| Festival screenings will take place throughout the week at Tribeca Cinemas, with Nitin Kakkar’s FILMISTAAN on May 4, 2013, the Closing Night selection to be followed by the   annual awards ceremony and after-party at the Skirball Center for   Performing Arts. This year marks the launch of a new award at the 2013   Festival that honors student-created short films (five minute or less).   Through open, no-fee submissions from film schools, one student will be   selected to receive a special award at the Closing Night Award Ceremony Lyrically interwoven, DEKH TAMASHA DEKH is a social and   political satire that cuts deep to the heart of many current issues, a   true story based off true events. Written by renowned marathi playwright   Shafaat Khan, who creates finely nuanced characters with depth and   dimensions and sets them against a lush visual backdrop of a small   village in India. The cast features Satish Kaushik, Tanvi Azmi, Vinay   Jain, Sharad Ponkshe, Ganesh Yadav, Apoorva Arora and Alok Rajwade.   Director Feroz Abbas Khan has directed some of India’s finest acting   talent during his career of over two decades and he is at the forefront   of Indian theatre today. His debut Film “Gandhi My Father”   received rave reviews and won several national and international awards.   He now showcases his new cinematic vision as the opening night film for   the festival.  “IAAC has an imagination that has expanded to embrace and celebrate   the artistic expression of the entire sub- continent,” Khan says. “I was   privileged to perform my play Mahatma v/s Gandhi as one of its earlier programs. Gandhi My Father was part of the film festival in 2007.  He adds, “Dekh Tamasha Dekh is a movie I have waited for   twelve years to realize. Finally, it was the faith of Mr. Kishore Lulla   and Eros International, that it is ready to face the world. The opening   night film at NYIFF 2013 is a huge responsibility and honor. I remain   grateful to all at IAAC for believing in the film.” For the closing night of NYIFF, debut director Nitin Kakkar brings his cinematic work of art, FILMISTAAN,   exploring Indo-Pak relationships with subtle brilliance. The   protagonist, aspiring actor Sharib Hashmi, is assisting an American film   crew shooting a documentary in the Indo-Pak border when one night he is   kidnapped and held hostage in a small village in Pakistan. When the   terrorist group realizes they have kidnapped an Indian and not an   American, Hashmi is kept hostage until the mix-up is corrected, and he   begins a burgeoning friendship with a young Pakistani. The cast also   features Kumud Mishra, Gopal Datt and Inaamulhaq. “We are proud to be the among the first supporters of immensely   talented directors like Feroz Abbas Khan and Nitin Kakkar, says Aseem   Chhabra, Festival Director. “It is in keeping with our mission to bring a   diverse group of voices to the forefront. The themes of communal   harmony and antagonism are shared in our opening and closing films and   sheds light to important issues.”  Both directors will be in attendance at the festival.  In conjunction with their stellar cinematic line-up, NYIFF also   presents excellent, informative networking events in the form of   industry panels. These panels explore in depth such topics as financing,   distribution, and production in an increasingly global market, and are   helmed by esteemed experts in the film industry. The New York Indian Film Festival (originally the IAAC Film Festival)   started in 2001 following the devastation of the September 11 attacks   on New York City. This festival creates an awareness and better   understanding of the people and stories from the Indian Diaspora by   bringing the most acclaimed feature films, documentaries, and shorts   from that region to America’s biggest and most remarkable city. Mira   Nair’s ‘Monsoon Wedding’ closed IAAC’s first festival before its   worldwide theatrical release. Since then, the festival has provided   first-looks at many acclaimed films, including Deepa Mehta’s   Oscar-nominated ‘Water,’ Nair’s ‘The Namesake,’ the Sundance audience   award-winning ‘Valley of Saints,’ the South by Southwest award-winning,   ‘Kumare,’ ‘Gangs of Wasseypur Part 1,’ and the New York Premiere of   Danny Boyle’s ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ which won eight Oscars including   Best Picture. Some of the artists who have lent their support to the   festival include Nair, Mehta, Salman Rushdie, Madhur Jaffrey, Padma   Lakshmi, Shabana Azmi, Rishi Kapoor & Neetu Singh Kapoor, Shashi   Tharoor, and the late Ismail Merchant. “I am thrilled to entertain, educate and challenge audiences with yet   another year of fantastic Independent films from every country in the   Indian subcontinent as well as the global Indian diaspora,” says   Indo-American Arts Council Executive Director Aroon Shivdasani. Film   Festival Director Aseem Chhabra adds, “We are particularly excited about   this year’s festival since it marks 100 years of Indian cinema. As   such, we are curating a series of recently restored classics from India,   never seen before in this condition. There is no better place for these   films to be showcased than at this year’s New York Indian Film   Festival.” | 
                            
                              | For IAAC Membership and NYIFF Tickets:Celebrating its 13th year, NYIFF will run April 30 to May 4. Memberships may be purchased at /Contribution.htm.
 Festival Passes and Individual Tickets go on sale in April at the festival’s website: /NYIFF2013. About the Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC):The Indo-American Arts Council is a registered 501(c)3 not-for-profit,   secular service and resource arts organization charged with the mission   of promoting and building the awareness, creation, production,   exhibition, publication and performance of Indian and cross-cultural art   forms in North America. The IAAC supports all artistic disciplines in   the classical, fusion, folk and innovative forms influenced by the arts   of India. We work cooperatively with colleagues around the United States   to broaden our collective audiences and to create a network for shared   information, resources and funding. Our focus is to work with artists   and arts organizations in North America as well as to facilitate artists   and arts organizations from India to exhibit, perform and produce their   works here.
 About the New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF):The New York Indian Film Festival is the oldest, most prestigious film   festival in the United States. It is dedicated to showcasing, promoting   and building an awareness of Independent, arthouse, alternate and   diaspora films from/about/connected to the Indian subcontinent. Our   mission is to encourage filmmakers to tell their stories, to educate   North America about them and their talent and to facilitate the making   and distribution of these films. NYIFF boasts five days of premiere   screenings of feature, documentary & short films, industry panels,   special events, retrospectives, red carpet galas, an award ceremony,   packed audiences and amazing media coverage.
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