What
MIFF 2014 has to offer :
The
festival line up promises best of documentary films and the International
Competition includes documentaries and short films that have been making the
right noises around the festival circuit for a while. Dylan Mohan Gray's Fire
in the Blood, Ian McDonald's Algorithms, Shai Heredia's I
Am Micro, Kim Longinotto's Salma, Joshua Oppenheimer's The
Act of Killing, and Nishtha Jain's Gulabi Gang. The
Indian section includes the likes of Shivendra Singh Dungarpur's Celluloid
Man, Satyanshu Singh and Devanshu Singh's Tamaash (The
Puppet), Raja Shabir Khan's Shepherds of Paradise, Govind
Raju's Golden Mango and Sunanda Bhat's Have You Seen
the Arana?
In
addition, there will be a number of Open Forum discussions, master classes and
seminars on film making and promoting documentary film culture.
MIFF Profile : Anand Patwardhan –
Anand Patwardhan has been making films on peoples’ movements in
India for over four decades. In 1970-72, on scholarship to study in the USA,
Patwardhan participated in the anti-Viet Nam war movement and later became a
volunteer in Cesar Chavez’s United Farmworker’s Union. On returning to India in
1972 he joined Kishore Bharati, a rural development and education project in
central India. He was active in the Bihar anti-corruption movement in 1974-75
and in the civil liberties and democratic rights movement during and after the
1975-77 Emergency. Since then he has worked with movements for housing rights
of the homeless, communal harmony, sustainable development and social justice
in the face of religious fundamentalism, rampant privatization, globalization
and nuclear nationalism. Most of his films have faced State censorship as well
as the wrath of religious fundamentalists and he has successfully challenged
these assaults in court and the public domain.
His engagement with the Bihar
anti-corruption movement in 1974-75 led to the making of Waves of
Revolution (1974). His film on Bombay, Bombay Our City (1985),
examined the daily battle for survival of Bombay slum dwellers. This film won
the National Award and Filmfare Award in 1986. Patwardhan’s documentation of
the radical fundamentalism of the nineties resulted in the widely
acclaimed In the Name of God (1992). The rigor and discipline
of his documentary practices also underpin War and Peace/Jang aur
Aman (2002), a documentary journey of peace activism filmed over three
tumultuous years in India, Pakistan, Japan and the USA. The film was made in
the aftermath of the widely celebrated nuclear testing in the Indian
sub-continent. This film received the award for Best Film at the Mumbai
International Film Festival (MIFF), 2002.
His continuing work on caste politics
in India assumes monumental form in his latest film, Jai Bhim Comrade (2012).
The film, shot over 14 years, explores the history and tradition of reason
followed by India’s Dalits and their music of protest. The film won the Bartok
Prize at the Jean Rouch Film Festival, the Best Film prize at the Mumbai
International Film Festival (MIFF, 2012) and the Special Jury Award at the
National Film Awards among many other screenings and awards.
Courtesy: Press Information Bureau Mumbai
|
Tuesday, 4 February 2014
MIFF 2014 opens with the screening of rare films of British Era
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