After making rounds on the festival circuit, the surrealist short film In Full Bloom begins its life online, premiering on Short of The Week and living on at Vimeo here. Written and directed by Maegan Houang, In Full Bloom features legendary Vietnamese-American actress Kiều Chinh (M*A*S*H) and tells the story of Cecile, an elderly hoarder whose life is upended when worms trigger a black hole in her home and threaten to take her most cherished belongings.
The 10-minute short cuts a deep narrative about a Vietnamese immigrant overcoming the loss of her partner. After her husband’s death, Cecile becomes an agoraphobic hoarder, paradoxically practicing what she loves — gardening — indoors without the help of direct sunlight. She orders mysterious worms to grow a rare flower. Though they help the flower to grow, the worms activate a growing black hole that absorbs everything she holds dear. With her home unrecognizably empty, Cecile has no choice but to leave for the first time since her husband has died and re-assimilate into society.
Through a fantastical lens, Houang poses the question: Can a person ever truly overcome losing someone they love? As such, the film explores coping after the death of a partner, which often leads to unresolved trauma and severe mental illness. Houang’s perceptive approach sheds light on the unique circumstances that affect Vietnamese Americans, particularly older individuals within the community.
The story is partially inspired by her grandfather’s severe dementia, and inability to remember that his wife (Maegan’s grandmother) had died, frequently asking where she was in the middle of the night. “I spent my childhood feeling haunted by the loss of a person I barely knew,” says Houang. “In many immigrant and refugee communities, past trauma continues to haunt people throughout their lives. I wanted to capture this aspect of Cecile’s life by visualizing how holding onto every little thing has become an unhealthy and fleeting source of comfort.”
To convey the metaphor of losing one’s memories, Houang took a suitably reality-bending visual approach. She explains: “I believe that some emotional experiences can and should be explored more subjectively and through fantasy. To me, In Full Bloom is an adult fairy tale that considers, at times abstractly, how one lives in the face of losing everything.”
In addition to the film’s spectacularly stylized set design, Houang opted away from CGI, utilizing practical effects (with VFX cleanup) to create the black hole, and using fishing wire to capture the pull of various objects into its orbit. Even the worms were stop-motion animated by Jason Whetzell, which serves to imbue the film with a darkly whimsical aesthetic.
In Full Bloom was created as part of the VSCO Voices grant in partnership with Access Ventures, which equipped five creators with funding and mentorship to tell the stories of marginalized communities in the United States through art. The opportunity to bring In Full Bloom to fruition further powers Houang’s drive to tell emotionally authentic stories, particularly ones that represent the female Asian American experience.
Having Kiều Chinh (The Joy Luck Club) sign on to do the film was the icing on the cake for Houang. She enthuses: “Kiều has over five decades of contributions to the motion picture industry. I’m so incredibly grateful for depth of emotion she brought to the role of Cecile, someone who is desperately trying to keep alive the memory of the person they loved the most.”
About Maegan Houang
Maegan Houang is a writer/director based in Los Angeles. She recently finished working as a staff writer on season two of the Starz show Counterpart, for which she wrote episode 207 “No Strings Attached” and co-wrote the series finale “Better Angels” with creator/showrunner Justin Marks. Maegan has also directed acclaimed music videos for artists such as Mitski, Charly Bliss, Chastity Belt and Skylar Spence. Her short film In Full Bloom premieres online in June 2019 following screenings at the Atlanta Film Festival, the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival, and the Breakthroughs Film Festival in Toronto, among others.
Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences Announces New Acquisitions To The Academy Collection, Now Comprising More Than 52 Million Items
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced today the newest acquisitions to its expansive Academy Collection—the largest film-related collection in the world, comprising more than 52 million items. The Academy, through its Academy Foundation, is a global leader in the conservation, preservation, and exhibition of film-related objects and materials. Recent acquisitions in the Academy Collection include the Studio Ghibli animation collection, featuring more than 80 pieces of original animation art by Hayao Miyazaki and Noboru Yoshida for Ponyo (2008), the studio’s Japanese movie posters, and animator’s desk; Quentin Tarantino’s original handwritten script draft for Pulp Fiction (1994); a screen-used guitar played by Lou Diamond Phillips as Ritchie Valens in La Bamba (1987); sets and puppets from Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022); a selection of animator’s maquettes from Pinocchio (1940), Fantasia (1940), and The Lion King (1994); glasses worn by Mink Stole as Connie Marble in Pink Flamingos (1972); additional costumes from films including True Lies (1994), The Three Faces of Eve (1957), The House of the Spirits (1993); and more. Personal collections of Richard Amsel, Curtis Hanson, Nicole Holofcener, Barbara Kopple, Ve Neill, Tom Sternberg, Marlene Stewart, Oliver Stone, and Paul Verhoeven have also been added to the Academy Collection. The Academy’s 70mm film collection, one of the largest in the world and screened exclusively at the Academy Museum, continues to expand with new prints, including Lawrence of Arabia (1962), Ryan's Daughter (1970), and Oppenheimer (2023). “We are thrilled... Read More