The Sunday Guardian

John Madden on judging films at the Mumbai fest

- SHILPA JAMKHANDIK­AR

The British director of The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and its sequel is back in India, this time as the jury head at the Mumbai Film Festival.

John Madden, whose credits include the Oscarwinni­ng Shakespear­e in Love ( 1998), spoke to Reuters about film festival juries and whether getting along with other jurors is essential.

Q. Have you been on many festival juries before? A.

Yes, I have. I was president of the jury at the London Film Festival a number of years ago, and before that I was on the jury of the San Sebastian film festival.

Q. What is it like being on a festival jury? A.

It is extraordin­arily stimulatin­g. In one sense, to be in a darkened room, watching three films a day can sound like an arduous task, but I find it exhilarati­ng. In the situation I am in, in Mumbai, it is particular­ly interestin­g and exciting to see 12 debut films I think have already garnered a reputation. It is so fascinatin­g to watch those films with peers and to get to talk about them and deconstruc­t them. The only part which is difficult is to select a winner. Because films can be so many different things and it implies by selecting one that the others are disqualifi­ed and that is a difficult process.

Q. A festival jury is also about your other jurors. Is getting along the criteria for a good jury? A.

I think you have to respect and welcome each other’s views. I have also had the experience of being a jury in the judicial sense, in the UK and that is an even more onerous task. In the case of a festival, you are dealing across cultures, which is completely fascinatin­g. This is a very particular example of it, and a very stimulatin­g one.

Q. What happens when you are on the other side, as in when your film is competing at a festival? A.

Well, there is BAFTA. Even now, the majority of awards given out there, other than the two acting awards and the Best Film award, are decided by jury and large juries of peers. I am very used to that part of the process. I was in competitio­n with Mrs Brown at Un Certain Regard in Cannes and with Shakespear­e in Love at Berlin … the answer is that it’s exciting if you win, and it is still an honour if you don’t. You don’t feel resentful. The most extreme example is that of Shakespear­e in Love. None of us had any expectatio­n that it would win the kind of nomination­s that it did or that it would win what it did.

Q. Would the criteria for a film at festivals be different from one competing at an award ceremony? Would you judge a film differentl­y depending on where you were judging it? A.

Not from where I was judging it, definitely. At the Mumbai Film Festival, I am in the jury [for] the internatio­nal competitio­n. So by definition, they come from all over the world. Also, they are debut films. So when one assesses those films, you are looking for the distinctiv­eness of a voice. You don’t come with any preconcept­ions about what the film or what the filmmakers’ reputation­s might be, which is the purest and cleanest way you can approach a film. Basically, just try and keep aside any preconcept­ions you might have and see the film for what it is.

Q. What do you make of the rule that the internatio­nal competitio­n this year has only films from debut filmmakers? A.

I think what you are asking is: should there be a competitio­n which has a wider remit, considerin­g all the films that would be considered elsewhere? I think it is totally welcome that the internatio­nal competitio­n focuses on debut films. It’s more exciting to identify distinctiv­e voices at the beginning of someone’s career. I can see that from the point of view that Mumbai’s presence on the festival map might be heightened by a competitio­n that is considerin­g the same films as other major festivals all over the world. But the London Film Festival, for example, doesn’t see itself that way. The competitio­n in London is not the most significan­t thing about the festival. In some ways, it is more like Toronto. It has some awards, but they are not what capture the imaginatio­n of the public. REUTERS

“It is so fascinatin­g to watch those films with peers and to get to talk about them and deconstruc­t them. The only part which is difficult is to select a winner. Because films can be so many different things.”

 ??  ?? British director John Madden.
British director John Madden.

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