HT Cafe

Film on Indian girl in BAFTA’s race

- Radhika Bhirani ■ radhika.bhirani@hindustant­imes.com

The touching and inspiring real-life story of a single Indian mother Suganthi’s struggle to break free from gender shackles for her 10-year-old daughter Kamali Moorthy’s empowermen­t through skateboard­ing, stands a chance to win at the British Academy Film Awards.

Kamali, a 24-minute-long documentar­y directed by Sasha Rainbow, a Londonbase­d director from New Zealand, is nominated in the British Short Film category of the Awards, organised annually by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Among others, the film is competing with Learning To Skateboard In A Warzone (If You’re A Girl), the story of young Afghan girls learning to read, write and skateboard in Kabul, and Azaar, which is set in 1800s India and has Hindispeak­ing protagonis­ts.

After winning at the Academy Award-qualifying Atlanta Film Festival, Kamali, which was filmed in the coastal town of Mahabalipu­ram in India’s Tamil Nadu, had a shot at the Oscars. But it missed being in the shortlist. Being nominated for a BAFTA Award, is, however, a ray of hope.

“I think we’re really focused on celebratin­g the victories. To be longlisted for the Oscars is a huge honour and now we are nominated for a BAFTA. I think we’ve gone further than all of our expectatio­ns,” Sasha tells us, adding that the news “still hasn’t sunk in”.

Sasha’s first tryst with Kamali, who belongs to a small fishing village, was when she saw a picture of her shared by American profession­al skateboard­er Jamie Thomas, who gave Kamali a skateboard­ing lesson when she was six years old. She recalls, “I saw a picture of a little girl with bare feet skating down a ramp, while researchin­g for a music video about female skateboard­ers in India. When I spoke to her mother and heard their story, I knew I had to find a way to come back to India and share their story.”

The question of whether the story was worth telling never cropped up in her mind. “Kamali symbolises so much of what the world could be,” says Sasha, for whom skateboard­ing holds a deep, metaphoric­al significan­ce.

She adds, “To get good at skateboard­ing, you have to fall down, and pick yourself up again. You get good at tumbling, at realising failure is an inevitable path in life, that it doesn’t mean the end but a chance to improve. It seems like a great metaphor for life.”

Sasha also hopes to see Kamali as a feature film in Bollywood. She also reveals there are efforts being put in to build a bigger skatepark in Kamali’s village so that more girls can learn to skateboard.

 ??  ?? Sasha Rainbow filmed her documentar­y (inset) Kamali, in Tamil Nadu’s coastal town of Mahabalipu­ram
Sasha Rainbow filmed her documentar­y (inset) Kamali, in Tamil Nadu’s coastal town of Mahabalipu­ram
 ?? PHOTO: INSTAGRAM/JAMIETHOMA­S ??
PHOTO: INSTAGRAM/JAMIETHOMA­S

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