Singapore's shopping obsession inspires filmmaker
By Jovanda Biston
SINGAPORE (Reuters Life!) - Singapore can seem like one big shopping centre, where everything is neatly arranged and price tagged in air-conditioned comfort, and local film director Li Lin Wee knows it all too well.
Wee's first feature-length movie, "Gone Shopping" in theatres this month, was inspired by the national pastime and centres on three characters - a lonely socialite, an abandoned Indian child and a dissatisfied young corporate executive - who seek comfort, love and fantasy in shopping malls.
"The mall is the most idyllic place. It's like our national treasure, like our Grand Canyon," she told Reuters in her studio.
"Where do you go to see the glorious and pristine Singapore? You go to the malls. What else do we have to take our mind off things?" the 33-year-old director added.
Wee said that she spent much of her college days hiking and horseback riding in Rhode Island, but often finds herself in shopping malls in Singapore.
"It's the hostile weather -- if it's not raining, it's very hot. And I feel that the infrastructure of the city herds us into shopping centres. You can do everything in shopping centres," she said.
Shopping is perhaps the leisure activity of choice for many Singaporeans who throng the malls around the island to shop, watch movies, eat, indulge in retail therapy and to escape the sweltering tropical heat.
Last October, VivoCity, the country's largest shopping centre, saw 2 million visitors -- equivalent to half the population -- within a month of its opening. Continued...
















