Ugyen lives in Thimphu with his grandmother. He has completed four of his five mandatory years of training as a government teacher. However, he does not enjoy teaching and dreams of moving to Australia to become a singer. When he is assigned to teach in the remote mountain village of Lunana, he considers quitting his job, but his grandmother urges him to complete his teaching assignment. He decides to take it and leaves the city.
Ugyen meets Michen, a village guide who leads him up the six-day-long path to Lunana, a village with a population of 56 people, 4800 meters above sea level. The villagers are excited by his arrival, but Ugyen, appalled by the poor conditions of the village, expresses his regret at coming and asks to be taken back. Asha, the village leader, informs him that the mules need time to rest and he can take Ugyen back in a few days. The next morning, Ugyen is awoken by Pem Zam, the class captain, who tells him the children are waiting for him in the classroom. Ugyen is taken aback by their affection for him, as the children believe teachers have the ability to “touch the future”. He decides to stay and teach for the remainder of the year.
Ugyen returns the next day better prepared to teach and improvises a solution to the lack of a blackboard by writing directly on the wall with charcoal. Michen later constructs a makeshift blackboard for him. Ugyen slowly makes improvements to the classroom, including sacrificing the paper covering his windows when the children quickly run out of scarce writing material. Asha suggests that the teacher may have been a yak in a past life, as yaks are prized in the community. Ugyen quickly becomes a favorite of the children, performing songs on his guitar and teaching them maths, English, and Dzongkha. They are sad when they learn that Ugyen plans to leave when winter comes and will not return.
Ugyen later meets Saldon, the niece of Asha, as she sings a local song atop a hillside. She tells him that she sings it daily as an offering to the mountain spirits, and he asks her to teach it to him. They meet daily, and he slowly learns how to sing it himself. She says it is called Yak Lebi Lhadar, and it was written by a local yak herder who lamented having to slaughter his favorite yak for the good of the village; the last verse is sung from the perspective of the yak, promising to return to its owner one day. Saldon later gifts Ugyen a yak, Norbu, so that he can use its dung to start fires. Because of the cold, Ugyen must keep Norbu in the classroom, and it becomes a fixture of the lessons.
Asha approaches Ugyen with news that winter is approaching and it is time for him to leave before the pass is covered in snow. He asks Ugyen to come back the following spring, but Ugyen says that he intends to leave Bhutan for good, disappointing him. He breaks the news to Saldon, reassuring her that a better teacher will come in the spring, but Saldon says that only the children can be the judges of that and they all love Ugyen. She hopes he will come back someday and perform Yak Lebi Lhadar for her.
Ugyen leaves Lunana after a heartfelt goodbye from the villagers. Pem Zam gives him a letter from all the children, and Saldon gifts him a white scarf. Asha sings Yak Lebi Lhadar as he departs, and Michen informs Ugyen that Asha originally wrote the song, but has not sung since his wife's death some years earlier. Ugyen later reads the letter from the children, in which they thank him, call him their favorite teacher, and urge him to return in the spring. On the way down the mountain, Ugyen stops at a shrine and leaves an offering for safe passage, saying that he hopes to return.
The end of the film shows Ugyen singing a Western song in a bar in Australia, where nobody is paying attention. Annoyed, he stops performing this song, the barkeeper complains that Ugyen is being paid to sing, the audience goes quiet and Ugyen begins to sing Yak Lebi Lhadar leading into the closing credits.
Cast
Sherab Dorji as Ugyen Dorji
Ugyen Norbu Lhendup as Michen
Kelden Lhamo Gurung as Saldon
Kunzang Wangdi as Asha Jinpa
Tshering Dorji as Singye
Sonam Tashi as Tandin
Pem Zam as Pem Zam
Tsheri Zom as Ugyen's grandmother
Critical response
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 98% of 63 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.6/10. The website's consensus reads: "Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom is a simple story with a big heart -- and a reminder of film's ability to communicate universal truths across international borders."[2]Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 76 out of 100, based on 13 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[3]
Awards and nominations
The film won the Audience Choice Award for Best Feature Film and the Best of the Fest at the 2020 Palm Springs International Film Festival.[4] At the 26th Film Festival della Lessinia in Italy, the film was awarded the Lessinia d'Oro Award for Best Film of the festival, the Giuria Microcosmo del carcere di Verona Award and a Special Mention in the Log to Green Award.[5] At the Festival international du film de Saint-Jean-de-Luz, in Saint-Jean-de-Luz, France, the film won the Prix du Public, and Sherab Dorji was awarded the Best Actor award for his role of Ugyen Dorji.[6]
It was selected as the Bhutanese entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 93rd Academy Awards,[7] but it was later disqualified.[8] However, it was resubmitted as Bhutan's entry for the following year,[9] and was shortlisted in December 2021,[10] as one of the five films competing at the 94th Academy Awards, making it Bhutan's first Oscar-nominated film.[11]
^Nordyke, Kimberly; Lewis, Hilary (8 February 2022). "Oscars: Full List of Nominations". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 8 February 2022. Retrieved 8 February 2022.