Festivals: Document 6, Glasgow 08, 11th International Theater & Film Festival in Holon 2008, Israel, Melbourne IFF 07, Docudays Beirut 07, 20th Dallas Video Festival 07, Margaret Mead Film and Video Festival 07, 10th Les Rencontres internationales du documentaire du Montreal (RIDM), Encounters IDF 07, MEET 07, Visions du Reel Nyon 06, IFF Zanzibar 06, Taiwan IDF 06, Netherlands FF 06, IDFA 06, Jakarta IFF 06, Adelaide FF 07, Documenta Madrid 07, INPUT Switzerland 07, Full Frame FF 07
Awards: Winner Golden Dow – Best documentary Film - IFF Zanzibar 06, Taiwan IDF 06 - Official selection, Adelaide FF - official selection, Full Frame - Official selection, Melbourne IFF - Official selection, Documenta Madrid - Official selection
Broadcast: VPRO Netherlands, Link TV USA, Canal Plus Poland, DOC AIR Online, Free Speech TV USA
Original Language: Indonesian with English subtitles

Promised Paradise

The Netherlands / Indonesia / 2006 / Leonard Retel Helmrich / 52 mins

The Jakarta-based Indonesian puppeteer and troubadour Agus Nur Amal travels to Bali to call to account the people who were responsible for the bomb attack on a nightclub there on 12 October 2002. Like in his theatre shows, humour is his main weapon. Before an audience of children, we see him enact the attack on the Word Trade Center inside a gigantic "TV set." The doll of Osama Bin Laden swaying his hips gets his audience roaring with laughter. But people stop laughing when his shadow play about the WTC disaster changes into images of new bomb attacks in Indonesia - first on the Australian Embassy in September 2004, and later in Bali in October 2005. Director Leonard Retel Helmrich, the 2004 winner of the Joris Ivens Award with The Shape of the Moon >(Stand van de Maan), uses ingenious editing to have Agus talk with the brain behind the attack in a "TV interview." Agus also consults a paranormal advisor and asks him where the perpetrators of the suicide attack are now. "Their heaven is our hell," is the conclusion. But while Agus is in Bali, his friend Endang, who is still in Jakarta, falls prey to intolerance and violence.
(Source: IDFA catalogue)