multiculturalism
![Filmmaker Phil Giordano On His Short Film SUPOT & About Creating In Asia](https://www.filminquiry.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Phil-Giordano.jpg)
Recently, I spoke with filmmaker Phil Giordano. Originally from Staten Island, New York, he elected to take the NYU’s Directing Program in Singapore, which is where he lives today. In 2010 he released the controversial short film The Empty Playgound, about a man struggling with inner-demons who tries to abduct a young girl from a playground.
![IN JACKSON HEIGHTS: Frederick Wiseman's Latest Masterpiece](https://www.filminquiry.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/In-Jackson-Heights.jpg)
By definition documentaries sound like a pretty straightforward genre; but the evolution of the genre over the years is anything but simple. While I don’t want to sound combative towards the artistic growth of any art form documentaries have splintered into so many different directions, we’re running out of terms for all of the varied sub genres. For every Michael Moore, Alex Gibney, or Errol Morris there seems to be only one Frederick Wiseman which is why his work always feels like a breath of fresh air.
![Good Morning Karachi](https://www.filminquiry.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/goodmorningkarachifeat.jpg)
At one point in Good Morning Karachi, a fashion photographer is vocal about the contemporary image of Pakistani femininity and culture he believes his photos represent. He claims that his company is the “women’s revolution the country has been waiting for” and that a simple fashion photoshoot can portray a more forward-thinking society to international citizens who portray Pakistan as a bunch of “fundamentalists”. Yet the views about femininity presented by director Sabiha Sumar in Good Morning Karachi are as confused as those presented by a photographer who believes photos of supermodels represents a realistic feminist ideal and aspiration in society.