Hong Kong coming-of-age documentary pulled from Italy film festival amid privacy row

A controversial coming-of-age documentary has been pulled from an Italian film festival after two of its subjects protested the screening over privacy concerns.

Golden Scene, the filmโs distributor, said in a statement on Sunday that To My Nineteen-Year-Old Self will not be screened at the Far East Film Festival in Udine.
The documentary no longer appears on a list of screenings on the festivalโs website.
An award-winning documentary that tracked the lives of six Ying Wa Girlsโ School students over the course of a decade from 2011, the movie was axed from cinemas in 2023ย after one of the students featured โ surnamed Wong โ said she did not consent to public screenings.
The drama sparked a heated debate over documentary ethics, which was reignited last week after Wong โ and a second film subject surnamed Sheh โ objected to the Italian screening.

Director Mabel Cheung and her production team issued an open letter on Thursday night as the controversy snowballed, after Ying Wa Girlsโ School โ which commissioned the documentary as part of a fundraising effort โ issued aย statementย earlier that day that it had not approved the screening in Italy.
Cheung accused the school of lying, saying that the principal never opposed the screening during a meeting two months ago.
The director said she was aware that Wong did not agree to the screening, and that her team edited her parts out of the film. But they did not expect a second student to express disagreement.
In a Thursday statement, Golden Scene corroborated Cheungโs account about a meeting with the schoolโs principal earlier this year and said the schoolโs claims were false.

HKFP has reached out to Far East Film Festival for comment.
In 2021, ahead of a fundraising premiere, Ying Wa Girlsโ School described the film as a โriveting showcase of the trials and tribulations, the dreams and aspirations, and the memories and friendships made during adolescence and one that surely canโt be missed.โ
The documentary won best film at the Hong Kong Film Awards in April 2023, two months after it was pulled from cinemas when Wong published a longย letterย in a media outlet saying she had opposed the filmโs public screening โfrom the very beginning.โ
After news emerged last week that the film was scheduled for a screening in Italy, Wongย told mediaย that she was not consulted about it and that she remained opposed. Sheh alsoย reportedlyย said she had told Ying Wa Girlsโ School that she objected to the screening plan in January.