Ken Kwek


Ken Kwek is a Singaporean screenwriter, director, and playwright. His short film compendium, Sex.Violence.FamilyValues, was banned by the Singapore and Malaysian governments in 2012. His first feature film Unlucky Plaza premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2014. He has written several full-length plays, including the #MeToo drama, This Is What Happens To Pretty Girls, which was staged in Singapore in 2019.

Career

After graduating from the University of Cambridge in 2003, Kwek worked as a camera assistant on various film productions in the United Kingdom. During this time, he also shot and produced The Ballad of Vicki and Jake, a documentary about a heroin addict struggling to raise her 11-year-old son in the ghettos of Bristol. The film won the Best Newcomer Award at the 2006 Visions Du Reel Film Festival in Switzerland.
In 2008, after a three-year stint as a newspaper journalist, Kwek returned to filmmaking. He penned The Blue Mansion, a satirical comedy of manners. He also co-wrote the crime thriller Kidnapper and the period musical comedy It's a Great, Great World with director Kelvin Tong.
In 2011, Kwek directed a trio of short films, Sex.Violence.FamilyValues. The component films, Cartoons, Porn Masala and The Bouncer, were selected for the Miami International Short Film Festival, Hollywood Reel Independent Film Festival, Seoul International Youth Film Festival and Sydney Underground Film Festival, amongst others. Porn Masala won the Audience Choice Award at the Gotham Screen Film Festival and was nominated for Best Comedy at the Super Shorts Film Festival in London.
In 2012, Sex.Violence.FamilyValues was acquired by distributor Cathay, the first Singapore omnibus film to get a major theatrical release in Singapore. However, on 8 October 2012, just three days before the film's slated release, Singapore's Media Development Authority revoked the film's M18 rating and banned it, citing public complaints about the film trailers' "racially offensive" content. The ban ignited a debate about censorship in Singapore's Parliament.
Kwek's first feature film, Unlucky Plaza made its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in September and opened the Singapore International Film Festival in December. In January 2016, the film was withdrawn from Kuala Lumpur's Titian Budaya Festival after Malaysian censors requested eight to ten edits to it, including its sex scenes and language. Unlucky Plaza opened in the United States in the same month, playing in New York City and Los Angeles. The film, which travelled to various film festivals, including the Warsaw Film Festival, Kolkata International Film Festival, International Film Festival Manhattan and the Tehran Jasmine Film Festival, was also released in the Philippines.

Personal life

Kwek is married to actress Pamela Oei, and they have one son.

Works

Feature films

YearFilmDirectorProducerWriterNotes
2005The Ballad of Vicki and JakeDocumentary film
2012Sex.Violence.FamilyValues
2014Unlucky Plaza

Screenplays

Short films

Music Videos

Plays

Books