Tag: London Film Festival

  • Anurag Kashyap’s Dobaaraa to premiere at London Indian Film Festival

    Filmmaker Anurag Kashyap’s upcoming thriller Dobaaraa, starring Taapsee Pannu, was on Tuesday confirmed because the opening evening film on the 2022 London Indian Film Festival (LIFF) on June 23, forward of its Indian launch on July 1. Female filmmakers shall be on the forefront of this yr’s version of the LIFF, together with the European premiere of the Aparna Sen directorial ‘The Rapist’, starring Konkana Sen Sharma and Arjun Rampal.

    “We have UK premiered a number of Anurag’s films over the last 12 years – including That Girl In Yellow Boots and Gangs of Wasseypur. Anurag delivers yet another fresh directorial approach and a compelling twisted story. Actor Taapsee Pannu steals the show as a young woman trapped between two lives in different decades,” mentioned Festival Director Cary Rajinder Sawhney.

    “We are also delighted at the exceptionally strong cavalcade of exciting new premieres at this year’s festival in 10 different languages and some very rare in person talks headlined by India’s greatest woman filmmaker Aparna Sen,” added Sawhney.

    This yr’s LIFF, backed by Blue Orchid Hotels, Integrity International, the British Film Institute (BFI), Bagri Foundation and Arts Council of England, spans over a fortnight beginning subsequent month to display a wide range of movies at cinemas throughout London in addition to regionally in Manchester, Birmingham and Leeds.

    “Dobaaraa being premiered at the London Film Festival right ahead of its theatrical release is a testament of its new-age, cutting edge narrative being wholly loved and applauded all over the world,” mentioned Ektaa R Kapoor, the producer behind the opening evening movie. Dobaaraa is our first movie underneath Cult Movies, our new film-division which is about to inform compelling, edgy and genre-bending tales. I really feel ecstatic for Dobaaraa and its presence amidst varied celebrated worldwide movies from across the globe and I can’t wait to showcase the movie to Indian audiences on July 1, 2022,” she mentioned.

    Among different UK premieres at this yr’s movie competition celebrating Indian and South Asian cinema embrace Pan Nalin’s homage to celluloid Chello Show and Anik Dutta’s Aparajito – a tribute to legendary director Satyajit Ray’s journey of constructing his first movie, the cult basic Pather Panchali.

    An intimate have a look at modern-day Kolkata, Once Upon a Time in Calcutta by Aditya Vikram Sengupta additionally options within the competition line-up. Set towards a rating by Oscar winner AR Rahman, who can be govt producer, No Land’s Man shall be screened on the movie gala as nicely. The acclaimed movie is headlined by Nawazuddin Siddiqui who performs the position of a person coping with the complexities of identification.

    Under the competition’s Save the Planet strand, ecological and local weather themes are explored in The Road to Kuthriyar, No Ground Beneath My Feet and Hatibondhu. Canadian Indian documentary Superfan: The Nav Bhatia Story, set across the Toronto Raptors basketball group’s biggest fan, will shut the competition. Following the London leg, which concludes on July 3, the LIFF will come to a detailed in Birmingham on July 5 and Manchester on July 6.

  • India Exclusive: First have a look at Dostojee, official choice at BFI London Film Festival

    Director Prasun Chatterjee’s Bengali debut function, Dostojee (Two Friends), which is co-produced by his banner Kathak Talkies, is a young movie about two little pals in a Bengali border village. The movie is about to have a world premiere within the ‘Love’ strand of the sixty fifth BFI London Film Festival (October 6-17).
    Watch Dostojee teaser right here

    The movie captures the harmless friendship of two boys in a distant Bengali border village in West Bengal’s Domkal (Murshidabad), separated from Bangladesh by river Padma. The thick-as-thieves friendship of the eight-year-olds Palash (Asif Shaikh) and Safikul (Arif Shaikh) transcends the boundaries constructed by faith and society. This distant village, nevertheless, isn’t untouched by echoes of Babri Masjid demolition and the next ’92-93 Bombay blasts. In a tragic flip of occasions, the 2 pals are parted. But do friendships finish when pals go away? How do they face their first farewell?

    The 111-minute movie in color, shot on 5.1 Scope lens, has been magnificently shot by first-time cinematographer Tuhin Biswas. A nonetheless photographer and primary-school trainer in West Bengal’s Nadia district, he was not sure concerning the video format, till Chatterjee instructed him, “This is photography too, just think of these as 24 stills per second”. The director instructed Indian Express final 12 months that the movie is about “broader humanism, rising above all discrimination, seen through the lens of innocence”.
    A poster of Dostojee.
    Dostojee is helmed by Prasun Chatterjee.
    From paper to display screen, it’s been a seven-year journey since 2013, from scripting, crowdfunding to discovering co-producers Prosenjit Ranjan Nath and Soumya Mukhopadhyay of Cherrypix Movies in 2017, and Taiwan’s Ivy Yu-Hua Shen after NFDC Film Bazaar chosen Dostojee in November 2019 in its Recommends part. It was amongst 5 movies chosen by NFDC to ‘Goes to Cannes’ in June 2020. The movie will now have a world premiere this month at BFI London Film Festival and can quickly have its India premiere.
    Also Read | sixty fifth BFI London: Three filmmakers inform tales of house to indicate what ails modern-day India | Two Indian movies round border make heads flip at Cannes
    The British Film Institute (BFI) Southbank (October 12) screening is already “sold out”. The Indian and Bangladeshi diaspora, amongst different individuals in London, appears wanting to catch the movie. If you might be in London, and wish to watch the movie, tickets are nonetheless obtainable for the screening at Institute of Contemporary Arts (go to https://www.ica.art/films/two-friends). The screening can be held on October 14.

  • sixty fifth BFI London: Three filmmakers inform tales of house to indicate what ails modern-day India

    Life comes full circle with London inviting, for a world premiere, a young movie on a Bengali village alongside India’s jap border, one whose destiny was written 75 years in the past, when the British left. In this distant no-man’s-land of a village in West Bengal’s Domkal (Murshidabad), separated from Bangladesh by river Padma, two eight-year-old boys Palash and Safikul are rising up within the early Nineties in Prasun Chatterjee’s directorial debut Dostojee (Two Friends). While the demolition of Babri Masjid in Ayodhya (in Uttar Pradesh) and the next Bombay blasts in 1992-93 have echoes on this faraway village, stirring the adults, the kids stay unperturbed, mimicking nature — rain-kissed, swinging wildly like wind-brushed kaash phool, fluttering by like stringless kites — their friendship deeply anchored, harmless, and immortal.
    The universe inside the movie, which can showcase within the ‘Love’ strand of the sixty fifth BFI London Film Festival (October 6-17), unspools by way of the eyes of those kids. “For me, truth, though uncomfortable, comes before beauty. What I want to say (through the film) is the broader humanism, which is beyond any kind of discrimination,” says Chatterjee, 35.

    A nonetheless from the movie Dostojee
    After gestating for seven years since 2013, the movie is now prepared. NFDC Film Bazaar chosen it in its Recommends part, and despatched it, together with Natesh Hegde’s Kannada function debut Pedro, as a part of ‘Goes to Cannes’ to the Marche du Film, to be pitched to patrons/distributors.
    “For two and a half years, I stayed in the village, roamed along the border areas, sat and ate with the locals. I’d fundraise a little, go and shoot till the funds ran out, return and repeat,” says the director, who’s making an attempt to gauge society by way of the lens of innocence. It was a Bangladeshi movie, Television (2012), by Mostofa Sarwar Farooki, a pioneer of Bangladeshi new wave, that grew to become a turning level for Chatterjee, for him to make cinema about his roots. Incidentally, Farooki’s newest movie, the Nawazuddin Siddiqui-starrer No Land’s Man, is headed to the twenty sixth Busan International Film Festival (October 6-15), the place Hegde’s Pedro may have its world premiere, too.
    Produced by Rishab Shetty Films, Pedro tells the story of yet one more village, in Karnataka’s Sirsi. It may have its European premiere at BFI London within the ‘Dare’ part, and is, maybe, the primary Kannada movie to premiere at Busan, in ‘New Currents’, a aggressive part for up-and-coming Asian filmmakers’ first or second options.
    A nonetheless from the movie Pedro.
    Hegde, 26, attracts on and from his personal village life to color a haunting image of a world seldom captured on celluloid. As the lens penetrates the luxurious thickets of this a part of the Western Ghats, it unveils the dividers – class, faith, caste – and the way they upend motive and the unspectacular lives of the village people.
    In Pedro, the eponymous function is performed by Hegde’s electrician father, who has beforehand featured in his brief movies Distant and Kurli/The Crab. The journalism graduate watched a poor-quality video of Abbas Kiarostami’s Iranian movie Close-Up (1990) on YouTube sooner or later and his life was by no means the identical since. “The expression was honest and true. It was not realism but transcending that. I have tried to do something similar (in the film),” he says.
    The purpose was to place the highlight on individuals like Pedro, who’re engaged in “unrecognisable jobs”, who’re invisibilised within the bigger scheme of issues, whose lives matter to none. And the set off was the sensation of “constant fear and uncertainty” that Hegde had whereas rising up, pertaining to the precarious nature of his father’s work. Pedro has been edited by Paresh Kamdar, who’d edited Kumar Shahani’s 1989 movie Khayal Gatha. The local weather of the village modifications when the good-for-nothing drunkard, an outcast, is claimed to have by chance killed a cow.
    Climate, or relatively local weather change and its far-reaching repercussions are on the coronary heart of Rahul Jain’s sophomore, Invisible Demons, which is screening within the ‘Debate’ strand at BFI London. The documentary was screened at this yr’s new Cannes strand ‘Cinema for The Climate’. Jain’s debut documentary Machines – a fascinating chronicle of the gruelling working circumstances inside a textile manufacturing facility in Gujarat – went to the 2017 Sundance Film Festival.
    A nonetheless from the movie Invisible Demons
    Jain, who’s been in California for a decade, says he wasn’t capable of see the Indian capital due to the thick layer of air pollution. “Delhi was repeatedly in the news as the world’s most polluted city,” says Jain, 30, who was terrified to return to Delhi, the place he principally grew up indoors. His relationship with nature modified in California. “Reacclimatising (to Delhi) was a physical challenge. The heat and humidity were taxing,” he says.

    Besides being about environmental disaster, the movie takes a dig at class privilege. How local weather change impacts the haves and have-nots otherwise. The wealthy purchase heaters, water filters, air conditioners, air purifiers because the horror of consumerism and inequality gawk on the couldn’t-care-less metropolis from a burgeoning landfill.
    The movie appears to be like at how previous decisions have ruined the current and disfigured the longer term. The digital camera factors at his metropolis, but in addition at himself. He addresses his privilege and actuality of circuitously being affected by Delhi’s circumstances. And how “people with greater financial means have tried to avoid dealing with climate change”, which “like COVID-19, is affecting everybody, everywhere,” he says.

  • London Film Festival welcomes audiences again to the flicks

    Movies from 77 international locations will display on the 2021 London Film Festival, as Britain’s main cinema showcase welcomes mass audiences again to film theaters after a pandemic-disrupted yr.
    The competition program, introduced Tuesday, consists of 158 options, down from 225 throughout its final pre-pandemic version in 2019. The 2020 competition was a curtailed assortment of 58 movies, most screened on-line.
    This yr, mask-wearing, full-capacity audiences will be capable of attend gala screenings at London’s riverside Southbank Centre, with lots of the premieres screened concurrently at film theaters throughout the U.Okay.
    About 37% of the options are directed by ladies — not but parity, however up from 1 / 4 4 years in the past and “heading in the right direction,” competition director Tricia Tuttle stated.

    The competition opens Oct. 6 with the world premiere of The Harder They Fall — a Western from British director Jeymes Samuel with a Black-led forged — and closes Oct. 17 with the European premiere of Joel Coen’s The Tragedy of Macbeth, starring Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand as Shakespeare’s murderous Scottish royals.
    The lineup consists of 21 world premieres alongside prize-winners and headline-grabbers from the Cannes and Venice movie festivals, together with Jane Campion’s Montana-set Western “The Power of the Dog” and Edgar Wright’s swinging-60s horror romp “Last Night in Soho,” each of which premiered in Venice this month.
    Also on the schedule are French director Julia Ducournau’s techno-sexual thriller Titane — winner of Cannes’ prime prize, the Palme d’Or — Paul Verhoeven’s lesbian nun drama Benedetta and Wes Anderson’s whimsical The French Dispatch, each of which additionally premiered on the French Riviera competition.
    The London competition will even function Maggie Gyllenhaal’s Elena Ferrante adaptation The Lost Daughter; Reinaldo Marcus Green’s King Richard, which stars Will Smith as the daddy of Venus and Serena Williams; Kenneth Branagh’s homage to his house city, Belfast; Jacques Audiard’s Paris, thirteenth District and Todd Haynes’ music documentary The Velvet Underground.

    Another spotlight is Chilean director Pablo Larrain’s Spencer — a movie whose first publicity shot of Kristin Stewart as Princess Diana was sufficient to set off a frenzy of anticipation.
    “I don’t think there’s a film fan alive who doesn’t want to see this film after that still was released,” Tuttle stated.
    Embracing tv in addition to cinema, the competition can be screening the primary two episodes of the third sequence of media-dynasty drama Succession.
    Festival organizers are nonetheless uncertain how the coronavirus pandemic will have an effect on plans for red-carpet premieres and events. Four-fifths of British adults are absolutely vaccinated, and there are few restrictions on social life. But infections stay excessive, and are anticipated to climb additional now that kids are again in school.
    Tuttle says just a few movies within the lineup deal explicitly with the pandemic, together with Matthew Heineman’s documentary The First Wave and seven Days, a coronavirus romcom a few couple locked down collectively after a disastrous first date.
    “We were wary of going too heavily into the pandemic,” Tuttle stated. “We’ve just chosen films that charmed us or felt too urgent not to include in the program.”