The Sunday Guardian

Here are all the films you just can’t afford to miss at DIFF

- RINI BARMAN

It’s that time of the year again for cinephiles: the sixth edition of the Dharamshal­a Internatio­nal Film Festival (DIFF) is going to be held from 2-5 Novemm ber. Conceptual­ized and curated by filmmakers Ritu Sarin and Tenzing Sonam, DIFF is known for its quality mixture of feature films, documentar­ies and animation films from around the world. If you’re heading up to the beauteous hills of McLeodganj for the festival, here’s a handy guide for you, which you simply cannot afford to miss. Commenting upon the many films from Northeast this year, Ritu says, “The success of Kothanodi, Village Rockstars and Ralang Road bode well for the future of films from the region. Though we can’t call it a unified film movement as such, owing to its vast diversity, once we watched the films, we knew we had to show them. There is a freshness of approach, subject-matter and style that is drawing rave attention”. views on the festival circuit, with the film’s cinematogr­aphy and feel-good vibes being praised in particular. Set in the Assamese village of Kalardiya, this is the story of young Dhunu, a ten-yearold girl determined to start her own band, aided and abetted by her equally young friends. As a film with untrained crew and one female director multitaski­ng, Village Rockstars won 3 awards at MAMI festival this month. livers a bravura performanc­e as the titular protagonis­t, struggling to come to terms with trigger- happy Naxalites, callous and indifferen­t government officials— and the plight of the local adivasis, who are perpetuall­y stuck between a rock and a hard place. thers are off to fight another war while their anxious mothers are glued to the TV screens, fearing what the news might tell them next. The children find them- selves in a face-off against a pair of deserting soldiers, over an abandoned military base. Who will blink first: the soldiers who’re fleeing from the war or the children who’ve lived the war since the day they were born? take our breath away. An immensely thoughtful portrayal of post-war life from varied footages compiled over 25-years, it intervenes into the very art of documentar­y film making. Her usage of personal life clips, including that of mental illness makes it a very bold narrative. This film won The Critics Choice Documentar­y award for the “Most compelling living subject of a documentar­y” l last year amongst other awards and nominat tions. for excellence in Cinematogr­aphy. It has been screened at over 50 festivals across the world and won multiple laurels.

HDIFF’s f i f t h selection of short films from India is curated by renowned Marathi f i l mmaker Umesh Kulkarni. These include: Taandav by Devashish Makhija, Afternoon Clouds by Payal Kapadia (the only Indian film to t compete at Cannes 2017), 2 Assamese film Days of o Autumn by Mukul Haloi(screened to appreciati­on at Internatio­nal Documentar­y and Short Film Festival of Kerala 2017, India) among others.

Everyone’s favourite children’s author Roald Dahl will come alive in animation at the festival. His book Revolting Rhymes is the subject of a 58 min-long animation film directed by Jakob Schuh and Jan Lachauer. It has six fairy tales retold and reinterpre­ted for 8-10 year olds. Then, there is also Dutch children’s feature The Day My Father Became a Bush, directed by Nicole van Kilsdonk who is the winner of profession­al Jury Award KinoKino – Internatio­nal Film Festival for Children, Zagreb, Croatia. It is based on an award-winning book by Joke Van Leeuwen.

Storytelle­rs, and filmbuffs, here’s a reason to rejoice!

‘I’m a fun dad, but I don’t know if I’m the fun, crazy dad.’

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