Tag: Indian Cinema

  • Bachchan is guest of honour at 12th River to River Florence Indian Film Festival

    Bachchan is guest of honour at 12th River to River Florence Indian Film Festival

    NEW DELHI: The River to River Florence Indian Film Festival has invited megastar Amitabh Bachchan, who turned seventy earlier this week, to be the Guest of Honour.

    To be held from 7-13 December in Florence, Italy the festival is being held this year to mark 100 years of Indian cinema.

    Bachchan – as an official guest, for the first time at a festival in Italy – will be in Florence to present some of his films (Deewaar, Sholay and Black) and a documentary on his life.

    Festival Director Selvaggia Velo said he is excited to have a living legend like Bachchan in Florence. He also said that Bachchan‘s presence will add reverence to his Festival.

    The 12th River to River Florence Indian Film Festival is the only festival in Italy entirely devoted to Indian cinema. The festival will take place at Cinema Odeon, in Florence, from 7 to 13 December under the patronage of the Indian Embassy and the Italy-India association.

  • Sydney fest to focus on Indian cinema

    Sydney fest to focus on Indian cinema

    MUMBAI: The Sydney Film Festival 2012, due to go underway from 6 to 17 June, will have a special focus on Indian cinema.

    The section will screen Anurag Kashyap’s Gangs of Wasseypur Part 1 and 2, Anand Patwardhan’s documentary Jai Bhim Comrade, Musa Syeed’s Valley of Saints, Umesh Kulkarni’s Deool and Sandip Ray’s documentary. The Sound of Old Rooms.

    The Kashyap film will also participate in the official competition of the festival. “Anurag Kashyap’s epic is a thrilling, beautifully shot and extremely violent journey tracing the feud between mining magnate and politician Ramadhir Singh and the Khan family from colonial to contemporary times,” announces the festival’s official website.

    An Indian short film Unravel by Meghna Gupta will be screened in the festival’s section for shorts. The film is about an Indian woman in the sleepy northern town of Panipat who ponders the ways of the world as she unravels unwanted clothes from the West recycling them back into yarn.

    Nashen Moodley, who had earlier programmed Durban International Film Festival and held a special focus on the Independent Cinema of India in its 32nd edition, is this year‘s Festival director.

  • Regional cinema is mainstay of Indian Cinema: Soni

    Regional cinema is mainstay of Indian Cinema: Soni

    NEW DELHI: Vice President M Hamid Ansari today said it was a matter of surprise that the number of regional films being dubbed or subtitled in Hindi was declining and had come down from 213 in 2001 to 147 in 2011 while the number of foreign films dubbed or subtitled had increased to 128 last year.

    Noting that the two top winners of the 59th National Film Awards were regional films, he said “it is an under-appreciated fact that over 80 per cent of the films certified for public exhibition are regional films.”

    Speaking after giving away the awards at a colourful function in the gaily decorated Vigyan Bhavan, he noted that Indian cinema had not remained unaffected by globalisation and it was fascinating to see how the industry has to face the challenge of continuing on the path of innovation, creativity, and technological upgradation even as it nurtures its umbilical chord with our heritage and culture.

    Earlier, thespian Soumitra Chatterjee received the Dadasaheb Phalke award, the highest national honour for lifetime contribution to cinema, amidst a standing ovation and thunderous applause. Actor Vidya Balan for ‘The Dirty Picture’ and Girish Kulkarni for the Marathi film ‘Deeol’ also received loud cheers as they came to get the awards for best performance.

    Ansari noted that popular culture is a site where “collective social understandings are created” and films play a significant role in this, more so given the linguistic and regional diversity they portray.

    Over the years, these awards have recognised excellence as also propelled new or unknown talent to national and international limelight and provide encouragement and recognition to them, he said.

    Applauding Chatterjee, Ansari said “his partnership with Satyajit Ray would indeed be counted as a memorable director-actor combination in the history of cinema.”

    He said the award winners had proved that contrary to popular perception, Indian cinema is neither formulaic nor conforming to stereotypes. It has successfully adapted traditional Indian narrative and oral traditions to the requirements of technology and formats of new media.

    Globalisation is also reflected in the nature and expectations of cinemagoers. “We have a growing middle class, and a younger generation of viewers; both are desirous and capable of spending on entertainment. The film viewers today, besides entertainment, seek to understand their society and their world, and to make sense of societal and personal evolution.”

    The technology and format of film viewing is also changing with new gadgets including phones, Tablets, Pay-per-view and laptops and venues such as multiplexes. This is leading to an increasing demand for better cinematography, improved quality and digital formats. They impact on the distribution and marketing and, thus, on revenue generation possibilities.

    “It is evident our films are one of the most potent elements of our soft power. They are ambassadors of our culture, tradition and society. They foster people-to-people relations and promote our image and interests in ways that are not readily apparent but are of enduring significance. As we improve our society and economy and empower our citizens, our films will continue to play a leading role within the country and abroad to further the effort.”

    Information and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni said the awards this year marked the commencement of the celebrations of 100 years of cinema. Programmes being given a fillip during the year included the National Film Heritage Mission for which a sum of Rs five billion had been allocated in the current five-year plan.

    She said that the year will see the opening of the Museum of the Moving Image in Mumbai in the premises of the Gulshan Mahal in the Films Division Complex.

    She agreed with Ansari that the rich cultural heritage and film music had contributed in turning India into a soft power. Cinema was the social mirror of society and a catalyst for the plurality of Indian culture. Regional cinema remained the mainstay of Indian cinema.

    I&B Secretary Uday Varma said Indian cinema celebrates life in all its glory and shares joys and sorrows, encapsulating life in all its colours. It was the finest tribute to human creativity.

    Chatterjee said he had been plagued in his early years on whether he had chosen the right profession, but his fans had proved him right.

    Chairpersons Rohini Hatthangady (features), Ramesh Sharma (non-features) and Vijaya Mulay (writing on cinema) presented their reports. Others present included the two Ministers of State for I&B, C M Jatua and R Jagathrakshkan, Film Federation of India president Vinod Lamba, and Dharmesh Tiwari of the All India Cine Employees Confederation.

    The evening presented by actors Vinay Pathak and Soumya Tandon saw music performances by National film awardees Anand Bhate (for his song in ‘Balgandharva’), Roopa Ganguly (for her song in ‘Abhosheyshey’) and Amit Trivedi and Amitabh Bhattacharya for the song ‘Agar Zindagi’ in ‘I am’. A film with clips from the award-winning films by Ramesh Tekwani and another on Chatterjee by Films Division were also screened.

  • CNN-IBN, IBN 7 trace 60 years of Indian cinema

    MUMBAI: CNN-IBN and IBN 7 have launched a new series titled Splendid 60: Six Decades of Cinema as a part of their celebration of 60 years of India’s independence. It will be presented by Rajeev Masand on CNN-IBN at 10 pm and Amrapali Sharma on IBN 7 at 11 pm every Saturday.

    The four-episode series will focus on the journey of Indian cinema along with some of the top filmmakers choosing their personal all-time favourite films of the last 60 years. The series will present special segments discussing – sexuality and the Hindi heroine, changing face of the Hindi film hero and growth of parallel cinema.

    CNN-IBN and IBN 7 editor-in-chief Rajdeep Sardesai said, “Six Decades of Cinema is an attempt to walk down memory lane and look at the most defining moments in Indian cinema. The viewers will thoroughly enjoy this recapitulation of one of their favourite pastimes.”

    IBN 7 managing editor Ashutosh said, “The progression of Indian cinema has been anything but linear. The industry is enormous with several linguistic spheres that together reflect the richness of Indian culture. Six Decades of Cinema will follow this journey step by step and showcase its most defining moments.”

  • International cinema exhibition next month in Chennai

    International cinema exhibition next month in Chennai

    NEW DELHI: An International Exhibition, ‘Cinema Today 2007’ is being held for the first time in Asia to commemorate 75 years of the Indian Talkie.

    Organised by Buysell Interactions, the technical show for the cinema and television Industry featuring the latest technology, services and products that are available Globally will be showcased at the expo scheduled from 16 to 18 February at the Chennai Trade Centre, a press release states.

    The highlights of the event include Seminar/Workshop on Cinematography by SICA – South Indian Cinematographer’s Association – on 17 February and the proposed “Film Panaroma” presented by National Film Development Corporation and ‘Maayajaal’ scheduled at the Mayajaal Multiplex, Chennai, from 14 to 18 February.

    A parallel event, “Talkie 75”- a research programme, has been planned to analyse the past and to work for the betterment of future Indian Cinema.