Eternal Mother (2017 film)

The Eternal Mother (Burmese: ထာဝရအမေ), a Burmese drama film created by Sin Yaw Mg Mg is based on the true story novel, "Mother and I", by Dr. Khin Maung Win. This is the first cooperated film between Sin Yaw Mg Mg and May Than Nu who did not work together since their separation 12 years ago. Their son, Min Thant Mg Mg, work as a deputy director for this film. This film was aired in Singapore.[1][2]

Eternal Mother
ထာဝရအမေ
Directed bySin Yaw Mg Mg
Written byDr. Khin Maung Win
Screenplay byMoe Ni Lwin
Based onthe true story of the famous doctor, Dr Khin Mg Win
StarringNay Toe
Wutt Hmone Shwe Yee
Ye Aung
May Than Nu
Release date
2017 December
CountryMyanmar
LanguageBurmese

Plot

Khin Maung Win is the son of a police officer. After his father retires from the police department, they moved to their home town, Wundwin. His mother, Daw Khin Khin, worked hard so that her children could go to school. Among her children, only Khin Mg Win passed the matriculation exam with three distinctions, and later he attended the University of Medicine, Mandalay. He then met with Khin Lay Yee. Not long after he became a professor, his mother died.[3][4]

Cast

Main

Supporting

  • Htun Ko Ko as Khin Maung Win's deputy
  • Zin Aung as Khin Maung Win's elder brother

Shotting Places

Myanmar

Singapore

England

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryNomineeResult
2017 Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards Best Picture Zin Yaw Films Nominated
2017 Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards Best Actress May Than Nu Nominated
2017 Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor Ye Aung Nominated
2017 Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards Best Cinematography Win Lwin Htet Nominated
2017 Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards Best Director Zin Yaw Maung Maung Won
2017 Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards Best Sound Thein Aung Won
2017 Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards Best Editing Owin Won
gollark: If you are converting the cellulosey bits you could just get rid of the lignin *or* take out the cellulose.
gollark: ?news
gollark: Consequentialist-ly speaking (yes, I am aware you don't subscribe to this) a technological development could be "bad", if the majority of the possible uses for it are negative, or it's most likely to be used for negative things. To what extent any technology actually falls into that is a separate issue though.
gollark: You can show that 2 + 2 = 4 follows from axioms, and that the system allows you to define useful mathematical tools to model reality.
gollark: If you're going to say something along the lines of "see how it deals with [SCENARIO] and rate that by [OTHER STANDARD]", this doesn't work because it sneaks in [OTHER STANDARD] as a more fundamental underlying ethical system.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.