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Rahul Roy

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Aug 26, 2008, 3:19:08 AM8/26/08
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From: Reshma Pritam <reshma...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Aug 26, 2008 at 11:59 AM
Subject: Travelling Film South Asia 2008: A Festival of South Asian Documentaries
To: "Delhi Film Archive [DFA]" <delhifil...@gmail.com>


Travelling Film South Asia 2008: A Festival of South Asian Documentaries

27th to 30th August 2008

 A festival of films show casing a selection of thirteen outstanding documentaries from the region screened at Film South Asia '07 Festival, Kathmandu. Films from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka will be screened.

Schedule

Date

Time

Films

 

27th Aug08

6pm

Introduction Followed by

 Every Good Marriage Begins with Tears (UK/Bangladesh)

(62 min; dvd; 2006; English & with subtitles)

Director: Simon Chambers

 A moving account of two rebellious Bangladeshi sisters, born and raised in London, who are forced to go back to their parents' motherland for arranged marriages. Through footage of some of their most personal moments, the film explores the conflicts between migrants to the West and their children. It also dispels some myths about Islam's treatment of women, and puts a human face on one of the communities that is being targeted as a result of the US – led 'war on terror'

7:15 – 8:15 pm

 

A Life with Slate (Nepal; 59 min; dvd; 2006; English subtitles)

Director: Dipesh Kharel

 

Joint winner of the Best Debut Film Award, Film South Asia '07

 

In the mountain village east of Kathmandu, the harsh lives of Thami slate-miners take on almost poetic dimensions. We learn how to separate slate slabs from the precipitous rock faces. Women work alongside men, carrying heavy loads down to the village and distant markets. A Life with Slate emphasises how cooperation between the labouring families ultimately makes a tough life bearable, and depicts intimate scenes of village life 

28th August 2008

 

6:00 - 7:14 pm

Motherland Afghanistan (Afghanistan; 74 min; 2006; dvd; English)

Director: Sedika Mojadidi

 

The filmmaker follows her father, who specialises in women's medicine, back to Afghanistan, where one in seven women dies during childbirth. Motherland Afghanistan takes in two different trips, one to a maternity ward in Kabul, and the other to a rural hospital in Ghazni. In the juxtaposition of these two situations, the film finds and highlights the inspiring grace and courage of Afghanistan's women

 

7:30 – 8:35 pm

Rabba Hun Kee Kariye (Thus Departed our Neighbours; India)

(65 min; dvd; 2007; English subtitles)

Director: Ajay Bhardwaj

 Rabba Hun Kee Kariye (Thus Departed our Neighbours) trails a shared history of Punjab - a   subcontinental culture, language and a way of life- that was torn asunder in the fateful year of 1947. It captures the documentary maker's almost unexpected encounter with feelings of guilt and remorse about the genocidal violence of the partition. These informal tales, almost like folklore, are strewn across the memoryscape of Punjabi countryside. This documentary invokes it in the public domain for the first time.

29th August 2008

6:00 – 7:00 pm

Chaama Deu! Tara Nabirsa! (Forgive! Forget not!; Nepal)

(59 min; dvd; 2007; English subtitles)

Director: Pranay Limbu

 This experimental documentary is the narrated story of a journalist who was detained inside Kathmandu's infamous Bhairabnath Barracks for 15 months. It provides a mirror to the terrible times just past in Nepal, during the 'people's war' and the state's reaction to the Maoist insurgency.

7:15 – 8:36 pm

Remembrance of Things Present (India; 81 min; dvd; 2007; English & with subtitles)

Director: Chandra Siddan

 Winner of the Second Best Film Award, Film South Asia '07

 How is a teenager supposed to deal with an arranged marriage? How does one resolve the conflict of a displaced life after years of nomadic existence abroad? In Remembrance of Things Present, the filmmaker, now living in Canada, returns to Bangalore to confront her parents with the former question, while she herself tries to resolve the latter. Long divorced and newly remarried, she records some profoundly touching conversations with her parents – while also finding her past being repeated in the life of her parents' household help.

30th August 2008

 

10:00 – 11:15 am

The Sky Below (India/Pakistan; 75 min; dvd; 2007; English)

Director: Sara Singh

 Joint winner of the Best Debut Film Award, Film South Asia '07

 The Sky Below paints a contemporary portrait of the India-Pakistan 'mind-frontier', six decades after the two were parted. Singh explores the lingering commonalities, as well as the remaining possibilities for reconciliation based on the countries' interwoven histories, cultures and faiths. From both Pakistan and India, we hear first-person recollections from the time of Partition, as well as the views of former militants, politicians, royalty, ordinary citizens, historians and others.

 

11:30 – 12:25 pm

6 Yards to Democracy (India; 55 min; dvd; 2006; English subtitles)

Directors: Nishtha Jain & Smriti Nevatia

 At a political event in Lucknow that was promising free saris, a gruesome stampede kills 22 women and injures many others. This seemingly stray incident hints at the sordid side of Indian democracy, but also goes deeper, to explore the daily humiliations forced upon these women and their families. As Lucknow's boomtown dynamics pushes them further to the margins, we observe the women's struggles to keep their homes, hopes and dignity intact, all the while petitioning an apathetic state to pay heed to their needs.

12:40 – 1:10 pm

The Miseducation of Pakistan (Pakistan; 30 min; dvd; 2005; English)

Director: Syed Ali Nasir

 Schools with no teachers, no buildings, no drinking water, no electricity, and overflowing with garbage – this is what so many students of public schools in Pakistan can look forward   to. Little wonder that a vast majority of the country's primary-school graduates are not even considered literate by international standards. All the while, a corrupt hierarchy of officials and school staff line their pockets with funds meant for the children's education – and no one is held accountable. This is the story of a generation lost, and of a country where basic education remains a distant dream for millions.

1:10 – 2:00 pm

Lunch break

 

2:00 – 3:00 pm

Ayodhya Gatha (India; 62 min; dvd; 2007; English & with subtitles)

Director: Vani Subramanian

 Winner of the Special Jury Mention Award, Film South Asia '07

 For two decades now, the destruction of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya has influenced national events in India. But beyond the symbolism that the Uttar Pradesh town holds for the rest of the country, how has that event affected life in Ayodhya itself? As this film relates, today the streets of Ayodhya seem to have lost touch with the feet of its residents. Blocked and barricaded, our only access to the citizens is through memory: the telling of stories, the hearing of tales, the very gatha of Ayodhya's people

 

3:15 – 4:15 pm

From Dust (Sri Lanka; 60 min; dvd; 2005; English & with subtitles)

Director: Dhruv Dhawan

Filmed following the devastating 2004 Tsunami, this is a damning expose of the Colombo government's ulterior motives during the course of disaster relief. The local survivors have ultimately been prevented from rebuilding their homes along the coastline, while developers eye the lucrative beaches. Told through the stories of two survivors and an aid worker, From Dust is a sensitive depiction of lives that waited in tents while the tourism industry repositioned itself on their properties.

 

4:30 – 6:05 pm

Living Goddess (Nepal; 96 min; dvd; 2007; English subtitles)

Director: Ishbel Whitaker

 Three kumaris, living goddesses, of Kathmandu Valley go about their ritualised lives against the backdrop of the agitations that marked the April 2006 People's Movement. Long   sought for annual blessings by Nepal's monarchy, the Kumaris suddenly find themselves caught amidst a fight to define the country's future. The film spends extra time with Sajani Sakya, the precocious, camera-friendly Kumari of Bhaktapur, who went on a trans-Atlantic visit that made news over the summer.

6:05 – 6:30 pm

Break

 

6:30 – 7:55 pm

Eisenfresser (Ironeaters; Bangladesh)

(85 min; dvd; 2007; English & with subtitles)

Director: Shaheen Dill-Riaz

 Winner of the Ram Bahadur Trophy for Best Film, Film South Asia '07

The annual famine in northern Bangladesh forces two farmers, Kholil and Gadu, along with several of their relatives, to leave their homes and go to work as seasonal labourers in the ship-breaking yards far to the south. Here, on the beaches of Chittagong, they dismantle the   discards of the Western world: decrepit oil tankers and enormous container ships, many of which harbour a vast range of perils, toxic and otherwise. These yards also capture their woes.

 

 



Rahul Roy

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Aug 26, 2008, 4:57:05 AM8/26/08
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the organisers had not mentioned the venue in the earlier notice.
Regards,
Rahul Roy

 
--------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Reshma Pritam <reshma...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Aug 26, 2008 at 1:01 PM
Subject: Travelling Film South Asia 2008: A Festival of South Asian Documentaries
To: "Delhi Film Archive [DFA]" <delhifil...@gmail.com>


Travelling Film South Asia 2008: A Festival of South Asian Documentaries

27th to 30th August 2008

Venue: India International Centre, Auditorium, New Delhi

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