Kamar
Ahmed Simon’s ‘Are You Listening’ wins Golden Conch Award at MIFF 2014
FTII films make an impression at the festival winning multiple awards
‘Gulabi Gang’ gets Best Director Award for Nishtha Jain
Kashmiri Film ‘Tamaash’ makes a mark
Dhvani Desai’s RTI film ‘Chakravyuh’ is voted the most popular film of the festival
FTII films make an impression at the festival winning multiple awards
‘Gulabi Gang’ gets Best Director Award for Nishtha Jain
Kashmiri Film ‘Tamaash’ makes a mark
Dhvani Desai’s RTI film ‘Chakravyuh’ is voted the most popular film of the festival
The seven day international documentary
film festival, MIFF 2014 concluded in Mumbai today (09-02-14) with best of the work in
documentary, short and animation films honoured with awards, presented by
eminent film makers Adoor Gopalakrishnan and Shyam Benegal.
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The Jury 1 comprised eminent film maker
Anand Patwardhan, film curator Angela Haardt from Germany, Director of the
Yamagata Documentary Film Festival, Fujioka Asako of Japan, Slovenian film
scholar Jurij Meden and noted animator from Mumbai Shilpa Ranade. The
Jury II comprised Canadian film maker Mark Achbar, film director and editor
Amitabh Chakrabarty, film maker from Kerala M R Rajan, noted cinematographer
Piyush Shah and Netherlands based film scholar Rada Sesic.
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Kamar Ahmad Simon’s 90 minute documentary ‘Are
You Listening’ has won the Golden Conch
Award for the Best Documentary Film (above
60 minutes) at the Mumbai International Film Festival for Documentary, Short
and Animation Films, MIFF 2014 which concluded today (09-02-14). It gets the
Golden Conch trophy and Rs 500,000 cash prize (Rs 300,000 for the Director
and Rs 200,000 for the producer – Sara Afreen).
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Set in the coastal belt of Bangladesh,
Simon’s ‘Are You Listening! ‘is a powerful and beautifully photographed film
that reveals the alarming effects of climate change and deftly captures the
fighting spirit of a community and their will to survive. The global issue of climate change is experienced in
microcosm in Kamar Ahmad Simon’s film, as he observes the families of
Sutarkhali. The coastal village was left underwater by a tidal surge after a
cyclone, and Rakhi, her husband Soumen and their six-year-old son are forced
to live on a dyke with 100 other families. The government is slow to help the
families reclaim their land, and continuing delays cause mounting friction.
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The Golden Conch for Best Documentary Film upto 60 minutes went to
Maria Stodtmeier’s (Germany) “In Between : Isang Yun in North and South Korea’. This documentary explores
whether music can overcome the boundaries of a divided country. It examines
the world’s of North and South Korean music, taking the viewer along on an
exciting journey through two political systems. It gets the Golden Conch trophy and Rs 500,000
cash prize (Rs 300,000 for the Director and Rs 200,000 for the producer –
Paul Smaczny).
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FTII production ‘Black
Rock’ directed by Vikrant Janardhan Pawar was adjudged the Best
Short Fiction film in International Competition. It gets the Golden
Conch trophy and Rs 500,000 cash prize (Rs 300,000 for the Director and Rs
200,000 for the producer - FTII).
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The Golden Conch Best
Animation Film award went to ‘True Love Story’ by
Gitanjali Rao. This 18 minute animation , set in the streets of Mumbai
explores what happens when the ultimate Bollywood fantacy is applied in
reality. It gives glimpse into the influence of Bollywood on real life
in Mumbai, told through puppet animation. The award carries a Golden
Conch and Rs 500,000 cash prize.
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Gulabi Gang gets Best
Director award for Nishtha Jain
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Nishtha Jain, whose documentary ‘Gulabi Gang’, won the Best
Director Award in the International Competition section of MIFF. She
gets Rs 100,000 cash award and a certificate. ‘Gulabi Gang’ tells
the story of Sampat Pal and her group of women vigilantes and activists from
Bundelkhand, who fight for womens’ rights and their empowerment. Armed
with a lathi (stick) the Gulabis visit abusive husbands and beat them up
unless they stop abusing their wives. The film has won several other
awards, and there are plans to release it in theatres on February 21, as part of PVR Director’s Rare initiative. Nishtha
Jain, an alumnus of Film & Television Institute of India, FTII is based
in Mumbai .
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Dhvani Desai’s RTI
film ‘Chakravyuh’ voted most popular film of MIFF 2014
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For the first time, MIFF had introduced a
new category of award – ‘Most Popular Film of the Festival’, which was
to be chosen through voting by festival delegates. Dhvani Desai’s short
film ‘Chakravyuh’, through the struggles of four characters
from different regions of India, throws light on how the Right To Information
Act can be used to fight corruption. The film, produced by
Films Division, was first shown on October 12, 2013 on the occasion of 8th anniversary of RTI in Mumbai.
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Dadasaheb Phalke Chitranagari Award
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Mumbai based film maker Dylan Mohan Gray’s
film ‘Fire in the Blood’ got
the Dadasaheb Phalke Chitranagari Award for Best
Debut Film of a Director. The 84
minute film tells the story of how Western pharmaceutical companies and
governments blocked access to low-cost AIDS drugs for the countries of the
global south in the years after 1996 - causing ten million or more
unnecessary deaths - and the improbable group of people who decided to
fight back. This award carrying a cash prize of Rs 100,000 and a Trophy has
been instituted by the Maharashtra Film Development Corporation, Mumbai
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IDPA Award for the best student film
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IDPA Award for the best student film went
to ‘Sonyacha Amba’ (Golden Mango) directed
by Govind Raju and produced by FTII, Pune. This film had participated in
Berlin and Beijing festivals as well. The Rs 100,000 cash and Trophy is given
by the Indian Documentary Producers’ Association, IDPA.
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Pramod Pati Award
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Pramod Pati Award for
most Innovative film, carrying a cash prize
of Rs 100,000 and a trophy went to Pushpa Rawat’s 57 minute documentary ‘Nirnay’ (Decision).
The film explores the lives of women in a lower middle class colony in
Ghaziabad, who are young and educated, but feel bound and helpless
when it comes to major decisions about their lives, be it career or marriage.
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Kashmiri film ‘Tamaash
(The Puppet) is the best Short Fiction Film
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The
Kashmiri short-film ‘Tamaash’ (The
Puppet) won the Golden Conch award for the Best
Short Fiction Film (upto 45 minutes) in the National Competition. Tamaash is
the first film by directors Satyanshu and Devanshu Singh, who also wrote,
edited, and produced it, along with Tulsea Pictures. The film insists on the
power of goodness and the importance of preserving the innocence of
children. It had won the Golden Elephant Award at the International
Children’s Film Festival held in Hyderabad during November 2013. Along
with the Golden Conch, the filmmakers also get Rs 250,000 cash award.
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Also in the National Competition section, ‘Seven
Hundred Zero Zero Seven’ by Altaf Mazid got
the Golden Conch for Best Documentary (upto 40 minutes), while ‘Have You Seen the Arana’ by
Sunanda Bhat and ‘Invoking Justice’ by
Deepa Dhanraj shared the Best
Documentary Awards in above 40 minutes category.
Courtesy: Press Information Bureau Mumbai |
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