In The News

null
Day 5 at 15th Mumbai Film Festival

Day 5 at 15th Mumbai Film Festival

by The Daily Eye Team October 21 2013, 11:41 pm Estimated Reading Time: 2 mins, 26 secs

There was no reduction in excitement levels of cinephiles as Day 5 of the 15th Mumbai Film Festival presented by Reliance Entertainment and organized by the Mumbai Academy of Moving Images (MAMI) kicked off.

The Popular Indian Film screened was director V.K.Prakash’s Natholi Oru Cheriya Meen Alla. The Malayalam romantic comedy, starring Fahad Fazil, Kamalinee Mukherjee and Rima Kallingal has been praised for its unconventional wackiness and humour. The audience attending this film seemed to agree.

Films from the Kabul Fresh 2013 category, Eye witness, Driving Test, A Time Called Oldness and End of Love, Killer Toon directed by Yong-gyun Kim, Xavier Dolan’s Tom at the Farm, Wild Berries directed by Batul Mukhtiar, Leos Carax’s Bad Blood, Heli directed by Amat Escalante as well as the second screening of Good Morning Karachi directed by Sabiha Sumar, World premiere if Mastram by Akhilesh Jaiswal, Powerless by Deepti Kakkar and Fahad Mustafa were the attractions on Day 5 of the 15th Mumbai Film Festival.

A special screening of Marathi film Jogwa was organized in homage to director Rajeev Patil. Patil, who passed away last month had directed award winning films such as Blind Game, Athara Bhuja Saptashrungi Mata, Sanai Choughade, and Pangira. Jogwa went on to win the National Film Award.

The afternoon session witnessed an intense discussion on ‘The portrayal of Women in Cinema’ with Shobhaa De, Nandita Das, Sriram Raghvan and Sudhir Mishra. The open forum panel discussion was moderated by Mayank Shekhar and addressed one of the most relevant issues of modern times.

“In popular cinema women are portrayed in a regressive way. A good woman in our cinema is someone who represses her desire and if she goes and does she what she wants, then she is a slut,” director and screenwriter Mr. Sudhir Mishra said.

Writer and novelist Shobhaa De criticized the portrayal of women in Indian cinema, “The virtuous Indian woman has not changed in Indian cinema. Either she learns from her mistake or is taught by the society her lesson. Choices have always been denied to women in our cinema.”

Nandita Das sees society’s need for fair skinned women simply unreasonable. “There are not really any dark skinned females in our industry. Many who were dark are now fair and sell fairness creams!”Bottom of Form

Not even the Monday blues could keep the audience away. Celebrities spotted on Day 5 included Sudhir Mishra, Nandita Das, Shobhaa De, Ratna Pathak Shah, Amol Palekar,  Vijay Kadam amongst others.

Tomorrow promises to be particularly engaging as Oscar Academy member Robert Neuman continues his master class on 3D.

The event was drawn to a close with thanks to the main sponsors: Reliance Entertainment and special thanks to the Government of Maharashtra, Venue Partner TajVivanta by Taj President, Liberty Cinemas, Cinemax , Metro Big Cinemas. Reliance Media Works and Real Image.




Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of thedailyeye.info. The writers are solely responsible for any claims arising out of the contents of this article.