| The New York Indian Film Festival celebrates the centenary of films in   India with a retrospective of leading helmer Shyam Benegal.   Opening-night pic on May 23 is "Chittagong," which also kicked off the   L.A. Indian fest earlier this month. Set during the 1930s, pic helmed by Bedabrata Pain centers around a schoolboy movement against the colonial British rulers.  The 12th edition's centerpiece is a colorized version of the late   Dev Anand starrer "Hum dono." The unspooling of the 1961 film will   serve as a tribute to the Bollywood multihyphenate.  An NYIFF sidebar is devoted to a retrospective of Benegal's films   including "Mamoo," "Sardari Begum" and "Zubeidaa." The screenings will   be followed by a Q&A with the director. While Benegal worked in   Hindi cinema, his movies became part of a wave of non-Bollywood pics in   the 1970s.  "To commemorate the 100th year of Indian cinema, our 2012 lineup   celebrates all that NYIFF finds inspiring about great films  --  depth,   character study, ingenious plots and riveting messages," said Aroon   Shivdasani, exec director of the Indo-American Arts Council, the   nonprofit org that puts on the fest.  Pics unspool at lower Manhattan's Tribeca Cinemas. Fest ends May 27, but the closing-night film has yet to be announced.  Visit iaac.us/NYIFF2012/index.htm for more information.  Contact Shalini Dore at shali.dore@variety.com |