Offbeat "India Now" Film Festival At MoMa
Festival Showcases A Range Of Indian Movies From Bollywood To Independent Cinema
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Filmmaker Mira Nair and author Salman Rushdie at a pre-event cocktail party on Sunday, April 22, 2007. (Michael Toolan)
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Rahul Dholakia, director of the opening night film, "Parzania," actress Nandita Das and Executive Director of the IAAC Aroon Shivdasani. (Michael Toolan)
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Rahul Dholakia, director of "Parzania," director of "The Namesake," Mira Nair, and actress Nandita Das (Michael Toolan)
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All the films have had recent releases in India and have been brought over after receiving critical acclaim from filmgoers in India. The films from Bollywood include "Omkara," an award-winning adaptation of Shakespeare's "Othello," and "Khosla ka Ghosla," a comedy about a middle class family duped by a land shark. Both films have English subtitles.
"Maati Maay" (A Grave-Keeper's Tale) is a Marathi film with English subtitles based on a short story, "Baayen" (Witch) is about a lower-caste children's grave-keeper who abandons her job to follow her maternal instincts only to be banished by the rest of the village. Nandita Das, the acclaimed Indian actress who played a lead role in two of Deepa Mehta's trilogy movies, "Fire" and "Earth," plays the protagonist in this film, too. "The Bong Connection" is about the Indian diaspora. It is a story of two young Indian men, one a musician from New York who moves to Kolkata, India, and the other an ambitious Bengali computer engineer to gets a job in Houston, Texas, according to a India Film Festival press release.
Aroon Shivdasani, executive director of the IAAC said in a statement, "We are very excited by this collaboration with the MoMA, as it marks recognition of a viable audience for Indian films by a major American museum."
Visit the Museum of Modern Art's Web site for more information on the event.
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