[Reader-list] 3 Day Film Festival on Kashmir

shaina a kalakamra at gmail.com
Wed May 29 10:27:54 CDT 2013


Dear All,

A 3-day film fest in Bombay that includes a wide range of films on kashmir.


best,
shaina

KASHMIR – BEFORE OUR EYES
Documentaries, features, shorts, readings and discussions on Kashmir.
MAY 31, JUNE 1, and June 2, 2013
CURATED BY: Ajay Raina & Pankaj Rishi Kumar
The screenings /discussions are free and open to all.

MAY 31, 2013 – Friday (3.00 PM to 6.00 PM)
ROOTS OF THE CONFLICT: The nationalist discourse

STORM OVER KASHMIR
1948/ Non-Fiction/English/45 Min/B. D. Garga /Films Division.
Films Division documentary about 1947 war between India and Pakistan over
Kashmir

A DIARY OF AGGRESSION
1966/Non-Fiction/English/23 Min./ NVK Murthy/Films Division

This Films Division documentary about 1965 war between India and
Pakistan over Kashmir “has been compiled from authentic newsreel
coverage between May and October 1965 during which period a series of
acts, covert and overt by Pakistan, unfolded.”

AATISH-E-CHINAR
The flame of the Chinar
1998 / 60/ URDU/ Zul Vellani / Films Division
The film depicts the life and works of Late Shri Shaikh Mohammad Abdulla,
the eminent leader of Kashmir.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheikh_Abdullah

Discussion about India Pakistan wars, moderated by Seema Mustafa.
(Seema Mustafa is resident Editor of The Sunday Guardian, a Delhi-based
newspaper. She has received the prestigious "Prem Bhatia Award for
Excellence in Political Reporting and Analysis" in 1999 for her coverage
of the Kargil war in May–July 1999.)


MAY 31, 2013 – Friday (6.30 PM to 8.00 PM)
CURTAIN RAISER
HARUD
2012/Fiction/Urdu/99 Min./ Aamir Bashir /India

Rafiq and his family are struggling to come to terms with the loss of
his older brother Tauqir, a tourist photographer, who is one of the
thousands of young men who have disappeared since the onset of the
militant insurgency in Kashmir. After an unsuccessful attempt to cross
the border into Pakistan to become a militant, Rafiq returns home to an
aimless existence, until one day he accidently finds his brother’s old
camera.

Winner of the Don Quixote award at the Fribourg
International Film Festival 2011: “For the sensitive treatment of the
subject and its aesthetic choice that blends realistic scenes and dream
visions as well as metaphors of oppression, death, madness and
self-sacrifice."
http://www.harudthefilm.com/
http://www.upperstall.com/films/2010/harud

Q&A with Aamir Bashir (Producer/Director) & Shankar Raman (Producer/DOP)


JUNE 1, 2013 – Saturday (10 AM to 1.00 PM)
PARADISE:  Kashmir then and now

BEFORE MY EYES
1988 / Non-Fiction/English/24 Min/Mani Kaul /India
http://dearcinema.com/article/understanding-the-films-of-mani-kaul/4332

LOLAAB – A valley in the Himalayas
1990/ Non-Fiction/English/57 Min/Mohiuddin Mirza/India

In the valley of Lolaab, a remote section of Kashmir in northern India,
the people still live an ancient lifestyle, as yet unaffected by
modernization. Learn about the culture of the people of Lolaab, how they
survive the elements, and learn how the violence and militancy of the
modern Kashmiri independence movement is effecting them.
National Award for best film on Ethnography

PARADISE ON A RIVER OF HELL
2003/ Non-Fiction/English/30 Min/Abir Bashir Bazaz – Meenu Gaur /PSBT/India

A culture of tolerance in Kashmir had been turned by Nund Rishi – the
fifteenth century Sufi believed to be an incarnation of the Buddha –
into a morality of the Other. The morality that refused to understand
the schizophrenia of India’s Partition, the language of rejection of the
Other. Abir Bazaz and Meenu Gaur’s -‘Paradise on a River of Hell’, is a
film on Kashmir’s catastrophic desolation. The film weaves itself out
of the knots of memory, the tapestry of truths and the cruel calligraphy
of fate Kashmir witnessed in the 1990s. It seeks to reflect and refract
the multiple experiences of tortured subjectivity in Kashmir. Not
attempting to situate the 1990s in this or that event, person, space or
time, the film’s mappings of personal and collective memories bears
witness to Kashmir’s historical solitude.
https://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=602930183053488


Special Recognition, Third Karachi Film Festival, Pakistan, 2003.
Official Selection, South Asian Human Rights Film Festival, New York,
2003

Discussion: Kashmir before 1990. Moiuddin Mirza / Piyush Shah / Jyoti
Swaroop/ Siddhartha Gigoo moderated by Ajay Raina


JUNE 1, 2013 – Saturday (2.00 PM to 4.00 PM)
EXILE/ DISSAPEARNCE/DISLOCATION:

THE LAST DAY
2013/Fiction/Kashmiri-Hindi/12 Min./ Siddhartha Gigoo /India

Set in 1994 in a camp for Kashmiri Pandit exiles, the film portrays
four frayed lives in a scrawny 8 x 10 tent. Gossamer memories of a
glorious past taunt their tawdry and uncertain present. An old patriarch
is battling dementia on his deathbed. His wife has lost the will to
live. His son and daughter-in-law struggle for personal space. Will they
ever find deliverance? Will they rediscover love? Will tomorrow be any
different from today or yesterday? The river has all the answers, yet
flows, eternally silent.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Last-Day/128232624019102?id=128232624019102&sk=info

TELL THEM, THE TREE THEY HAD PLANTED HAS NOW GROWN
2001/Non-Fiction/Kashmiri-English/58 Min./ Ajay Raina /PSBT /India

A cinematic diary of a Kashmiri revisiting Kashmir to witness the scars
of a ‘Paradise’, now lost. Ajay Raina looks at the lives of the
Kashmiris who have stayed behind and their struggles. He examines the
changing scenario – the ideology, the history and the cause of militancy
in Kashmir. The film is replete with nostalgia and memoirs of people
and places. It also delves into the psychological scars, the despair and
the hopes for a better future, a better “Kashmir”.
http://www.upperstall.com/films/2002/tell-them-the-tree-they-had-planted-has-now-grown
Winner of Golden Conch (MIFF 2002) RAPA Award and IDPA Silver trophy

Followed by Q&A with the filmmakers moderated by Dilip D’Souza. (
Dilip D'Souza is a Mumbai-based writer and journalist. He writes about
social and political causes. He has won several awards for his writing,
including The Daily Beast award for South Asian commentary, the
Statesman Rural Reporting Award, the Times of India/Red Cross prize, and
the Outlook/Picador prize in 2004 for his essay "Ride Across The
River". It was about an Army officer killed in action in Kashmir.)


JUNE 1, 2013 – Saturday (4.15 PM to 6.15 PM)
WHERE HAVE YOU HIDDEN MY CRESCENT MOON
2009/Non-Fiction/Kashmiri- English/28 Min./ Iffat Fatima/ India

The film was made in 2009 in collaboration with the Association of the
Parents of Disappeared Persons in Kashmir (APDP). APDP, is a collective
of the family members, mostly mothers and spouses, of the victims of
enforced disappearances in Kashmir seeking information about the
whereabouts of their disappeared relatives. The film is part of a larger
project on enforced disappearances, which began in 2006, with the
objective of supporting APDP in its campaign against enforced
disappearances, in Kashmir and outside Kashmir.
Through the production of documentary films the project seeks to create a
space for
women whose voice remains buried in the larger political and
militaristic discourse, to narrate their personal experiences with
violence. The film is a tribute to Mughal Mase and her relentless quest
for justice and redress. It explores issues of memory, violence and
healing. Mughal Mase lived in Habba Kadal, Srinagar, Kashmir. On
September 1st 1990, her only son Nazir Ahmed Teli, a teacher,
disappeared, never to be found again. In April 2009, the filmmaker spend
a day with her...
http://cpnn-world.org/cgi-bin/read/articlepage.cgi?ViewArticle=464

AUTUMN’S FINAL COUNTRY
2005/Non-Fiction/Kashmiri- English/66 Min./ Sonia Jabbar / India

Autumn’s Final Country is the touching story of Indu, Zarina, Shahnaz
and Anju, four women who suffer displacement in the conflict-ridden
State of Jammu and Kashmir. Recorded as testimonials for the South Asia
Court of Women (Dacca, Aug.2003), the film explores the lives of each
woman as she relates the circumstances leading to her rootlessness, and
reveals an intimate dimension of the Kashmir conflict, raising questions
about patriarchal values and power, communal identities, patriotism and war.
http://asiasociety.org/policy/social-issues/human-rights/autumns-final-country?page=0%2C0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sW0CL3jtUUE

Discussion moderated by Ram Puniyani.
Ram Puniyani was a professor in biomedical engineering at theIndian
Institute of Technology Bombay, and took voluntary retirement in
December 2004 to work full- time for communal harmony in India. He is
involved with human rights activities from last two decades. He is
working for communal harmony and initiatives to oppose the rising tide
of Fundamentalism in India. He is associated with various secular and
democratic initiatives like All India Secular Forum, Center for Study of
Society and Secularism and ANHAD.


JUNE 1, 2013 – Saturday (6.30 PM to 8.30 PM)
BUB (The Father)
2009/Fiction/Kashmiri/120 Min./ Jyoti Sarup / NFDC/ India

The film is based on the real life incident of the Vandahama tragedy,
where a Kashmiri Pundit family was massacred before the Republic day on
26 January. The film describes the pain of a Kashmiri boy, Vinod, who
lost his parents and it also gives an insight into the various aspects
of Kashmiri society and culture. Vinod, a 13-year-old Kashmiri Pandit,
is the sole survivor of a terrorist massacre that leaves his entire
family and 20 others dead. Shiban Lal, the Divisional Commissioner of
Srinagar, is forced to take Vinod home, since the child has no one to
look after him. When the government announces a grant of Rs. 4,000,000
for the boy's education, an uncle turns up to collect him. The uncle
finds a profitable use for Vinod – as a crowd puller during the
elections. Tormented by his uncle and aunt, Vinod eventually runs away
and lands up at Shiban Lal's house. When Lal talks of legally adopting
Vinod, all hell breaks loose at his home, with his wife and children
against the idea. Lal regretfully takes Vinod to the Border Security
Force's boarding school, so that he can learn to defend himself.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bub_%28film%29

National Award for best film in Kashmiri language
Followed by Q&A with the filmmaker.

JUNE 2, 2013 – Sunday (10.00 AM to 1.00 PM)
AZADI:
JASHN-E-AZADI
2007/Non-Fiction/Kashmiri-Urdu-English/140 Min./ Sanjay Kak /India

It’s 15th August, India’s Independence day, and the Indian flag
ritually goes up at Lal Chowk in the heart of Srinagar, Kashmir. The
normally bustling square is eerily empty– a handful of soldiers on
parade, some more guarding them, and except for the attendant media
crews, no Kashmiris. For more than a decade, such sullen acts of protest
have marked 15th August in Kashmir, and this is the point from where
Jashn-e-Azadi begins to explore the many meanings of Freedom–of Azadi–in
Kashmir.
http://kashmirfilm.wordpress.com/
http://intercontinentalcry.org/review-of-the-movie-jashn-e-azadi/
http://pratilipi.in/2008/12/jashn-e-azadi-sanjay-kak/

Discussion with Kalpana Sharma
Kalpana Sharma is an independent journalist, columnist and media
consultant. She was Deputy Editor with newspaper The Hindu. She has
written three books: Rediscovering Dharavi: Stories from Asia's Largest
Slum, Whose News? The Media and Women's Issues and Terror
Counter-Terror: Women Speak Out both co- edited with Ammu Joseph.


JUNE 2, 2013 – Sunday (2.00 PM to 3.30 PM)
MARGINALISATIONS:

PATHER CHU JAERI (The Play is on)
2001/Non-Fiction/Kashmiri-Urdu-Hindi/44 Min./ Pankaj Rishi Kumar /PSBT/India

How does art survive in a regime of fear? I first encountered this
question in 1999, while taking photographs of Kashmir during that
mindless war with Pakistan. That summer, I established contact with the
National Bhand Theatre, Wathora, and the Bhagat Theatre, Akingam, two
groups that were still performing in the traditional Pather form of
satire.

I returned twice in 2001, now armed with a camera. I
was encouraged by what I found: an illiterate community has sustained a
centuries-old tradition in the face of debilitating social and cultural
changes. Although perenially intimidated by the corruption, violence and
intolerance that prevail in Kashmir, the bhands are still affirming a
commitment to their theatre, to the critical potential of its form and
the liberating joys of performance. Faith in Sufism has tempered their
enthusiam for satire and they identify with the collective voices of
Kashmir's freedom.

Pather Chu Jaeri / The Play is on....
follows the two groups as they prepare for public performances, a rare
phenomenon today. For the bhands, who daily witness the erosion of their
way of life, each performance represents both a change as well as a
repetition of the same brutal fact: that they are not free to share
their revolutionary spirit.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=273234312820316&set=pcb.273234892820258&type=1&theater
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIi2TKO6JtE

Best film---UNESCO MITIL Prize
Bronze Remi at Houston International Film Festival
Special Jury award at Karachi film festival
Special Mention--earthvision, santa Cruz, US
Special Jury award at Dallas South Asia film festival

Screening followed by Q&A with Pankaj Rishi Kumar


JUNE 2, 2013 – Sunday (3.30 PM to 5.30 PM)
APOUR TI YAPOUR. NA JANG NA AMAN. YEI CHU TALUKPETH
(Between Border and the fence. On the edge of the map)
2011/Non-Fiction/Kashmiri-Urdu-English/78 Min./ Ajay Raina /PSBT/India


About the people living on the LOC, a semi-permanent border that
divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan. The film explores the same
themes as Raina’s previous documentaries -- Tell Them, The Tree They Had
Planted Has Now Grown and Wapsi. All the films explore geographical and
psychological dislocation, the notion of exile and the yearning for a
return to less fractious times. 'In Tell Them ...', Raina goes on a
visit to his old home in Jammu and Kashmir. In Wapsi, Raina attends an
India-Pakistan cricket series across Pakistan in 2004. In Apour Ti
Yapour, the attempt was to “go beyond the personal, to understand and
address the question of Kashmir’s struggle for azadi”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BohnbWC3Chc&list=PLD193A39B02DE4349&index=8

Screening followed by Q&A with Ajay Raina

JUNE 2, 2013 – Sunday (5.30 PM to 6.00 PM)
THE LONG AUTUMN AFTER WINTER:

23 WINTERS
2013 / Fiction/Hindi-Kashmiri/31 Min/Rajesh Jala /India
"23 Winters", a film set in reality, played by a real protagonist -
Bota , who lives a surreal life. A forced refugee from Kashmir, Bota is
schizophrenic. This film glimpses through his traumatic past which
haunts his exiled present. Nonetheless, his hopes are unvanquished.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=273235122820235&set=pcb.273235722820175&type=1&theater
https://vimeo.com/66543463
http://www.rangmunch.tv/index.php/writers-gully/spotlight-menu/item/2914-23-winters-exodus-illusions-dreams-of-a-kashmiri-pandit

JUNE 2, 2013 – Sunday (6.00 PM to 7.00 PM)
Reading from ‘The Garden of Solitude by Siddartha Gigoo and discussion
moderated by Dilip D’Souza.

JUNE 2, 2013 – Sunday (7.15 PM to 8.45 PM)
CLOSING FILM -- Special India Preview
VALLEY OF SAINTS
2012 / Fiction/English/82 Min/Musa Sayeed /USA

Widely considered to be the crown jewel of Kashmir, Dal Lake is a
sprawling aquatic community where erupting political violence often
distracts from the natural beauty. Gulzar, a young, working-class
boatman, plans to skip town with his best friend Afzal in search of a
better life, but a week long military curfew derails their departure.
Forced to wait it out, Gulzar and Afzal discover they’re not alone: a
young woman named Asifa is also trapped on the lake, but by choice.
She’s researching the lake’s ecosystem and brings on Gulzar to be her
guide. As they navigate the floating landscape, an unlikely relationship
blossoms between the two. With the end of the conflict looming, Gulzar
has to choose between a new life or a new love.

Shot during the military curfew of 2010, Valley of Saints weaves together
documentary
and fiction, ancient myths and contemporary issues, and the beauty and
danger of Kashmir to tell a story of finding one’s path home in a changing
world.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UW5149u-uKM&feature=youtu.be
http://www.valleyofsaints.com/
http://www.tumblr.com/tagged/valley%20of%20saints

Audience Award, Sundance Film Festival.
Alfred P. Sloan Film Prize, Sundance Film Festival.
Best Feature, Ashland Independent Film Festival
Best Feature & Outstanding Director, Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film
Festival
Special Jury Prize, Mumbai International Film Festival
Special Jury Prize, Dubai International Film Festival
Crystal Heart Award Winner, Heartland Film Festival
Cinema en Un Ambiento Diverso Prize, Milan Fim Festival
Opening Night Selection, Hamburg Film Festival
Closing Night Selection, Cines del Sur Film Festival

Venue:
RR Theatre
10th floor
Films Division
24, Pedder Road
Mumbai – 400026

Other Screenings @ FD Zone
8th June: to be announced
15th June: Red Ant Dream by Sanjay Kak
https://www.facebook.com/redantdream

22nd June:  to be announced
29th and 30th June: Experimental Film Festival
curated By Ashish Chaddha and Pankaj Rishi KUmar

6th July: To Let The World In (part 1) by Avijit Mukul Kishore
13th July:To Let The World In (part 2) by Avijit Mukul Kishore
https://www.facebook.com/pages/To-Let-The-World-In/133472803516251

20th July: BIDESIA in BAMBAI by Surabhi Sharma
http://surabhisharma.wordpress.com/

27th July: 'Ningal Aranaye Kando?' (Have you seen the arana?) by Sunanda
Bhat
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-metroplus/tracing-a-fading-trail/article4514189.ece
http://www.imdb.com/video/wab/vi2001381145/



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chitrakarkhana.net


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