| The 13th edition of the New York Indian Film Festival was a fitting ode to Indian cinema’s centenary year. 
 Centuries ago, there was the tradition of the kathakar, the   travelling storyteller. Indian cinema, now in its 100th year, is but a   continuation of this tradition, which took wonderful shape at the New   York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF). Not unlike a big fat Indian wedding,   there were several colourful events leading up to NYIFF. The kick-off   was a special screening of Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children, brought to screen by Deepa Mehta. This was followed by a screening of Mira Nair’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist. Organised by the Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC), the 13th edition of   NYIFF dished out a veritable feast for film lovers — features,   documentaries and short films celebrating a range of genres, from art   house to Diaspora.
 
 Tellingly, the opening, closing and centrepiece films dealt with social   and political issues using humour, satire and drama. In the first, Dekh Tamasha Dekh, Feroz Abbas Khan takes on religion, corruption, caste politics and the violence that permeate everyday life. The centrepiece, Shahid by Hansal Mehta, tells the story of slain human rights activist and   lawyer Shahid Azmi, through some strong performances from Raj Kumar   Yadav, Tigmanshu Dhulia and K.K. Menon. Filmistaan, on the final   day, tackled the prickly issue of Indo-Pak relations with humour and   empathy. The film had just won the National Film Award in India — and   may indeed be a guide book for cross-border understanding.
 
 This year there was a special nod to 100 years of Indian Cinema with The Human Factor, a documentary about little-known musicians who contributed much to the   music of the Hindi film industry. Other tributes to Indian cinema   included Baavra Mann, a documentary on filmmaker Sudhir Mishra, and Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro — a 1983 cult classic. Also on screen were two rare gems — Uday Shankar’s Kalpana and M.S. Sathyu’s Garam Hawa. Several films in Indian regional languages — including Pune 52, Dhag and Anumati in Marathi, Oonga in Hindi and Oriya, and Akashathinte Niram in Malayalam — were showcased. A highlight was Goutam Ghose’s Bengali film Shunyo Awnko starring Priyanshu Chatterjee, Konkona Sen Sharma, Priyanka Bose and Soumitra Chatterjee.
 
 One notable aspect is the encouraging number of young, first-time   filmmakers braving the odds without big budgets or studios behind them,   and taking on tough issues without box-office formulas in mind. Listen Amaya,   a contemporary tale with the pairing of Farooque Shaikh and Deepti   Naval, was created by Avinash Kumar Singh and his wife as a   self-produced and self-released venture.
  Some films explicitly invoked the Indo-U.S. connection. B.A Pass, in   which a college boy and an older woman get embroiled in a relationship,   is actually based on New York-based Monika Sikka’s short story ‘The   Railway Aunty’ from the Delhi Noir anthology. Fireflies, an atmospheric film about relationships, starred Monica Dogra who has her roots in the U.S.   The Diaspora was ably showcased in short films, churned out by a new   breed of young filmmakers just-emerged from film schools. Notable among   the off-beat films at NYIFF were Please Don’t Beat Me Sir directed by Shashwati Talukdar, Chara and The Only Real Game, directed by Mirra Bank.   Dosa Hunt by Amrit Singh explored identity and culture by   following seven NYC musicians — all brown — on a multicultural pursuit   of the most authentic dosa in New York City. Alexandra Eaton’s Bombay Movie was the result of an impulsive move. The Bard University student hopped on a plane to Bombay after reading Suketu Mehta’s Bombay: Maximum City. There, she followed independent filmmaker Raja Menon as he made Bara Anna and shot her documentary in the process. She finished the film just   four days before the festival. How did she survive financially? She   says, “It was difficult but it’s always worth it if you're doing   something you love.”   Ritu Sarin and Tenzing Sonam’s When Hari Got Married is the tale of a taxi driver embarking on an arranged marriage yet connecting with his bride-to-be on a mobile phone. Daadi is   a short film by David Andrew Stoler about Laj Bedi, 88. She once acted   in Hindi and Punjabi films in India and now lives in a seniors’ home in   Harlem. Now she sometimes sits and watches her old films starring Dara   Singh. She acts in Daadi with her own grand-daughter, Purva, an actress   in New York.   On the final day, the award winners were announced at Skirball   Performing Arts Center. The bevy of presenters included diplomats   Dnyaneshwar Mulay and Manjeev Puri, actors Farooque Sheikh, Padma   Lakshmi, Sarita Chowdhury, Aasif Mandvi, Monica Dogre and Sakina   Jaffrey.   Anumati bagged best film, and best actor for Vikram Gokhle. Hansal Mehta scooped up the best director prize for Shahid and Deepti Naval was declared best actor, female, for her role in Listen Amaya. Mirra Bank’s The Only Real Game was chosen best documentary.   There was a striking, nostalgic cameo at the festival — a painting, much   like a yesteryear Bollywood movie hoarding. Mehvash Husain of Speaking   Tree pictures, who produced Oonga, is the grand-daughter of MF   Husain. Her father, Mumtaz Husain had brought a huge replica of the   artwork Husain had been working on for the Indian film industry’s 100th   year, at the time of his death. The painting had pride of place at the   crowded Tribeca Cinema.   With this, it all comes full circle. Once a struggling billboard painter   who painted Bollywood stars to make a living, Husain went on to become   the poster boy of Indian painting.   And after all these years, he was once again painting hoardings of   cinema superstars. Struggling young actors, new filmmakers, and hordes   of cinema-mad fans gazed at it. As Nitin Kakkar of Filmistaan told me, “That is where the magic happens.”  |