Tag: Papilio Buddha

  • Three Indian films at Durban International Film Festival

    Three Indian films at Durban International Film Festival

    NEW DELHI: Ritesh Batra’s Lunchbox and Anup Singh’s Qissa, the two Indian films that have swept international film festivals over the past year, will be among the three Indian films at the 35th edition of the Durban International Film Festival.

     

    Jayan K. Cherian’s Papilio Buddha will be the third Indian film at the festival to be held from 17 to 27 July.

     

    A total of around 69 feature films, 60 documentaries and 57 short films will be screened.

     

    Qissa will be screened as part of a special package of films on Gender and Sexuality as it is a film that blurs the boundaries of gender and genre in its story of a girl who is brought up as a boy.

     

    The Lunchbox– a tale of an isolated housewife who tries to reignite her relationship with her husband through a friendship she forms with someone who receives her delicious meals – will be screened in World Cinema section.

     

    Also in the World Cinema section is Papilio Buddha, the story of a university-educated son of a Dalit activist who is politically apathetic until he receives bad treatment at the hands of the state.

     

    The film was screened at the Berlin International Film Festival early this year.

  • India fails to make it to competition of Montreal, four in World Cinema section

    India fails to make it to competition of Montreal, four in World Cinema section

    NEW DELHI: While it has failed to make it to the competition section, there are four films from India in the focus on World Cinema of the 37th Montreal World Film Festival this year.

    The Festival will be held between 22 August to 2 September will screen 218 feature films, of which it claims more than half are international (or world) premieres.

    As in recent years, films from China and Japan dominate the selections. There are twenty titles from the two countries. There are two other films from southeast Asia.

    Interestingly, two of the four films from India are collaborations with filmmakers in the United States: Chittagong (2010) directed by Bedabrato Pain; and Papilio Buddha directed Jayan K. Cherian.

    Filmistaan directed by Nitin Kakkar, and Monsoon Shootout by Amit Kumar are the other two entries from India.

     

    The festival is also hosting a tribute to South Korea cinema with eight features and ten shorts with a mix of independent and more mainstream titles.