It Takes a Village to View A Film

The Film Connects with Featured Chinese Family in a New Way

By Co-Director Changfu Chang

For the past two years, I’ve stayed in touch with the Zhu family. They’re the  family we filmed in 2010 who had adopted a daughter within China. This summer they had the chance to see the completed documentary The Invisible Red Thread for the first time and the results were simply transformative.

It started on July 3, when I met up with Mr. Zhu in Shanghai to give him a DVD of the final film. As usual, Mr. Zhu was working at a construction site in Shanghai while his wife farmed their land allotment 1000 km away in Ruichang, Jiangxi and their daughter Shuming spent her summer holidays off from middle school helping her mother with chores and reading.

It took several weeks until they were finally reunited and could view the film with their family and close friends. Ruichang is a small rural village so many other villagers soon heard about it and showed up to watch it, too.

I wish we could have been there with them experiencing the joy and pride they felt! With all the publicity, there is no doubt Shuming is now like a “celebrity” and well respected in town.  When I first met Shuming a little over two years ago, she was very introverted and humble; she felt inferior for having been adopted. I asked her by phone after the screening whether this is still the case. She said, still in her soft voice but with assertiveness, “No.”  Her father has repeated with delight many times how much Shuming has changed.  Shuming now has a lot of confidence in herself and in her future. Right now, she knows she will continue her education and go to college one day, a lofty goal she didn’t dare consider two years ago.

Shuming also told me that she liked the film very much and was glad to see the kind of life Vivian lives in Canada.  While Vivian and her family in Toronto had the chance to see the completed film this past spring for its Canadian TV broadcast, it took a few months longer for the Zhus to be able to come together.

I and the film’s producers continue to support Shuming financially and emotionally and plan to do so for the long term. Yuan Li (the crew’s interpreter) and Jing Li (our sound person), call Shuming occasionally, checking on her and encouraging her to be the best she can.  These two young women have gone far in their educations and are great role models for Shuming. Yuan just sent Shuming the famed Chinese historical series “China: Five Thousand Years” and it’s now her autumn reading. I am inspired to see other members of the crew also keep up this relationship long after the filming is over.

The Invisible Red Thread continues its theme of powerful transformative connections not only among the people featured in the film and audiences who see it, but the crew who made it! 

 To learn more about Changfu’s other films, check out his website: www.lovewithoutboundaries.org  

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Vermont Premier at the Common Ground Center

This gallery contains 8 photos.

Thanks to all the people at the Common Ground Center and the Chinese Cultural Camp for their help in making this a successful screening.  A special thanks to One World Library Project. Check out our screenings page to see if there … Continue reading

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The Filmmakers Go to Camp!

Screening and Live Q & A at Chinese Cultural Camp in Vermont

On Tuesday evening August 21, co-director Maureen Marovitch and co-producer David Finch are heading off to a very special summer camp. While they won’t be pitching a tent, they will be screening “The Invisible Red Thread” for a special audience of families from the North Eastern United States who have adopted children from China.

Watching movies isn’t always on the agenda at Chinese Cultural Camp in Starksboro, Vermont. But along with the traditional camp activities like hiking, swimming and toasting up s’mores, families also gather to learn more about China and its culture. Seeing a film about 15 year old Vivian’s return to her birthplace in China, and the connection she makes with a teenager adopted within China, fits perfectly into those activities.

Marovitch and Finch with have the chance to answer questions after the screening and also spend the next morning connecting with parents and their children. While most families who come to Chinese Culture Camp have adopted children from China, everyone is welcome.

We love to have the film seen around the world! Please contact us if you’d like information about how to set up a screening in your community!

Campers test out their homemade boats in the Creek.

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What’s it Like? Vivian and Family’s Experiences On The Big Screen

Deciding to be in a documentary is not an easy decision. But once you’ve committed and been filmed, another challenge await : the film’s release. Suddenly everything you did and said is now up for everyone to see on the big and small screen. What’s it like?

We checked in with Vivian and her family, now that the film was broadcast on television in Canada.  For Vivian it was a nerve wracking experience. When we requested holding an advance screening at her high school, Vivian flat out refused. She told us it was one thing to have your friends watch it on TV at home, quite another to have 400 people gathered in an auditorium watching you up close and personal at your best and worst.

But overall, the experience has been immensely positive. The public screening the family participated in showed the family how positively audiences react to their sharing of their emotional journey back to China. And more positive reactions continue to flow in. Says Eve, Vivian’s mother,  “We continue to have great feedback on the film from friends – friends of friends, acquaintances, and people we hardly know, like the woman who serves at Hubert’s favourite deli counter, who have seen it. Everyone comments how sensitively and respectfully the film makers handled the topic, and how moving they found certain parts.”

Scenes that might seemed potentially embarrassing to Vivian have also turned out to be touching, funny moments that people particularly mention. Says Eve “Vivian in the market is definitely the crowd favourite, though Hubert with the carrying poles and the Vivian and Shuming’s lipstick session are close seconds!”

Shuming’s family (the adopted girl Vivian meets in China) has received a copy of the film, which hasn’t yet been released in China. But as the father of the family, Mr. Zhu, works in the construction trade in Shanghai for many weeks at a time, he hasn’t yet been back to his home village to watch it with Shuming, his wife and extended family. We hope to have news of their feedback in a near future blog post.

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Your Turn To Shine!

You’ve been following our adoption documentary- but what about making your own short film about what adoption means to you?  You don’t have to be a professional filmmaker or have pro equipment. Just whip out your handy cam or mobile phone and start filming. You could win a chance to screen it in London for National Adoption Week! If you’ve been touched by adoption in any way, you’re eligible to enter.

More details at: http://www.nationaladoptionweek.org.uk/awards2012/adoptionfilmoftheyear

Photo By Facets.org

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Screening and Q & A in Southwestern Ontario This Week!

The Invisible Red Thread is playing this week in Southwestern Ontario: The Bamboo Bunch from the Brant, Wellington and Waterloo regions is holding a screening on Thursday, July 26 at 7:00 pm at the Knox Presbyterian Church (map below). After the film, audience members can interact with the film’s co-director/writer Maureen Marovitch via a Skype Question & Answer session. DVDs of the film and refreshments will also be available for purchase. Tickets are available onsite or by reserving with sueg@sympatico.ca.

The Bamboo Bunch is a group of families who have adopted from Asia. These families get together to share experiences, strengthen their shared bonds and allow the children to play and have fun with their peers. The Bamboo Bunch began in May 2000 with 6 families meeting at the Forum in Cambridge.  They now count over 150 families who attend their events at various times. They welcome inquiries from those who have adopted, are in the process of adopting or have questions about the process.

Want to organize a screening at your organization, festival, conference, school or library? Contact us!

Written in collaboration with Sue Galloway, Children’s Bridge Event Coordinator

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What viewers said about the film

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Calls for China’s One Child Policy to Be Eased

Researchers call for adjustments of the One-Child Policy (source: Bloomberg News)

Since 1979, an undocumented number of infants and small children – numbering at least in the hundreds of thousands -were abandoned or given away in China as the result of the One Child Policy implemented by the government.  Girls like Vivian Lum and Shumin Zhu, protagonists of The Invisible Red Thread were part of this wave – although adopted on different sides of the world.

With the policy now over three decades old, and China’s economic and demographic situations shifting, a  recent Bloomberg article highlights Chinese researchers calling for the nation to ease its one-child policy as soon as possible to cope with an aging population and labor shortage.  

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New screening in the US

After a successful screening organized by Families with Children from China in Toronto, The Invisible Red Thread is going international.

The upcoming screening is in the state of Washington during Chinese Heritage Camp at Camp Casey on Whidbey Island. The Camp is geared toward children with Chinese heritage, and is a camp experience for the entire family. As part of the weekend’s activities FCC NorthWest, is organizing the screening event under the lead of its board member, Lara Peterson.

The screening will be held on Saturday at 9:30 am in the main auditorium. Families who wish to attend must register between 7:30 and 9:00 on site at the camp.

A special guest, David Wing-Kovarik, Executive Director of Families Like Ours will be present at the screening to moderate a panel. His organization helps pre & post adoptive families through adoption resources, support, education and advocacy. We’re told that camp attendees are looking forward to the film and the ensuing discussion.

Want to organize a screening at your festival, conference organization, school or library? Contact us!

 

 

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We have a winner!

The winner for our contest is Becky! Here is what she wrote on her blog:

My invisible Red Thread

Right now I’m watching The Invisible Red Thread, that aired a few days ago on TV. I’m thankful that I stumbled on it through my WordPress Reader. It’s a documentary about a girl who travels back to where she was born and then adopted by a family from Toronto.

Hearing Vivian’s “What if” questions made me sad: wondering what her life would be like if she’d been adopted by another family, if she was never given up and remained in China, thinking about all of the questions I’ll have to answer or my daughter will be thinking, and not asking, as she grows up.

Something that I’ve come to realize and firmly believe as I’ve gotten older, and since adopting, is that although blood may technically be thicker than water, biology is essentially irrelevant when it comes to love and forming bonds within a family.

I really hope one day that my daughter, husband and I can travel back there – if she wishes – and we can explore China once gain.

Definitely had a lump in my throat at the end of the film when Vivian and her dad came back home and her mom ran to greet her with a big hug.

Thanks to all of you who participated or shared about The Invisible Red Thread!

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