The Free Press Journal

Rohena Gera on a high

Shillpi A Singh speaks to the filmmaker, who has had a successful year so far with her movie SIR making a splash on the festival circuit

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It has been a year of highs for filmmaker Rohena Gera. Her film SIR featuring Tillotama Shome, Vivek Gomber and Geetanjali Kulkarni in lead roles has been on an award-winning spree on the fest circuit, bagging two trophies in quick succession.

After becoming the first woman filmmaker to win the Gan Foundation Award for SIR at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, Gera went on to receive the Audience Award at the Cabourg Film Festival. Cabourg Film Festival is dedicated to films in the romantic genre and SIR was up against many strong films including Pawil Pawilowski’s Cannes mise en scene awardwinne­r Cold War, Alex Lutz’ Guy, and Love, Greg Berlanti’s Simon.

“I was surprised, but delighted when they announced that the audience had voted for SIR as their favourite film. It’s important to me that the film connects with people on a human, emotional level, so this really means the world to me. It was beautiful to see how engaged people were, how much they were rooting for this woman to realise her dreams,” says Gera. Set in Mumbai, the film revolves around Ratna played by Shome, who works as domestic live-in help for Ashwin (Gomber), a man who hails from a rich family. Although Ashwin seems to have it all, Ratna can sense that he has given up on his dreams and is somewhat lost. On the other hand, Ratna who seems to have nothing is full of hope and works determined­ly towards her dream. As these two worlds collide and the two individual­s connect, the barriers between them seem only more insurmount­able. Gera has added layers of class and women empowermen­t to bring forth the complexiti­es in their characters, and how they deal with them, finding love and happiness within their different social statuses and constraint­s.

Calling it an unusual love story and an Indian film in every sense, Gera is humbled to see SIR touch and move audience and critics on foreign shores. “It questions how we allow ourselves to love who we love. The film touches upon class dynamics in urban India. There’s a class difference between Ratna and Ashwin, but it is not about a victim and oppressor. It is about love where two people become equal and see each other’s points of view. Their two different worlds clash in one apartment, and how they break the barriers, both physical and social, and come closer,” she says.

Gera only had Shome in mind to play Ratna, but Gomber landed the role after an audition. “I had seen Tillotama in Monsoon

Wedding and Qissa, and like always, she’s done full justice to bring forth strength, dignity, optimism, freedom in Ratna’s character. Vivek gave a screen test, and inhabited the character and space around him, working hard to externalis­e Ashwin’s internal conflicts and be him, quite effortless­ly,” she says on casting it right.

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