Monday, July 27, 2020

Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 9 : Aamakaar - The Turtle People

Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 9
From 6 pm, 31st July / Friday!

Film: AAMAKAAR- THE TURTLE PEOPLE
Dir: Surabhi Sharma; 76 min; 2003; Documentary



Synopsis: This film depicts the struggles of a small fishing village in North Kerala that is fighting the assault on its estuary by sand mining. The villagers are also engaged in the conservation of Olive Ridley turtles that come to their beach to nest. They make a connection between a species fast becoming extinct and the fate of a community that could face displacement.

Produced by Sunil Shanbag
Cinematography Setu, Sudheer Palsane
Music Rajivan SA
Editing Sujata Narula
Audiography Suresh Rajamani
Production Company Chrysalis Films

Awards: Ramsar- Medwet Award, Eco-Cinema 2004, Greece
Bronze Trophy from Indian Documentary Producers Association, Mumbai

Festivals: FICA VI, Brazil, 2004
Planet in Focus, Toronto, 2003
Vatavaran, New Delhi, 2003
Opening film at ‘Women in Film’, The Substation, Singapore, 2003
Kara Film Festival, Karachi, 2003
Quotes from the Earth, New Delhi, 2004
Vikalp – Films for Freedom, Mumbai, 2004



About the filmmaker : Surabhi Sharma is a filmmaker based in Abu Dhabi and Mumbai. She has worked on several feature length documentaries apart from some short fiction films and video installations. Her key concern has been documenting cities in transition through the lens of labour, music and migration, and most recently reproductive labour. Cinema verite and ethnography are the genres that inform her filmmaking. She is currently teaching in the Film and new Media Programme at New York University Abu Dhabi.

We also invite you to the interaction with Surabhi Sharma and Sunil Shanbag at 11 am on 2nd Aug / Sunday; message 9940642044 for ID and password!

Monday, July 20, 2020

Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 8 : Have You Seen the Arana?

Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 8
From 6 pm Friday (24 July); for 48 hours only


Film : Ningal Aranaye Kando? (Have You Seen The Arana?)
Dir: Sunanda Bhat; 73 minutes; Malayalam with Eng subtitles; 2012

In a world that has grown more dynamic and uncertain, where diversity and differences make way for standardization and uniformity, the film explores the effects of a rapidly changing landscape on lives and livelihoods. Set in Wayanad, in South India, ‘Have you seen the arana?’ is a journey through a rich and bio-diverse region that is witnessing drastic transformation in the name of ‘development’

A traditional healer’s concern over the disappearance of medicinal plants from the forest, a farmer’s commitment to growing traditional varieties of rice organically and a cash crop cultivator’s struggle to survive amidst farmers’ suicides, offer fresh insights into shifting relations between people, their knowledge systems and the environment.

Interwoven into contemporary narratives is an ancient tribal creation myth that traces the passage of their ancestors across this land, recalling past ways of reading and mapping the terrain.

As hills flatten, forests disappear and traditional knowledge systems are forgotten, the film reminds us that this diversity could disappear forever, to be replaced by monotonous and unsustainable alternatives.


CREDITS:

Cinematography: Saumyananda Sahi
Gaffer & Editor: Tanushree Das
Editing Consultant: Bina Paul
Location Sound: Christopher Burchell
Sound Design: P M Satheesh
Stereo Mix: Tapas Nayak
Research & Production: Sibi Pulpally & Arun P A 


FILM FESTIVAS:

Mumbai International Film Festival, MIFF 
International Film Festival of India, Goa. 
27th Parnu International Documentary and Anthropology Film Festival, Estonia. 
Female Eye Film Festival, Toronto, Canada. 
6th International Documentary and Short Film Festival, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. 
23rd African, Asian and Latin American Film Festival, Milan, Italy. 
Planet in Focus Environmental Film Festival, Toronto, Canada 
32nd Jean Rouch International Film Festival, Paris, France. 
International Festival Signes de Nuit, Paris. 
8th Seattle South Asian Film Festival. 
Kuala Lumpur Eco Film Fest. 
10th Salento Film Festival, Tricase, Italy. 
TiNai Eco Film Festival, Goa. 
Verzio Human Rights film Festival, Budapest, Hungary 
International Food Film & Video Diversity Festival, Trento, Italy 
Moab International Film Festival, UT, USA 
International Intangible Heritage Film Festival 2014 (IIHFF 2014), S. Korea 
International Health Film Festival, Belgium 
Madurai International Film Festival 
International Women's Film Festival, Hyderabad 
IAWRT Asian Women's Film Festival, New Delhi. 
Dhaka International Film Festival 
Jeevika Livelihood Film festival, New Delhi. 

AWARDS: 

Golden Conch for Best Documentary, Best Cinematography and Best Sound Awards, Mumbai International Film Festival, 2014. 
“Monde en Regards” award, Jean Rouch International Film Festival, Paris. 
Best Documentary Mark Haslam Award at Planet in Focus Film Festival, Toronto. 
John Abraham National Award for Best Documentary, Signs Film Festival, Kerala 
Honorable Mention, Documentary Feature, Int. Film Festival for Environment, Health and Culture, Jakarta.
Special Mention, International Documentary & Short Film Festival of Kerala. 
Best Eco documentary Feature Award, Tinai Eco Film Festival. 
Best Cinematography and Best Editing Awards, Jeevika Asia Livelihood Film Festival 
Best Documentary, Professional, Dada Saheb Phalke Award. 
Best Documentary & Best Director, National Short & Documentary Film Awards, Thrissur, Kerala. 
Best Documentary & Best Director, Kerala State Television Awards. 


ABOUT THE DIRECTOR:

Sunanda is a Bangalore based documentary filmmaker.  Her interest in non-fiction films is to represent people living on the margins of an intricate and stratified Indian society. She looks at ways to bring in textures of landscape with layers of lives of her characters.

Her latest independent work 'Have you seen the arana?' won critical acclaim with  screenings at film festivals in India and outside. Among the prominent awards are the  Golden Conch at Mumbai International Film Festival, Mark Haslam Award at Planet in Focus in Toronto, ‘Monde en regards’ at the Jean Rouch Ethnographic Film Festival in Paris, the John Abraham National Award for Best Documentary at Signs Film Festival, among others.

She was invited to present her film at Metropolis Kino, an art-house cinema theatre in 
Hamburg and showcase her film at the Tisch School of the Arts in New York. 
Her first film “Bol Ayesha Bol” premiered at the International Documentary Film 
Festival, Amsterdam. 

Sunanda has made several short films on sanitation, dry land farming and micro 
enterprise. She is an active member of Vikalp Bengaluru, a collective of filmmakers 
that has been showing the best in documentary films in the city for over 10 years.


Don't forget to attend the interaction with the filmmaker via Zoom@ 11 am on Sunday, 26 July!
Message 9940642044 for ID and password!

Monday, July 13, 2020

Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 7 : Invoking Justice

Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 7

From 6 pm, 17th July, Friday; for 48 hours only!

Film : Invoking Justice
Dir: Deepa Dhanraj; 86 min; Tamil with English subtitles; 2012; Documentary



Synopsis: Fed up with male dominated Jamaats (Councils), where they cannot represent themselves, Muslim women in South India set up their own council in 2004. The Women’s Jamaat guides, arbitrates and decides on matters related to family law.

Invoking Justice tells the complex story of the inspired challenge posed by the Women’s Jamaat to a corrupt judicial system. The film follows Jamaat members as they investigate cases and negotiate with families, male Jamaats and the police with skill, tenacity and the courage of convictions grounded equally in faith and in a secular idea of justice.

Credits:
Producer : Deepa Dhanraj, Ryota Kotani, Sally Jo Fifer
Co-producers NHK Japan, ITVS USA, with support from the Jan Vrijman Fund
Cinematographer: Navroze Contractor
Editor/Script: Jabeen Merchant
Music: Konarak Reddy
Sound Recording: Kalaiselvan

Awards / film festivals:

Golden Conch best documentary 2014, Mumbai International Film Festival. QFX Cinema Jury Award 2013, Film South Asia, Nepal.



Deepa Dhanraj is a writer, director, and producer living in Bangalore, South India. She studied English Literature in Madras University. She has produced and directed numerous an award-winning documentaries, ”Something Like a War “ (Channel 4); “The Legacy of Malthus” (BBC 2); “Sudesha” (Faust Film/ARD). “Nari Adalat/Women's Courts" and “What Has Happened to This City?".

The films have been screened on ARTE, CBC, and SBS. Her films have been invited to festivals such as IDFA, Berlinale, Leipzig, Oberhausen, and Films de Femmes, Creteil France, Tampere, Vancouver and Chicago. She has a special interest in education and has created special video materials to address challenges faced by first generation learners.


Interaction with the filmmaker on 19th July, Sunday at 11 am; Message 9940642044 for ID and password

About the filmmaker:


1) Transcending testimony: an interview with filmmaker Deepa Dhanraj

2) Feminist Documentary in India : an interview with Deepa Dhanraj

3) Justice League : on Deepa Dhanraj

Monday, July 6, 2020

Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 6 : The Slave Genesis


Marupakkam Online Film Screening # 6

From 6 pm 10th July, Friday; for 48 hours only! (Extended for 24 hours more)

Film : The Slave Genesis (Dir: Aneez Mappilla; 62 min)



The film won the 65th National Award for Best Ethnographic Documentary!

Synopsis : The documentary, ‘The Slave Genesis’ deals with the ethnicity and the social transformation of Paniya tribals, who belong to Wayanad, the hill district to the south of Western Ghats in South India.

‘Paniya’ literally translates to a ‘labourer’. These tribals—who were deployed to work in the farms of migrants, who trickled into Wayanad from time to time - have distinct arts and songs that reflect their identities. The prime among their songs is Penappaattu (speech of ghost), which they recite as part of funeral rituals. The song begins with the origin of Paniya tribes.

Based on the contents of Penappattu, the documentary explores the social transformation of the Paniyas. It proceeds through the recollections of the director, who was born and brought up in close proximity to the Paniyas. The anthropological pitch forms the aesthetic build of the documentary.

We also invite you to the interaction with the filmmaker via Zoom on 12th July, Sunday at 11 am; message 9940642044 for ID and password.

Click here to watch the film!

Review 01

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