Nowhere to Call Home : A Tibetan in Beijing

Director: 
Jocelyn Ford
Duration: 
77Min
Year of production: 
2014
Movies language: 
Subtitles language (s): 
Cinematography: 
Jocelyn Ford, Kai Yang, Hao Wu
Editing: 
Geoff Gruetzmacher, Emma Morris, Gigi Wong, Jocelyn Ford
Production: 
Stories That Matter - Tripod Media
Synopsis: 

Widowed at 28, Tibetan farmer Zanta defies her tyrannical father-in-law. When Zanta’s in-laws won’t let her seven-year-old son go to school, she flees to Beijing to become a street merchant. Destitute and embattled by ethnic discrimination she inveigles a foreign customer, an American journalist, into helping pay her son’s school fees. When the three of them travel back to Zanta’s village for the New Year holiday, Zanta’s father-in-law takes her son hostage. The unwitting American journalist faces a tough decision: does she intervene in the violent family dispute or watch in silence?

 

 

Bio Director: 

Beijing-based radio correspondent and filmmaker Jocelyn Ford has been a pioneer in giving a voice to marginalized groups and pushing for media freedom in East Asia for three decades. She served for over ten years as Tokyo and Beijing bureau chief for U.S public radio’s premier national business show, Marketplace, and her reporting has been heard on a wide range of U.S. programs, including Radio Lab, The World, On the Media and Studio 360. Nowhere To Call Home is her first feature-length documentary.

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