist Arts and Film Festival Boulder, CO • Cleveland Cinematheque Cleveland, OH • International Buddhist Film Festival San Rafael, CA • Laemmle Claremont 5 Los Angeles, CA • Laemmle Glendale Los Angeles, CA • Laemmle Monica Film Center Los Angeles, CA • Laemmle Newhall Los Angeles, CA • Laemmle Town Center 5 Los Angeles, CA • Landmark's Nuart Theatre Los Angeles, CA • Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Film Festival Minneapolis, MN • Smith Rafael Film Center San Rafael, CA • Toronto International Film Festival Toronto, ON • Upstate Films Rhinebeck, NY • Quad Cinema New York, NY

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