Khoo: What’s so great about this region is that we’re so different. Our folklore is so rich, I wanted all that to be part of this series. Like many young aspiring filmmakers then, Khoo — an alumni member of the City Art Institute Sydney who started out making TV commercials — took part in the Singapore International Film Festival’s short film competition. He attributes his entire career to that opportunity. “In the 1950s, we had a great film industry with the Shaw Brothers, and P Ramlee films. When television came, there was a split, and the industry here sort of withered away. But I attribute everything to the Singapore International Film Festival. In 1991, I left the army and submitted one film. That year, there were 17 short films, all of which were finalists. I won the main prize. “In 1994, I submitted another short film, which was banned. It was called Pain, and was essentially torture porn. They nevertheless let the film be screened for competition because the judges were foreigners. I won the best director award, but also a new special achievement award that I later found out came with a sponsorship prize. The great thing was that the piece of paper had no final amount listed,” Khoo recounts. He jumped at the opportunity to knock on doors for funding, resulting in the making of Mee Pok Man. “I think I’ve really gone full circle and come back to my roots. My mother was a huge movie buff and every week, she would take my sister and I to watch the 4 o’clock show. We grew up in a fantastical world. Spaghetti Westerns, James Bond, Bruce Lee martial art films and one of her favourites, horror. Unfortunately, she’s gone now, so it’s just memories of that, and also of her cooking. Hence, we are where we are now,” he laughs.
Mae Chan is a writer with the Options desk at The Edge Malaysia.