this film and 7 years in Tibet, they are both great
another great film about Tibet: Moutain Patrol-Kekexili, telling a story of a Beijing reporter who traveled to Tibet, discovered the great beauty but severity of the nature itself, encountered a group of moutain patrols who sacrificed to protect antelope away from the killings by years
This movie perpetuates the myth that Tibetans are only spiritual. The filmmaker, because he wants to have continued access to Tibet and the monk because he is after rich patrons, Chinese ones. They do the dirty work for the PRC. Please remember the real Tibet. BOD GYALO, FREETIBET!
You sanctimonious twit, if you're going to profess to be a supporter of Tibetan freedom then start by paying respect to those who are actually DOING something towards telling factual accounts of the nation's people. Clearly you haven't seen the film or you'd realize the extreme lengths the filmmaker had to go to get his access and that the monk was imprisoned by the Chinese and still has all his family there. Your type of ignorant, soap-box standing, poser-activism remarks drive me nuts.
this film and 7 years in Tibet, they are both great
another great film about Tibet: Moutain Patrol-Kekexili, telling a story of a Beijing reporter who traveled to Tibet, discovered the great beauty but severity of the nature itself, encountered a group of moutain patrols who sacrificed to protect antelope away from the killings by years
georgetruong 4 years ago
This is one very talented man. Geoff Browne!
anastasiafontaines 4 years ago
Look like a great film.
eliskander 4 years ago
Awesome looking stuff. Can't wait to see the whole film.
androidfrisbee 5 years ago
This movie perpetuates the myth that Tibetans are only spiritual. The filmmaker, because he wants to have continued access to Tibet and the monk because he is after rich patrons, Chinese ones. They do the dirty work for the PRC. Please remember the real Tibet. BOD GYALO, FREETIBET!
bottomsup151 5 years ago
You sanctimonious twit, if you're going to profess to be a supporter of Tibetan freedom then start by paying respect to those who are actually DOING something towards telling factual accounts of the nation's people. Clearly you haven't seen the film or you'd realize the extreme lengths the filmmaker had to go to get his access and that the monk was imprisoned by the Chinese and still has all his family there. Your type of ignorant, soap-box standing, poser-activism remarks drive me nuts.
tedwlm 5 years ago
I saw this film at the Whistler Film Festival. Incredible story.
tedwlm 5 years ago