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This meditative videopoem reflects on recent anti-Asian hate incidents, including one at Wing Luke museum in Seattle and one in Georgetown, Texas, in the context of violence and colonialism that goes back hundreds of years. Psychiatrist, poet and filmmaker Ravi Chandra explores love, hate, identity, and suffering, and commits us solemnly to the fight against racism and violence. The film closes with a nod to Shantideva’s “Path of the Bodhisattva”: Chandra says, “As long as racism remains, as long as beings affected by racism remain – may I too remain, to dispel the miseries of the world.”
World Premiere (IRL and Virtual) – DisOrient Asian American Film Festival, Eugene, Oregon – March 8-17, 2024 (Tickets now available)
East Coast Premiere: Queens World Film Festival, April 23 2024 @ 9:30 pm, Zukor Theater in Queens (Museum of the Moving Image)

What’s a winner? Trumpian ego vs. public service? Dr. Amy, immigrant, international medical graduate, first in her family to go to college, weighs in like a champ. This short doc raises question of who has power and voice in this country and the world and thus, who wins.
Submitting to festivals 
3 minutes, 2022, USA, English
Director, cinematographer, interviewer, titles: Ravi Chandra
Logos: Kym Gray
Official Selection, Houston Asian American Pacific International Film Festival
Official Selection, San Francisco Documentary Festival

How do we hold grief and rage? How do we find meaning?
Brief logline: Grief, rage, identity and meaning are explored in the stories of three Asian American men: psychiatrist/poet Ravi Chandra, poet/artist Truong Tran, and Jungian psychoanalyst/artist QiRe Ching. From shamanistic poetry channeling the dead to deeply riven accounts of our psychological truths, these three come to insights and reflection that aim to inform a changing world.
Rumi wrote “keep your eyes on the bandaged place; that is where the light enters you.” This hourlong documentary features three Asian American men in mid- to later-life: Ravi Chandra, Truong Tran, and QiRe Ching. They are all artists in one or more media, two are psychotherapists, and all have been affected by AIDS and the twin pandemics of COVID and more visibly surfacing wounds of racial trauma. Their identities ‘don’t fit’ in significant ways, and so expression and relationship have become powerful affirmations. In poetry, reflection and conversation, their odysseys of alienation, intransigence, creativity and repair bring the viewer to the great depth needed in our fraught times. This documentary illuminates the wounds they carry, and showcases the light generated by staying close to vulnerability with insight, compassion, and relationship in the midst of suffering and loss. Viewers are opened to a space of grief, rage and resolve. We rarely see Asian American men of these ages on film. “The Bandaged Place” is an antidote to our cultural blindness for diverse identities, and our unwillingness to hear men’s insights born of vulnerability. From the margins comes a new vision for how society might better center itself for the road ahead.
Director’s Statement: This is my first film project, though I wrote about film for over 14 years as the CAAMFest Superfan blogger. George Floyd was murdered on my birthday, intensifying my connection with racial justice and Black Lives. I was also deeply dismayed by the lack of compassion evinced by President Trump and other powerful people for either Black Lives or those threatened or killed by COVID. I felt that as a psychiatrist, artist, and Buddhist, I could not be silent, and needed to do everything in my power to help shift our consciousness and conversation, and also bring the stories of Asian Americans to light.
Filmed from October, 2020 to January, 2021. Festival submissions pending. (c) 2021 Superfan Productions
Total Running Time: 56:37
Director and Producer: Ravi Chandra
Cinematographer and Editor: Sompong Viengvilai
Jenny Chu – second camera
Austin Blackwell – still photography
Ravi Chandra – additional stills and video
Logo design – Kym Gray
Titles – Sompong Viengvilai
Thanks: Eddie Wong, Kathy Ko Chin, Valerie Mih, Ruth Nott, Barbara Koh, Donald Young, SF Love Dojo workshop participants, Janet Austin, San Francisco Film Commission
(c) 2021 Superfan Productions

Official Selection – 2021 Queens World Film Festival, June 23 – July 3, 2021

