Tag: Zurich Film Festival

  • India in focus in the ‘New World View’ at Zurich Film Festival

    India in focus in the ‘New World View’ at Zurich Film Festival

    NEW DELHI: A total of 12 Indian features and six shortfilms are being showcased in the ongoing Zurich Film Festival (ZFF) in which India is the focus in the ‘New World View’ section.

     

    The Festival is being held from 25 September to 5 October. Chaitanya Tamhane’s ‘Lion of the future’ winner Court and recent festival favourites Anand Gandhi’s Ship of Theseus and Kanu Behl’s Titli are among the selected films.

     

    A package of shorts curated by Swiss Short Film Festival Internationale Kurzfilmtage Winterthur will be on display as well. There are six shorts made by Anurag Goswami , Varun Chawla , Hossein Mozdgir Roozane , Rodd Rathjen , Payal Kapadia  and Gitanjali Rao.

     

    The other features include Fandry by Nagraj Manjule; Gulabi Gang by Nishtha Jain; I.D by Kamal K.M.; Katiyabaaz by Deepti Kakkar and Fahad Mustafa; Liar’s Dice by Geethu Mohandas (which is India’s selection for the Oscars); Lucia by Pawan Kumar; Monsoon Shootout by Amit Kumar; Soodhu Kavvum by Nalan Kumarasamy, and Sulemani Keeda by Amit Masurkar.

     

    Festival’s artistic director Karl Spoerri, one of the festival founders in October 2005, said, “The event will also include a Game Changer award for Mediakraft Networks president Christoph Krachten, honouring a visionary who breaks new ground while choosing to ignore convention and popular opinion”.

     

    ZFF will also introduce an out-of-competition strand to present television productions that have garnered international attention.

     

    The third International Film Music Competition will also be held during the festival and brings with it Oscar-winning composer Hans Zimmer, who will be honoured with a lifetime achievement award and a concert of his most famous works.        

     

    ZFF’s partnership with San Sebastian Film Festival will continue, with each hosting a window dedicated to films from their respective countries rather than competing for titles.

     

  • Zurich Film Festival’s New World View: India

    Zurich Film Festival’s New World View: India

    MUMBAI: For its tenth edition, the Zurich Film Festival (ZFF) welcomes India as its New World View section guest for the film festival held this year between 25 September and 5 October. In doing so, ZFF highlights a country with a tradition spanning more than 100 years of cinematic history and a production output.

    In explaining the decision to choose India, the co-directors of ZFF, Nadja Schildknecht and Karl Spoerri said in the official statement, “New Indian cinema has experienced an upsurge in recent years, and not just on the subcontinent.” It is among young filmmakers that the change is most visible. The festival-directors go on to say, “New projects have been realised over the past few years that undermine common stereotypes. The movement from mainstream to independent cinema is unmistakable. This development is incredibly exciting.”

    Even the large festivals such as Cannes have discovered the potential of Indian cinema for themselves. There has not been a line-up in recent years that did not include an Indian film. Schildknecht and Spoerri are certain for this reason that “focussing on India can only serve to enrich the 10th ZFF.” M.K. Lokesh, the Ambassador of India to Switzerland, is delighted by the festival’s choice: “Over the years, the Indian film industry has achieved a very high level of technical standards and directional skills. In the Indo-Swiss context, the Indian cinema, by capturing the natural beauty of Switzerland in many films, contributed to Swiss popularity among Indian tourists. It is befitting that the Zurich Film Festival is showcasing India as the guest country this year.”

    Indeed, Indian festival entries are usually and rightfully praised for their thematic freshness and high cinematic quality. The best examples of these attributes include Vasan Balas’ promising debut Peddlers, a captivating relationship drama in the form of a thriller; the romantic comedy The Lunchbox by newcomer Ritesh Batra, and the family/gangster saga Gangs of Wasseypur, Anurag Kashyap’s Indian Godfather, with a budget of $ 45 million, the most expensive non-Bollywood production to date.

    It was not only with the launching of The Lunchbox in 2013 that ZFF reacted early to the subcontinent’s cinematic signals; guest in Zurich and highly successful producer Guneet Monga (The Lunchbox, The Gangs of Wasseypur and Peddlers) also offered a preview of things to come during her ZFF Master Class. Bollywood bastion Yash Raj Films hired Guneet Monga for the international sales and distribution of the adolescent drama Titli – an indication that the traditional Indian film scene is giving independent domestic cinema a commercial chance.

    The programme of this year’s New World View section will showcase ten new feature and documentary films by emerging Indian filmmakers and a short film block. The short film block is selected through our collaboration with the Internationale Kurzfilmtage Winterthur. Details of the programme will be released at a later date.

  • Richard Gere to be honoured at Zurich Film Festival

    Richard Gere to be honoured at Zurich Film Festival

    Mumbai: Richard Gere will be honoured with a special award at the Zurich Film Festival that is to begin from 20 September.
     
    The 62-year-old actor will be conferred the Golden Icon Award for his career achievements.
     
    "Richard Gere is an extraordinary man whose accomplishments in Hollywood are equalled by his humanitarian achievements. We are honoured to recognise his amazing career," festival director Karl Spoerri said.
     
    The actor‘s new film Arbitrage will also be screened at the festival.

  • Zurich Film Festival to honour John Travolta

    Zurich Film Festival to honour John Travolta

    MUMBAI: The upcoming Zurich Film Festival will present John Travolta with a special lifetime achievement award next month.
    Travolta will be honoured with the Golden Eye for his career that has spanned five decades at the annual event in Switzerland before the premiere of his new film Savages that co-stars Taylor Kitsch, Aaron Johnson and Blake Lively.
    Observed festival director Karl Spoerri in a statement, “We‘re excited to welcome John Travolta to Zurich to bestow him with this honour and celebrate his amazing career. We‘re gearing up for a momentous opening night.” said Karl Spoerri, festival director.
    The festival will also honour Ocean‘s Eleven producer Jerry Weintraub for his achievements.
    The festival runs from 20 to 30 September.

  • Zurich fest presents Polanski lifetime achievement award

    Zurich fest presents Polanski lifetime achievement award

    MUMBAI: After exactly two years, Roman Polanski was presented with his lifetime achievement award at the Zurich Film Festival.

    "What can I say? Better late than never. It‘s a very moving moment for me. It‘s a strange anniversary for me – two years, day-for-day," the 78-year-old director has been quoted as saying.
     
    In 2009, when he was on his way to accept the honour, Polanski was detained on an American warrant in child sex charges upon landing at the Zurich airport. He fought extradition to the US and was allowed to walk free in 2010 after several months of jail time and house arrest at his Swiss chalet.

    The noted director is best known for his films like Chinatown, Rosemary‘s Baby and The Pianist.

  • Polanski apologises to victim in new documentary

    Polanski apologises to victim in new documentary

    MUMBAI: Directing his apology to Samantha Greimer, the woman he sexually assaulted 33 years ago, Roman Polanski has made a new documentary that had its world premiere Tuesday at the Zurich Film Festival.

    "She is a double victim: my victim and a victim of the press," the director says near the end of the documentary Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir.
     
    The film, shot while Polanski was under house arrest in Switzerland two years ago awaiting possible extradition, offers little new information not already in the public record.

    It is also unlikely to sway anyone on the fence in the Polanski case. The film — one long, wide-ranging conversation between Polanski and his old friend and colleague, producer Andrew Braunsberg.

    The Greimer case takes up only a small portion of the film while the bulk of the film is dedicated to Polanski‘s childhood in German-occupied Poland, including his escape from the Warsaw ghetto and his early life and career.

    Polanski chose to use the 2011 Zurich Film Festival as the platform for the world premiere of the documentary, picking the date almost two years to the day when he was arrested en route to a ceremony to receive a lifetime achievement award.