India: Film Southasia Festival of Documentaries wrapped up on Sunday, awarding the Ram Bahadur Trophy for the Best film to ‘6-A Akash Ganga’, directed by Nirmal Chander Dhandriyal.
The three-member jury spoke
highly of the film, saying it is a tribute to the enigmatic Hindustani
classical musician Annapurna Devi. The film combines archival footage,
interviews, and good performances.
The Jury Award was split
between Subina Shrestha's ‘Devi’ and Prateek Shekhar's ‘Chardi Kala—An Ode to
Resilience’.
This year, Film Southasia
also honoured filmmaker Anand Patwardhan with the ‘Documentary Stalwart Award’,
honouring his decades of productions focused “on social justice, humanity and
memory”.
The Best Student Film Award
went to ‘Hello Guyzz!’ by Samiksha Mathur. The Tareque Masud Best Debut Film
Award was awarded to ‘Siege in the Air’ by Muntaha Amin. The Best Film on
Depiction of the Climate Crisis, sponsored by ICIMOD, went to ‘A Flaming
Forest’ by Salman Javeed, Vivek Singh Sangwan and Satya Ambasta.
This year’s biennial
Southasian film festival featured forty-seven films from 9 countries screened
over 4 days. With the theme ‘Documentary in Anthropocene’, the festival focused
on the alarming ecological deterioration of the planet, including in Southasia,
while presenting many documentaries that touched on South Asian lives across
boundaries.
The festival also hosted
workshops and discussions, starting with a directing workshop with chief guest
Kabir Khan. ‘Kathaharu’ and the ‘WOW Festival’ conducted masterclasses with
Jane Mote, The Whickers, UK, and film editor Shweta Venkat, in collaboration
with Film Southasia. Other discussions were held on the themes ‘Understanding
the Anthropocene’, ‘The Evolution of the Nepali Documentary’ and ‘The Sudden
Runaway Success of Nepali Cinema’.
In their closing remarks, the
jury, consisting of Farjad Nabi (Lahore), Anitha Pottumkulam (Chennai), and
Kiran Krishna Shrestha (Kathmandu), highlighted the importance and urgency of
the theme related to human-induced deterioration of the environment, “This
year’s theme—Anthropocene—is not just timely but essential. It is a stark
reminder that what we share cannot be restrained by borders.”
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