Bhutan’s best known film-maker is also a high ranking Master

Bhutan’s best known film-maker is also a high ranking Master

Khyentse Norbu is an iconic figure in Bhutan.

Bhutanese Lama and internationally acclaimed film director’s latest film ‘Hema Hema: Sing me a song while I wait, premiered in Switzerland recently. It is Norbu’s  fourth feature. The monk’s association with film began during the Bhutan shoot for Bernardo Bertolucci’s 1993 film “Little Buddha.”

Norbu at the time served as a consultant for Bertolucci. He then went to film school in New York and made a splash with his directorial debut “The Cup,” in 1999, about a bunch of soccer-crazed Tibetan monks who rent a satellite dish to watch the 1998 World Cup final.

Khyengtse Norbu in action
Khyengtse Norbu in action

“Travellers and Magicians,” in which a young Bhutanese government official dreams of escaping to America, followed in 2003; segued by “Vara: A Blessing,” a tale of forbidden love between a Hindi dancer and a Muslim sculptor, in 2013.

Veteran British producer Jeremy Thomas, serving as executive producer and distributor for the film says of Norbu: “I’ve been with him in all his films, to sort of support him” Thomas had met Norbu, and had spent quite a long time in Bhutan for “Little Buddha.” “It’s very interesting to be with a director like that because of the culture that evolves,” he notes.

Khyentse Norbu is no ordinary lama. Norbu, who Thomas described as the most important Buddhist figure in Buthan, comes from a long long line of spiritual teachers. He is considered to be the incarnation of the 19th century saint Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo.

“He also has an enormous film knowledge; really knows cinema back to front,” Thomas underlines. And “the story that he’s telling in this film it has a credibility to it, because of his telling the story.”

“It’s the story of a man’s [spiritual] journey to act the way you would act if you had no identity,” he says.

Thomas’ role is really as an advisor on all the aspects of the film. “I read the screenplay, talked about it a bit, talked about the editing a bit, and then talked about how to position it, present it and promote it,” he explains. The producer is Pawo Choyning Dorji who is in Locarno with Thomas and “Hema Hema” actors Thinley Dorji, Tshering Dorji, and Sadon Lhamo.