Tag: Goa

  • Marathi film on football in offing

    Marathi film on football in offing

    MUMBAI: Reputed goalkeeper Brahmanand Shankhwalkar is all set to bring his real time soccer experiences on silver screen through a Marathi film titled Penalty.

    Produced by Goa-based Saima Production, the film will be directed by Jitendra Shikerkar and entirely shot in Goa.

    Scheduled to release in December, the film is based on six young boys who vent out their passion for soccer by playing in the paddy fields and row grounds. “The film is about the passion of football. Talk to any successful footballer in India and he will tell you how he has struggled to reach to the top level,” said Goa’s only Arjuna Award recipient.

    The story is not about the trained footballers who play on big stadiums. It‘s about school-going kids and their passion for the sports.

    To be made with a shoestring budget of Rs 15 million, the film will be released across Goa and Maharashtra.

    It is expected to be ready before International Film Festival of India (IFFI) 2012 that will be held in November-December in Goa.

  • Anjunaa Beach to release on 24 February

    Anjunaa Beach to release on 24 February

    MUMBAI: Producer Sikander A Khan’s Anjunaa Beach is set to release on 24 February.

    The film is based on the mysterious death of Scarlett Keeling on a Goa beach on 18 February 2008.

    The body of the British teenager is still lying in a mortuary in the UK. Keeling’s family is awaiting a nod from the CBI to carry out the last rites. It is said that Keeling, 15, was sexually assaulted and left to die at Anjuna beach, allegedly by two beach shack workers.

    The police had initially dismissed the case as death due to drowning. But after her mother alleged foul play, the case was transferred to the CBI.

  • The Lunchbox to participate in Cinemart at Rotterdam fest

    The Lunchbox to participate in Cinemart at Rotterdam fest

    MUMBAI: Anurag Kashyap Productions and Cine Mosaic’s film, The Lunchbox, will participate in Cinemart, the co-production market at the International Film Festival Rotterdam.

    Helmed by Ritesh Batra, the film is one of the 35 projects selected for Cinemart. The project, that was selected for NFDC Screenwriter’s Lab, recently participated at workshops in Venice and Goa.

    The prizes given to distinguished CineMart projects are Eurimages Co-Production Development Award (one prize of € 30,000) and Arte France Cinéma Award (one prize of € 10,000).

    The 29th edition of Cinemart will take place from 29 January to 1 February.

  • IFFI competition should strive for premiere films: Dan Wolman

    IFFI competition should strive for premiere films: Dan Wolman

    PANAJI: International Jury member Dan Wolman feels the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) should strive at getting only new films that have not been to other festivals for its competition section.


    Films which have won awards at other festivals can be screened in the World Cinema section, he said, taking part in the last Open Forum at the current Festival on ‘Success of Film Festivals: Quality of films‘.


    He wanted IFFI to take pride for what it had achieved, instead of always trying to compare itself with Cannes or Berlin. He said IFFI is already one of the top festivals of the world, but a lot has to be done to take it to the very top. He said the ambience is good, the selection is very good, and there is no reason why India should not be able to attract the best films from the world over particularly as it has such high prize money.


    He felt that delegates from overseas should work as some kind of ambassadors for IFFI when they go back, and the Indian missions could also play a major role in this respect.


    He said film culture can grow if cinema studies are introduced at the school or college levels, and wanted the IFFI Secretariat to invite the best in the world for master classes or workshops.


    Renowned filmmaker AK Bir who is also a member of the Steering Committee said Festivals are voyages of discovery and one get to see films made in the cultural milieu of their country of origin.


    Eminent filmmaker Laxmikant Shetgaonkar regretted that there is little representation of India in foreign film festivals. But he wanted to know if India should replicate Cannes or have its own identity. The aim should be to use the festival to improve the quality of Indian films.


    Referring to media reports, he said not getting enough sponsors is no reason for shifting the Festival from Goa.


    Referring to some complaints, he said the IFFI this year is in a changing phase having been separated from the Directorate of Film Festivals. Furthermore, the local arrangements are the responsibility of the Entertainment Society of Goa. He agreed that the ESG should take films to other parts of the state.


    Both he and U Radhakrishnan who moderated the Open Forum said there should be a separate section for Konkani cinema.

  • Danis Tanovic to approach Aamir Khan for Tigers

    Danis Tanovic to approach Aamir Khan for Tigers

    MUMBAI: Danis Tanovic, whose No Man‘s Land was pitted against Aamir Khan‘s Lagaan and Audrey Tautou‘s Amélie in the nomination for an Academy Award in the Best Foreign Film category in 2002, is to approach Aamir Khan for a role in his forthcoming film Tigers.

    “If everything goes well, we plan to propose a small role to Aamir in Tigers. Let‘s see if it works out,” said producer Cédomir in a statement. He is currently in Goa attending the International Film Festival of India (IFFI).

    The story of Tigers revolves around a successful baby food company‘s product that is mixed with spurious ingredients, the large-scale consumption of which ultimately results in problems like diarrhea and dehydration and eventually, a few deaths. “It‘s a very real problem today,” added Cédomir.

    Tanovic and Cédomir are looking to film Tigers in India. “It is set in the Pakistani part of Punjab, but since it‘s not easy to shoot there, we will finish it in the Indian side of the state,” revealed Cédomir.

  • Goa to host Portuguese film festival on 5, 6 November

    Goa to host Portuguese film festival on 5, 6 November

    MUMBAI: A selection of contemporary films from Portugal will be part of a two-day Portuguese film festival in Goa that is scheduled to begin on 5 November.

    The films to be screened as part of this festival at the Maquinez Palace; Auditorium I, Panaji are Miguel Gomes‘s Aquele Querido M?s de Agosto (Our beloved Month of August), Telmo Martins‘s Um Funeral ? Chuva (A Funeral In the Rain), Alberto Seixas Santos‘ E o Tempo Passa (And Time Goes By), Marco Martins‘ Alice, Jo?o Salaviza‘s Arena and Sandro Aguilar‘s A Zona (The Zone).

    This festival is being organised by the Entertainment Society of Goa (ESG) in association with the Semana da Cultura Indo-Portuguesa, the Consulate General of Portugal, Goa and Instituto Cam?es, Portugal.

  • Jo Hum Chahe to release on 18 November

    Jo Hum Chahe to release on 18 November

    MUMBAI: Aman Gill‘s maiden film Jo Hum Chahe will release on 18 November.


    The film is a modern coming of age romance that reflects the current urban landscape of contemporary India focusing on the aspirations of the youth and what they do to achieve their desires.
     
    The film has been written and directed by debutant Pawan Gill, earlier first assistant director at Yash Raj Films from 2005-2007.


    Jo Hum Chahe, shot in Mumbai, Goa, Pune and Ladakh, will see the acting debut of Sunny Gill and Simran Kaur Mundi.


    Gill used to earlier look after film acquisitions and domestic film distribution at Studio18.

  • SAFF gets going in Goa

    SAFF gets going in Goa

    MUMBAI: The South Asian Film Festival (SAFF) got going in Goa yesterday with the screening of the Shammi Kapoor and Sharmila Tagore-starrer Kashmir ki Kali, screened as a special tribute to the late star.


    The festival was declared open by Goa chief minister Digambar Kamat in the presence of Randhir Kapoor and Rajeev Kapoor, the scions of Kapoor family among representatives of South Asian Countries who were present at the ceremony.


    Randhir Kapoor was felicitated by the state chief secretary Sanjay Srivastava in honour of the contribution of the Kapoor family to Indian Cinema. “Cinema knows no boundaries. Its just an emotion that we create. We should have lot of cultural exchange amongst the south Asian nations,” said Kapoor responding to the felicitation.


    The festival‘s theme is ‘Dissolving Boundaries‘ – spreading the message of togetherness and oneness amongst the South Asian Countries including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.


    Bhutan is the focus country for SAFF 2011. The annual festival will also pay tribute to Bangladeshi film maker Tareque Masud who was one of the two prime witnesses of the International War Crime Tribunal. Incidentally, Tareque was killed in a fatal bus accident near Dhaka on 26 August.

  • Asianet News Network acquires 51% stake in Kannada Prabha

    Asianet News Network acquires 51% stake in Kannada Prabha

    BANGALORE: Asianet News Network (ANN) has acquired a 51 per cent stake in Kannada Prabha, the New Indian Express Group’s leading Kannada daily newspaper, as it seeks to spread its footprint across television, Internet and print.

    The financial details of the deal could not be ascertained.

    Rajeev Chandrasekhar’s regional news empire now consists of Asianet News in Malayalam, Suvarna News in Kannada and a major part of Kannada Prabha.

    Kannada Prabha was founded by Ramnath Goenka on 4 November 1967. With a tagline ‘The Most Powerful Kannada Newspaper’, the Bangalore-headquartered Kannada Prabha is spread across the state with other editions in Mangalore, Shimoga, Hubli, Belgaum, Hyderabad and Goa.

    Says ANN chairman Rajeev Chandrasekhar, “This alliance will leverage the vast synergy between two of Kannada’s most respected and credible news brands, namely Kannada Prabha and Suvarna News 24×7. This partnership and strategic alliance will be transformational for the reader and the viewer, giving the best in editorial, news reporting and features acceptable to millions of readers and viewers. ANN’s journalism credo ‘Nera Ditta Nirantara’ (Straightforward, Bold and Relentless) will now be visible in Kannada Prabha as well.”

    Senior journalist Vishweshwar Bhat has been appointed as the Editor-in-Chief and will spearhead the integration and growth of all the platforms.

    Suvarna News is investing in a new Bangalore studio and news gathering infrastructure, which is scheduled to be commissioned in the next few months.

    Chandrasekhar had earlier acquired Asianet, which owned and operated a clutch of popular Malayalam channels. He went on to launch Asianet Suvarna, a Kannada general entertainment channel, and Suvarna News 24×7. In late 2008, he sold the entertainment channels to Star India while retaining the news outfits.

  • CNN-IBN to air season two of ‘Citizens for Earth’ from 10 January

    CNN-IBN to air season two of ‘Citizens for Earth’ from 10 January

    MUMBAI: CNN-IBN is set to air the second season of its flagship series Citizen for Earth from 10 January.

    The series will consist of five episodes which will be aired every Saturday at 9.30 pm and Sunday at 11.30 am and 5.30 pm.

    Says IBN18 Network editor-in-chief Rajdeep Sardesai, “Wildlife really is the untamed natural essence of our environment. India, the land of diversity with its immense variety of flora and fauna, is the ideal place for the wildlife enthusiasts. But today many fascinating species are endangered and it is important to save them. The second season of Citizens for Earth is an effort to work towards not only enlightening our viewers but also highlighting the people who have contributed in saving the endangered animals in the country.”

    The series will be hosted by Bahar Dutt and will have episodes like ‘Storm in the Rann’ which will take viewers on a jeep safari through the Rann of Kutch and will show how pink flamingoes and Indian wild ass survive the harsh landscape of the desert.

    ‘Queen of Chambal will highlight the story of the endangered Indian Gharial and wildlife conservationists and activists who are fighting to save the Indian Gharial.

    ‘The Big Cat Special’ episode will be about big cats like the Tiger, the Lion and the Leopard. ”Turtle Trouble’ focuses on the beaches of Orissa which are home to Olive Ridley Turtles that are dying due to over fishing and developments along the coast. 

    Finally, ‘The Monkey Mania’ episode will introduce 13 new species of monkeys like ‘Hoolock Gibbon’ and ‘Golden Langur’ found in north east India.

    The first season of Citizens for Earth took viewers to six major destinations like Ladakh, Mumbai, Lakshwadweep, Goa, North East and the river Krishna that are under threat due to global warming.