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          | www.deccanherald.com 'Bombay Summer' rules New York film fest, bags three awards
 November 20, 2009 (PTI)
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          | 'Bombay Summer'which  explores the fleeting and delicate friendship among three young people,  won top three awards including best film and best director at the MIAAC  Film Festival in which Deepti Naval also bagged an honour. 
  Joseph  Mathew-Varghese was adjudged the best director and Tannishtha  Chatterjee the best actress for her role in "Bombay Summer", which, set  in contemporary India, subtly mirrors the turmoil within  tradition-bound Indian society as it copes with change and rapid  modernisation. 
 Naval won the best screenplay award for her  directorial debut "Two Paise for Sunshine, Four Annas for Rain", an  atmospheric ode to Bollywood musicals with Manisha Koirala in an  unusual love affair with a gay man. Aasif Mandvi was named best actor  for his role in "Today's Special", the festival's opening film that is  a comedy set in New York City.
 
 "Good Night" by Geetika Narang  won the best short film award while the best documentary film prize  went to "The Salt Stories" by Lalit Vachani.
 
 The festival, which  ran from November 11-15, saw the screening of 47 films which  spotlighted the established and emerging Indian independent filmmakers.
 
 Celebrities  like Shabana Azmi, Javed Akhtar, Rahul Bose, Sanjay Suri, Mira Nair,  Shyam Benegal and Manisha Koirala attended the closing function which  saw the US premiere of Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury's "The Endless Wait  (Antaheen)".
 
 Festival winners were chosen by a jury comprising  10 members specialising in film. Awards were also presented to three  student NYU filmmakers for their one-minute films entitled "My MIAAC"  on their cell phone cameras.
 
 The festival premiered 44 Indian  and diaspora films and held special events, with a sidebar on 'Kashmir  in Film', and discussion panels focusing on themes like 'Queer  Bollywood' and 'the changing landscape of Indian film business'.
 
 Other  festival highlights included an evening with Mira Nair, an evening with  Sharmila Tagore and a celebration of contemporary Bengali cinema.
 
 In  its ninth year, the annual festival also presented veteran Benegal's  comic take on Indian politics "Well Done Abba" and Anurag Kashyap's  "Gulaal".
 
 Since its inception in 2001, Mahindra Indo-American  Arts Council (MIAAC) has established itself as one of the premiere  Indian film festival in the US, introducing audiences to films such as  Oscar winner "Slumdog Millionaire", Mira Nair's "The Namesake" and  "Monsoon Wedding", Deepa Mehta's "Water" and Gurinder Chadha's "Bride  & Prejudice".
 
 The regular public screenings were held at the  Quad Cinema, with special screenings at the Paris Theatre, Walter Reade  Theater, the National Museum of the American Indian, and NYU's Cantor  Center.
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          | Source: http://www.deccanherald.com/content/36926/bombay-summer-rules-york-film.html |