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Zack_Tu_Nan's profile image

Zack_Tu_Nan

Joined May 2019
Documentary Filmmaker
Welcome to the new profile
Our updates are still in development. While the previous version of the profile is no longer accessible, we're actively working on improvements, and some of the missing features will be returning soon! Stay tuned for their return. In the meantime, the Ratings Analysis is still available on our iOS and Android apps, found on the profile page. To view your Rating Distribution(s) by Year and Genre, please refer to our new Help guide.

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Ratings35

Zack_Tu_Nan's rating
The Territory
7.54
The Territory
Honeyland
8.010
Honeyland
I Am Because We Are
8.26
I Am Because We Are
First Cow
7.12
First Cow
24 Frames
6.86
24 Frames
Sugarcane
7.010
Sugarcane
No Other Land
8.37
No Other Land
Where Dragons Live
7.56
Where Dragons Live
Lorena, Light-footed Woman
7.07
Lorena, Light-footed Woman
Foreign Uncle
8.08
Foreign Uncle
Wander to Wonder
6.79
Wander to Wonder
Edmond
7.11
Edmond
In Blood, Truth
7.69
In Blood, Truth
Twice Born
7.73
Twice Born
Sisterhood Above All
7.45
Sisterhood Above All
Two Wolves
7.710
Two Wolves
The Hidden Hand
7.510
The Hidden Hand
13th
8.29
13th
Mountain Queen: The Summits of Lhakpa Sherpa
7.610
Mountain Queen: The Summits of Lhakpa Sherpa
King of the Cruise
7.05
King of the Cruise
Madame Web
4.12
Madame Web
Barbie
6.84
Barbie
Four Daughters
7.410
Four Daughters
Kung Fu Panda 4
6.34
Kung Fu Panda 4
Dune: Part Two
8.52
Dune: Part Two

Watchlist12

Winter Sleep
8.0
Winter Sleep
Les Misérables
7.6
Les Misérables
The Look of Silence
8.2
The Look of Silence
The Velvet Queen
7.8
The Velvet Queen
Leviathan
7.6
Leviathan
One Last Hug: Three Days at Grief Camp
7.2
One Last Hug: Three Days at Grief Camp
Green Street Hooligans
7.4
Green Street Hooligans
This Is England
7.7
This Is England
Made in Britain
7.2
Made in Britain
The Story of Ming Lan
8.2
The Story of Ming Lan
A Child of the Streets
BILAL WAHIB: altijd, altijd
5.6
BILAL WAHIB: altijd, altijd

Lists1

  • Bertie Gregory in Epic Adventures with Bertie Gregory (2022)
    Watched
    • 5 titles
    • Public
    • Modified Jan 10, 2024

Reviews6

Zack_Tu_Nan's rating
The Territory

The Territory

7.5
4
  • Jul 29, 2025
  • Undeniably Urgent Cause But A Soulless Spectacle

    The Territory is visually striking, with polished cinematography and high production value, yet it ultimately feels like a soulless spectacle. It relies on familiar Western tropes; beauty shots, expert interviews, aestheticized destruction, and pushy sound design that dictates emotion. Even with Indigenous camera participation, most of the film, around 70%, still reflects an outsider gaze.

    The narrative feels fragmented, as if the filmmaker parachutes in for beautiful shots rather than building a complete, lived in story.

    The film ends abruptly, as if unsure of its direction, leaving me feeling abandoned as a viewer. I wanted to truly know the Indigenous people, but the film only skims the surface, never letting us into their lives beyond brief fragments.

    Perfectly packaged for Western funders, festivals, and their echo chamber of validation, the film checks every expected box; Indigenous struggle, climate change, Amazon deforestation, while fitting neatly into a digestible format.

    A more meaningful approach would involve deeper research and longer immersion, creating a film that reflects the community's ways of seeing and relating to their land. This does not mean handing authorship to untrained individuals; it means using cinematic craft to express a worldview rather than bending that worldview into a pre existing festival friendly arc.

    Honeyland demonstrates this alternative. With a fraction of the budget, it achieves intimacy and cultural authenticity without interviews, explanatory devices, or spectacle. It invites viewers to inhabit its characters' rhythms rather than observe them from afar.

    The filmmakers clearly have noble intentions and technical skill, yet the result feels designed to satisfy the Western gaze, a polished product made for festivals and funders, validated by the same systems that continue to gatekeep Indigenous storytellers. For all its urgency, it reinforces the very power structures that reward impact driven statement films while sidelining authentic Indigenous voices.
    I Am Because We Are

    I Am Because We Are

    8.2
    6
  • Jul 10, 2025
  • "Admirable Intentions and Good Deeds by Madonna, but Repeating the Western Gaze and Perpetuating Stereotypes"

    When I started watching I Am Because We Are, I didn't know it was written, narrated, and produced by Madonna. In fact, I spent much of the first half trying to decipher who this disembodied, almost savior-like narrator was, a voice delivering moral reflections on Africa's suffering and resilience, but never appearing on camera. That initial choice set the tone: the story is framed by an outsider's journey, with Malawi and its people positioned as a backdrop for her awakening.

    The first half of the film was difficult to watch, not just because of the harrowing subject matter, the impact of HIV/AIDS on orphans, but because of the way it was presented. Madonna speaks of her mission and guilt, pointing out the prevalence of witchcraft and stigma, while admiring the children's optimism despite their hardship. This gaze felt flattening and reductive: the Malawian characters were presented as noble, admirable, even mystifying, but rarely allowed to speak as full, complex individuals. Although the children and others are technically given space to speak from the beginning, their words are selectively used to support the Western narrator's own sentiments and assumptions, rather than as complete stories of their own. The film's treatment of witchcraft and stigma is particularly problematic: it demonizes these aspects of Malawian culture and flattens them into mere evidence of backwardness, without offering sufficient context about their social meaning or role.

    It was only in the second half that the film began to resonate more strongly. Here, the children's own voices and stories took center stage, and their dignity and resilience came through more authentically, without so much external narration or framing. This shift showed what the documentary could have been if it had trusted its subjects more fully from the start.

    Since watching, I've reflected on what made me uncomfortable. The film exemplifies what Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak called "the problem of representation": even when well-intentioned, Western filmmakers often speak for marginalized people, instead of letting them speak. Similarly, Claude Lévi-Strauss observed how Western observers tend to exoticize other cultures, projecting meaning onto ordinary behaviors, something this film does when it romanticizes communal life and resilience as if they are inherently superior to Western alienation. What Madonna reads as an African paradox, materially poor but spiritually rich, is perhaps just the baseline of how Malawian society expects people to behave. These are not magical or saintly characters; they are humans shaped by their culture and circumstances.

    That is the recurring problem I now see in many Western documentaries about the Global South: they claim to give voice to the voiceless, but end up dominating the narrative arena, leaving local people as supporting characters in someone else's moral drama. This gaze is very prevalent and repetitive in most of Western made documentaries, I noticed the same dynamic recently in Everything is Temporary (2024) by Juliette Klinke, which similarly admired the optimism of a young Myanmar woman while flattening her into a symbol of noble suffering rather than presenting her as a full human being. I Am Because We Are has good intentions, and some moments of genuine power, but it ultimately re-centers the Western gaze, failing to fully trust the people it seeks to honor.
    Lorena, Light-footed Woman

    Lorena, Light-footed Woman

    7.0
    7
  • Jan 27, 2025
  • Admirable Character

    A such great potential documentary with a great subject yet Sloppy storytelling lacking in depth and also so many of her family members popping in randomly. Sometimes I lost track of whose who. One third or fourth of the film is Lorena running.

    Lots of beautiful drone shots but that's about it and doesn't add any value to the story.

    A waste of potential.

    --- A such great potential documentary with a great subject yet Sloppy storytelling lacking in depth and also so many of her family members popping in randomly. Sometimes I lost track of whose who. One third or fourth of the film is Lorena running.

    Lots of beautiful drone shots but that's about it and doesn't add any value to the story.

    A waste of potential.
    See all reviews

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