Dubai Telegraph - Acclaimed Malaysian horror film embraces 'female monstrosity'

EUR -
AED 4.330984
AFN 77.242325
ALL 96.717297
AMD 445.508099
ANG 2.111042
AOA 1081.419041
ARS 1700.904617
AUD 1.693874
AWG 2.122741
AZN 2.013887
BAM 1.957162
BBD 2.377044
BDT 144.340433
BGN 1.980482
BHD 0.444608
BIF 3497.32967
BMD 1.179301
BND 1.503101
BOB 8.154639
BRL 6.222582
BSD 1.180216
BTN 106.658762
BWP 15.624872
BYN 3.380652
BYR 23114.291079
BZD 2.373541
CAD 1.61366
CDF 2629.840418
CHF 0.917832
CLF 0.025864
CLP 1021.27426
CNY 8.182046
CNH 8.182707
COP 4361.05349
CRC 585.107121
CUC 1.179301
CUP 31.251465
CVE 110.341308
CZK 24.246655
DJF 210.165343
DKK 7.467255
DOP 74.481825
DZD 153.173321
EGP 55.255774
ERN 17.689508
ETB 183.891253
FJD 2.605667
FKP 0.863465
GBP 0.869221
GEL 3.178211
GGP 0.863465
GHS 12.957961
GIP 0.863465
GMD 86.08881
GNF 10358.163363
GTQ 9.05226
GYD 246.910755
HKD 9.214607
HNL 31.174692
HRK 7.53491
HTG 154.823132
HUF 379.153977
IDR 19903.05564
ILS 3.68917
IMP 0.863465
INR 107.055134
IQD 1546.07577
IRR 49678.036498
ISK 144.806309
JEP 0.863465
JMD 184.588438
JOD 0.836111
JPY 185.206205
KES 152.129955
KGS 103.130147
KHR 4763.172883
KMF 494.126479
KPW 1061.405893
KRW 1731.142391
KWD 0.362493
KYD 0.983484
KZT 582.075012
LAK 25366.650286
LBP 105710.180544
LKR 365.224125
LRD 219.511807
LSL 19.066467
LTL 3.482168
LVL 0.713347
LYD 7.47617
MAD 10.832291
MDL 20.056956
MGA 5221.633248
MKD 61.636336
MMK 2476.27553
MNT 4209.108813
MOP 9.497108
MRU 47.077757
MUR 54.319021
MVR 18.22057
MWK 2046.423916
MXN 20.501834
MYR 4.657646
MZN 75.180118
NAD 19.066467
NGN 1613.448075
NIO 43.428929
NOK 11.513689
NPR 170.654743
NZD 1.972392
OMR 0.45343
PAB 1.180216
PEN 3.967144
PGK 5.13057
PHP 68.943679
PKR 330.45143
PLN 4.21679
PYG 7793.389651
QAR 4.301375
RON 5.093369
RSD 117.385242
RUB 90.661415
RWF 1722.498526
SAR 4.42244
SBD 9.502979
SCR 16.380355
SDG 709.350537
SEK 10.71536
SGD 1.502399
SHP 0.884781
SLE 28.833802
SLL 24729.342339
SOS 673.268465
SRD 44.659986
STD 24409.140703
STN 24.517059
SVC 10.326185
SYP 13042.562925
SZL 19.05726
THB 37.377957
TJS 11.046439
TMT 4.133448
TND 3.419765
TOP 2.839473
TRY 51.435072
TTD 7.991561
TWD 37.356109
TZS 3048.491552
UAH 50.927336
UGX 4212.913512
USD 1.179301
UYU 45.541495
UZS 14476.072549
VES 445.758072
VND 30621.128827
VUV 141.14774
WST 3.21518
XAF 656.413737
XAG 0.016021
XAU 0.000243
XCD 3.187119
XCG 2.12698
XDR 0.816368
XOF 656.410952
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.152835
ZAR 19.081557
ZMK 10615.136605
ZMW 21.922161
ZWL 379.734301
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    -5.3600

    91.12

    -5.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.55

    +0.13%

  • GSK

    1.9400

    59.17

    +3.28%

  • BCE

    -0.7700

    25.57

    -3.01%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -1.0700

    89.16

    -1.2%

  • BP

    -1.0300

    38.17

    -2.7%

  • BTI

    0.3300

    61.96

    +0.53%

  • AZN

    -0.2900

    187.16

    -0.15%

  • NGG

    -0.9000

    86.89

    -1.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    16.42

    -1.22%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    23.89

    +0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.1500

    13

    -1.15%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    30.09

    +1.03%

  • VOD

    -1.0900

    14.62

    -7.46%

Acclaimed Malaysian horror film embraces 'female monstrosity'
Acclaimed Malaysian horror film embraces 'female monstrosity' / Photo: Mohd RASFAN - AFP

Acclaimed Malaysian horror film embraces 'female monstrosity'

One day they are little bundles of joy, the next mood-swing monsters called teenagers with spots, identity crises and oceans of anger.

Text size:

But in "Tiger Stripes", the first Malaysian movie to win a top prize at Cannes, these teen monsters don't just get acne, they start to morph and growl, sprout whiskers and claws and escape into the jungle.

That's a truer face of puberty, insists director Amanda Nell Eu, a passionate advocate of "feminine monstrosity", which she uses to offer a wildly fresh take on female empowerment.

"It is not all beautiful -- she's a monster, she's wild, she's violent and scary but also she is herself and we should celebrate that," Eu said of the film's hairy heroine.

Eu, 37, wanted to challenge the silence and fear hanging over puberty she recalled growing up in Malaysia and England.

"I feel like for a lot of girls once they hit the defining moment of puberty they start learning about shame, about insecurity," she said.

"I suddenly became hyper aware of my body and I realised other people were hyper aware of it and that made me feel really uncomfortable."

In "Tiger Stripes" she exposes and explodes that discomfort, following three friends at a girls' school and the changing dynamics when one gets her period.

As she begins to sweat more, smell differently and need a bra, others look at her like she is dirty, some girls parroting social conventions by calling her a "whore".

But then the film veers off into uncharted territory.

The girl whips off her full veil to reveal a tigerish monster, terrifying those around her, but also offering a new narrative of liberation.

"I love the ambiguity of it. She turns into a creature instead of a woman, and that just makes it more open for everyone."

- 'Feminine monstrosity' -

Eu's inspiration for her first feature came from the female monsters she read about in Malaysian folklore -- and also her experience at a girls' boarding school.

She has a British grandmother and moved to England when she was 11, enrolling in a school in High Wycombe.

"It can be the most beautiful supportive place and the most horrible, lonely place at the same time," Eu said.

She studied graphic design at Central Saint Martins in London but discovered her true calling was cinema.

Wanting to make films but feeling out of place in Britain, she moved back to Kuala Lumpur.

"I didn't know who I was and... I couldn't find something that I wanted to tell a story about."

The feeling of being an outsider only followed her back to Malaysia though, where she talked differently, and did not share the cultural references of her peers.

But making short films unlocked her passion and a path to explore "feminine monstrosity".

"It's Easier to Raise Cattle" (2017) follows a teen vampire living in the jungle, while "Vinegar Baths" (2018) features an abortion nurse who feasts on dead babies.

- Puberty is no picnic -

The subjects can sound grisly, and "Tiger Stripes" has been hailed as a "body horror" in the mould of the cult French hit "Raw" by another woman director, Julia Ducournau, who triumphed at Cannes in 2021.

But while tackling complex issues head-on, the bubbly Eu does not take herself, or her films, too seriously.

"I want people to chuckle and feel uncomfortable and weird but also find it funny... I feel you can laugh about these serious things and emotions."

Eu cites "Mean Girls" (2004), one of Hollywood's nastiest teen flicks and arguably Lindsay Lohan's finest hour, as one of her favourite films.

In "Tiger Stripes" adults are usually a source of ridicule. Shot from afar, they are slow to catch on, clueless when the drama hits.

The girls by contrast are filmed often in intense close-ups.

To get even deeper into their world, Eu also incorporated shots from mobile phones that the girls filmed themselves.

"It's really important to get their gaze," Eu said of the footage that includes the girls dancing raucously in school toilets, trying on bras, but also group bullying.

Puberty, after all, is about breaking everything, but also constructing something new, and although Eu's heroine escapes into the jungle, that's not the end of the story.

"If you want to fight for your freedom it's not rainbows and blue skies for the rest of your life, you need to find your community."

Z.W.Varughese--DT