Category: Hindi

  • Women filmfests to showcase varied talent and themes

    NEW DELHI: Two film festivals being held in the capital to coincide with the International Women’s Day exhibit how women filmmakers add their own unique sensitivity to the subjects they pick up.

    Sixteen films by the renowned filmmaker Lavlin Thadani on issues relating to women and around 25 films from five countries by Asian women on the theme of ‘Insights and Aspirations’ are to be shown in the two festivals. The second festival has been organized by the International Association of Women in Radio and Television (IAWRT).


    While one festival is dealing with subjects like female foeticide, the girl child, treating some women as witches, others burnt on the pyres of their husbands and so on, the other has varied subjects like the politically sensitive communal relations, social issues like the search for a suitable groom, or a historical on the famed singing saint Kabir.

    The films by Thadani’s Muskan Productions are all short features which have been or to be screened on Doordarshan and have been made as commissioned programmes for the public service broadcaster. The festival commenced on 5 March and will continue till 8 March at the India Habitat Centre.

    Thadani told indiantelevision.com that all the films were ‘films of hope’ and had been inspired by media reports. She admitted in reply to a question that it was often the elder women who were responsible for the atrocities on younger women, but said this was because of years of conditioning.

    The IAWRT festival is being held in collaboration with the India International Centre Asia Project and UNESCO on 7 and 8 March and will feature short and full-length and animation films from Australia, Japan, Pakistan, and the United States besides India. IIC Asia-project and IAWRT will use this forum for short films dedicated to genres across animation, fiction and documentary film.

    Filmmakers like Paromita Vohra who will also have a presentation on how she makes films, Dhvani Desai who uses a dying folk form to make an animation film, and Rajula Shah who explores the greatness of the 14th Century mystic Kabir, are among the filmmakers who will be present during the two-day meet.


    The theme of the Fourth IAWRT Women’s Film Festival this year is ‘Insights and Aspirations’. The aim is to open up a space for debates on creative processes and concerns, Jai Chandiram who is Managing Trustee of the IAWRT told indiantelevision.com.

    Chandiram said recognizing the critical need for a forum that can sustain the form of documentary as well as women’s contribution to this unique form, the festival is showcasing documentary films created by women, covering a range of genres and expressive styles. It presents films that explore and reflect on how women filmmakers negotiate, resist or document political, social, cultural, environmental, educational or economic issues.

    Panel discussions to be held along with the festival will examine whether women are creating a new language of filmmaking, which reflects, and explores new politics of filmmaking, and how women are widening the frame for issues concerning women.

    The IAWRT Women’s Festival has in the past traveled to many cities in India .The last festival had screenings in Kolkata, Bangalore, Ahmedabad, Pune and Madurai.


    The earlier three IAWRT festivals were on the themes of ‘Expressions in Freedom’, ‘Women, Media and Society: Transformations’, and ‘Reflections: Women Imaging Realities.’

    The International Association of Women in Radio and Television (IAWRT) is a non–profit professional organization of women working in electronic and allied media. The IAWRT is a non-government organization (NGO), in consultative status with United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).

    IAWRT seeks to ensure women’s views and values become an integral part of programme making. It offers professional skill-training to women. It provides grants and fellowships, and presents awards of excellence. It helps members share inputs by organizing workshops and festivals round the world.

  • Anupam Kher launches first Bollywood acting school in London

    MUMBAI: Hindi film actor Anupam Kher has launched a London chapter of his Actor Prepares, making it Britain‘s first official Bollywood acting school.


    The school aims to improve the quality of Bollywood‘s notorious over-the-top hammy acting and represents the next step in the growing connection between Britain and the Hindi film industry.


    “I am trying to kill off a certain style of cliched Bollywood acting. It‘s already dying so it is the right time to do this international school,” Anupam told IANS.


    The school is to be based in the West London neighbourhood of Ealing, home to Ealing Studios which made a string of well known English films in the 1950s.


    It will work out of the Ealing Institute of Media, and 60 students will be admitted in the first year.


    Although most students are expected to be South Asians, Anupam said there was interest among white Britons as well.


    The school is a partnership between Actor Prepares, Heathrow City Partnership, a local not-for-profit organisation, and the Ealing Institute of Media, which is a part of Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College.


    “It will provide the first course of its kind in which actors from Indian cinema and elsewhere come to Britain to pass on their inside knowledge,” added Kher.


    Stars such as Boman Irani, Tabu, Urmila Matondkar and filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt, who are the visiting faculty at Actor Prepares Mumbai, are scheduled to be involved in the teaching programme.


    Courses will include martial arts, yoga, dance, music and Hindi, diction, improvisation and acting on camera.

  • IDPA Excellence Awards introduces ‘cell stories’ category

    MUMBAI: The Indian Documentary Producers Association (IDPA) has announced that it will be organising the IDPA Awards for Excellence 2007 in Mumbai this April-end.

    The categories that will be introduced this year are films on environment and “cell stories,” films shot exclusively on a mobile phone which may be submitted on a CD in wmv, mov or wav formats.


    Any film or video produced in India between 1 July 2006 and 31 December 2007, of any format or length will be eligible for entry. The entries will have to be submitted only on DVD, in PAL or NTSC format, and the films must be subtitled in English or have an English or Hindi narration or dialogue.


    Through this event IDPA, an association of producers of documentaries, animation films, advertisement films and TV programmes, aims to promote the Indian short filmmakers in the field of documentary, short fiction, animation, advertising, corporate films and student productions.

  • Paramount Films India showcases film lineup for 2008

    BANGALORE: Distributor of Hollywood films Paramount Films of India Ltd (PFIL) announced the lineup of films slated for release in 2008.


    The Universal Studio release lineup includes movies such as Definitely, Maybe, which is the story of a daughter who wants her father to be happy; Wanted by the Russian visualist director Timur Bekmambetov of The Night Watch and The Day Watch fame. Wanted tells the story of one invisible drone’s transformation into a dark avenger; Forgetting Sarah Marshall by the makers of 40 Year Old Virgin is another release expected this year.


    Mama Mia, a feature film adaption of the musical, is a story of a girl who wants to make her wedding a prefect one by having her father lead her down the aisle. The problem is that her mother is not sure which of the three men she slept with is the real father – Meryl Streep plays the mother and Pierce Brosnan one of the probable fathers. The movie is inter-spiced with popular ABBA songs such as “Mama Mia,” “SOS,” “Dancing Queen,” “Money, Money Money.”


    With over 700 VFx shots, Mummy 3 – Tomb of the Dragon Emperor is another release on the cards for 2008. The action shifts to Asia this time, China to be more precise. Brandon Fraser returns as explorer Rick O’Connell to combat the resurrected Han Emperor played by Jet Li, who has been awakened from a 2,000-year old curse and threatens to plunge the world into his merciless, unending service.


    In Hellboy II – The Golden Army, the saga of the world’s toughest, kitten-loving hero from Hell continues to unfold. An animated film on, well a heroic mouse – The Tale of Desperaux – is another film on the anvil for a 2008 release.


    From the Paramount and Dreamworks stable are Oscar winner No Country for Old Men; a fantasy adventure based on the series of books of the same name comes The Spiderwick Chronicles; Marvel Entertainment’s adaption of Ironman will launch into theaters on 2 May. Owen Wilson stars in (and as) Drillbit Taylor. The movie is slated for release on 21 March. Featuring a Panda who just loves that martial art is Dreamworks animated film Kung Fu Panda.


    Dreamworks also brings back all the characters – Alex the lion, Marty the zebra, Melman the giraffe, Gloria the hippo with Madagascar – The Great Escape. An all-new explosive action-packed episode of The Incredible Hulk, will feature Bruce Banner/Hulk struggle to avoid the obsessive pursuit of his nemesis General Ross (William Hurt) and the military machinery that seeks to exploit his power.


    On 22 May, Harrison Ford will be back on cinema screens probably for the last time as Indiana Jones in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. The movie also features Cate Blanchett, Karen Allen, Ray Winstone, John Hurt, Jim Broadbent and Shia LeBeouf, who also reteams with Disturba director DJ Caruso in Eagle Eye, also to be relased in 2008.


    “Ninety per cent of these films will be released in India. Some of them such as Definitely, Maybe and No Country for Old Men have already been released elsewhere, including in some Asian countries. India is an important market for us,” said Paramount Films Singapore regional director for sales and marketing (Asia) Han Seng Lim, while speaking with indiantelevision.com on the sidelines of the event.


    “With globalisation and rising literacy levels, the demand for international cinema is growing,” says PFIL GM Sarabjit Singh.


    “The sound and well-heeled urban Indians, especially from the growing mid- and high-income sections, are rediscovering the magic of cinema in plush multiplexes. Also, the increase of multiplexes in A, B & C class centres has helped us to tap wider and newer markets. This has enabled us to release more titles with increased number of prints. The enhanced acceptability of dubbed films in India has widened the mass appeal for Hollywood films,” added Singh.


    According to a Paramount release, the Hollywood films market in India is estimated to be around Rs 2 billion. An average of 70 English films, several of them dubbed into regional languages, are released in India every year.

  • PPC defers release of ‘Khuda Ke Liye’, music launch on 14 March

    MUMBAI: Percept Picture Company (PPC) has rescheduled the release date of Khuda Ke Liye for 4 April 2008. Directed by Shoaib Mansoor, the Pakistani film was initially slated to release on 28 March.


    Sony BMG will be releasing the audio of the film on 14 March 2008.


    Speaking to indiantelevision.com, PPC film distribution head Ashok Ahuja said, “We had to postpone the release date of Khuda Ke Liye because the audio release got delayed. Sony BMG will be launching the audio of this film on the 14th of this month.”

    PPC plans to release the film, which describes a struggle between fundamentalists and liberal Muslims post the 9/11 tragedy, not only in the multiplexes but also in the single-screen theatres across the nation.


    “We are talking not only to all the multiplexes but also to the single-screen theatres. Once the audio of the film is released, we will fasten the process,” Ahuja added.


    When asked whether the film would do well in the Indian market, being the first Pakistani film to enter Indian theatres, Ahuja said, “Content always speaks. The film has already been hugely appreciated at the Goa Film Festival last year and with the content that the film contains, the film will definitely do well in the Indian market.”


    Khuda Ke Liye (For God‘s Sake) is a low-budget film starring Pakistani actors Shaan in the role of Mansoor and Iman Ali as Maryam/Marie.


    Indian actor Naseeruddin has a special appearance in the film. He plays the role of a Muslim cleric named Maulana Wali. Apart from Pakistan, the film has already been screened in Dubai and London.

  • Separate festivals of Spanish, Australian films in March

    NEW DELHI: Separate film festivals of acclaimed films from Australia and Spain are to take place in the capital this month which will later be taken to some other cities in the country.

    The Spanish film festival, the third to be held here, represents the best in the latest films from that country. It will be held in Delhi from 6 to 10 March and in Thiruvananthapuram from 11 to 15 March.

    While all the other Spanish films will be screened at the Indian Habitat Centre, the festival in Delhi will conclude on 10 March in Sirifort Auditorium with the screening of Fados, a film based on the popular musical form of that name. The screening in Delhi will include a conversation with its maker Carlos Saura and renowned film critic Aruna Vasudev. Fados was the closing film at the International Film Festival of India in Goa in November-December 2007.

    La Noche De Los Girasoles (The Night of the Sunflowers) by Jorge Sánchez-Cabezudo is the opening film in both Thiruvananthapuram and Delhi.

    The other films are El Camino De Los Ingleses (Summer Rain) by Antonio Banderas; Los Dos Lados De La Cama (The Two Sides of the Bed) by Emilio Martínez Lázaro; Salvador by Manuel Huerga; El Laberinto Del Fauno (Pan‘s Labyrinth) by Guillermo del Toro; Vete de mí (Go Away From Me) by Víctor García León; Alatriste by Agustín Díaz Yanes; and Caotica Ana (Chaotic Ana) by Julio Medem.

    The film Yo Soy La Juani (My Name is Juani) by Bigas Luna will be screened in Thiruvananthapuram but not in Delhi.

    The Spanish film festival has been organised by the Cultural Centre of the Spanish Embassy and Casa India in collaboration with the Directorate of Film Festivals.

    Organised by the Australian High Commission in collaboration with the Directorate of Film Festivals, the Australian film festival, Australian Visions, will open in the capital at Sirifort Auditorium on 6 March with Jindabyne by Ray Lawrence. Other films are The Caterpillar Wish by Sandra Sciberras, Three Dollars by Robert Connelly, Swimming Upstream by Russel Mulcahey, Ned Kelly by Gregor Jordan, Dirty Deeds by David Caesar, Somersault by Cate Shortland, La Spagnola by Steve Jacoba, and The Rape in Placid Lake by Tony McNamara.

    The festival will later travel to Hyderabad from 8 to 10 March and Bangalore from 14 to 17 March, where some other Australian films will be screened. These are Lantana by Ray Lawrence, Harvie Krumpet, The Tracker by Rolf De Heer, and Australian Rules by Paul Goldman.

  • UFO Moviez installs digital cinema technology in 1000 theatres

    MUMBAI: UFO Moviez has installed digital cinema technology in 1000 cinemas across the country.

    UFO Moviez CEO Rajesh Mishra says, “Digital Cinema heralds a new era for the cinema industry.The Indian film entertainment industry is poised to grow from the present size of Rs 96 billion to Rs 175 billion by 2011, implying a 16 per cent cumulative annual growth over the next five years. We hope that the advanced technology that UFO Moviez brings with it will help the Indian film industry in all the spheres including film production, film exhibition and marketing.”


    UFO Moviez has released in digital format about 600 movies in 17 Indian languages and has completed installations in 21 screens across Nepal, Sri Lanka and Mauritius.


    “We plan to provide our consumers flexible programming and high-quality viewing experience,” adds Mishra.


    UFO Moviez is now venturing into Hollywood films with its first release Rambo IV opening in 98 theatres.

  • Eros releases Heyy Babyy on blu-ray disc format

    MUMBAI: Eros International has announced the release of Heyy Babyy on blu-ray high-definition disc format. This will be the first global release of a Bollywood film on this format.

    Heyy Babyy has been mastered directly from the negative digital source with upgraded picture and sound. In addition to the film, the disc includes extra features and a four hour documentary that explains the methods of making a big budget Bollywood film.


    “The blu-ray technology has allowed us to take our films to new heights, fully utilizing the larger capacity and interactive capabilities for an incredible all-new consumer experience,” commented Eros International India, President Sunil Lulla.


    After Heyy Babyy, Eros will release Farha Khan‘s Om Shanti Om on blu-ray disc format.


    “We will soon be releasing Om Shanti Om and many of our all time classics that will appeal to the ever growing market of Bollywood and Indian film fans around the globe,” said corporate development & Eros New Media EVP Marcus Stuart Vannini.


    The Heyy Babyy blu-ray discs are on sale and available immediately through erosentertainment.com and will be available in retail stores throughout India, Canada, United States and United Kingdom.

  • UTV wins case, Jodhaa Akbar to be screened nationwide

    MUMBAI: UTV Motion Pictures can now screen Jodhaa Akbar anywhere across the country. The company has won the case in the Supreme Court on 4 March leading to the lifting of the ban on the film not only in UP but nationwide till 14 March.

    “Even in the smallest local areas and regions the film can be screened now. We have won the case in the Supreme Court and as per the verdict, the film will be immune to any ban anywhere in the country,” said UTV Motion Pictures director Siddharth Roy Kapur to Indiantelevision.com.


    UTV motion pictures had moved the Supreme Court on 3 March following the ban on Jodhaa Akbar in UP.


    Before the SC hearing took place, Roy Kapur had told Indiantelevision.com, “There‘s no point fighting the ban from one state to the other. Hence, we finally decided to move the Supreme Court on Monday.”


    The UP government had banned Ashutosh Gowariker‘s controversial film on Saturday siting law and order problems in the state, where the film met with some protests.


    UTV had earlier moved the High Courts of Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan to lift the ban on the screenings, and in both courts it had won the case.


    The film has already faced ban in parts of Haryana and Uttaranchal following protests over the alleged wrong depiction of some historical characters in the film.

  • UTV moves Supreme Court, hearing at 2 pm today

    MUMBAI: In order to completely lift the ban on Jodhaa Akbar nationwide, UTV Motion Pictures, the producer of Jodhaa Akbar, has finally moved the Supreme Court on Monday.

    Speaking to Indiantelevision.com, UTV Motion Pictures director Siddharth Roy Kapur said, “We took this decision after the UP government banned Jodhaa Akbar in the state on Saturday. It‘s no point fighting the ban from one state to the other. Hence, we finally decided to move the Supreme Court on Monday.”


    The UP government had banned Ashutosh Gowariker‘s controversial film on Saturday stating that the decision to ban the film was taken to maintain law and order in the state.


    “The hearing is at two o‘clock in the afternoon today and we are confident that we will be winning it,” added Kapur.


    UTV had earlier moved the High Courts of Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan to lift the ban on the screenings of Jodhaa Akbar, which ultimately led to its victory. The film has already faced ban in parts of Haryana and Uttaranchal following protests over the alleged wrong depiction of some historical characters in the film.


    The petition filed by UTV to the Supreme Court states that the on-going controversies have been causing a lot of financial loss to it.


    Some days back, around 300 members of the Shiv Pratishthan were lathi charged by the police in Sangli town in western Maharashtra following a protest that the mob had launched against the screening of the film.