Friday, March 9, 2018

IFFLA 2018

Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles
April 11-15, 2018 - Regal L.A. Live 14





Wednesday, April 11 at 7:30 pm - Opening Night Gala

IN THE SHADOWS - 117 min



Dipesh Jain’s impressive feature debut centers on Khuddoos (Manoj Bajpayee), a shopkeeper living in self-imposed isolation within the walled city of Old Delhi. In lieu of human interaction, Khuddoos monitors the people in his neighborhood via a series of hidden cameras he’s placed throughout the streets and alleys. Whether he fancies himself an amateur police officer or is a Peeping Tom is open to interpretation, but when Khuddoos hears the sounds of a young boy suffering abuse at the hands of his father – somewhere outside the view of Khuddoos’ cameras – he is spurred to take action.

Thursday, April 12 at 7:00 pm 

OMERTA - 96 min



Hansal Mehta returns to IFFLA with perhaps his most ambitious feature to date. Partnering once again with his muse, actor Rajkummar Rao, the two artists probe the life of British-born terrorist Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, a man believed to have, among other despicable acts, funded the events of 9/11. In order to sketch a portrait of Saeed, Mehta and Rao bring us uncomfortably close to the man, combining known biographical elements of Saeed’s life with reenactments of crimes Saeed has confessed to, or is generally believed to have committed – most notoriously, the kidnapping and murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002.

Thursday, April 12 at 7:15 pm

UP DOWN AND SIDEWAYS - 83 min



Directors Anushka Meenakshi and Iswar Srikumar took their camera to the farthest northeast corner of India to capture this ethnographic portrait of an indigenous community and their remarkable musical traditions. Villagers of Phek in the Nagaland region rely on rice cultivation as their primary means of subsistence. Together they form small teams called mülé, to work each other’s paddies year-round. As both men and women labor they sing lis, folk songs formally similar to the “call and response” style of African-American work music, but polyphonically more complex. The lyrics of love, friendship, strength and fatigue feel strikingly timeless and universal.

Thursday, April 12 at 9:15 pm

MERCURY - 109 min



Five long-time friends, all of whom are maimed as a result of their town’s mercury poisoning, come together for their high school reunion. But, a moment of mischief and misfortune during the after-party puts them on a one way road to hell.

Friday, April 13 at 7:00 pm - SHORTS PROGRAM 1

Friday, April 13 at 7:15 pm 

THE HUNGRY - 100 min



In this all-star adaptation of Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, the bard’s notoriously bloody tale of deceit and revenge is cleverly modernized by director Bornila Chatterjee and relocated to a sumptuous wedding celebration in Delhi. The approaching nuptials are meant to solidify a powerful union between the families of two business magnates – Tathagat (Naseeruddin Shah), the wealthy head of a corporate empire, will marry off his son to Tulsi (Tisca Chopra), the widow of his former partner. However, the sins of the father’s past have driven Tulsi to concoct a devious scheme for revenge, which threatens to set both families on an irreversible path to destruction.

Friday, April 13 at 9:30 pm

AJJI - 104 min



When 10-year-old Manda is brutally assaulted by Dhavle, a local politician’s violent and uncontrollable son, her family sees little hope for justice. Her parents – scraping by on meager earnings from technically illegal work – are scared into silence by a police force unwilling to hold the powerful accountable. Only Ajji, Manda’s aging grandmother, sees a path to vengeance. While Dhavle parades around town fearless of any reprisal, Ajji stealthily moves through dark alleys and butcher shops, methodically devising her plan for revenge.

Saturday, April 14 at 1:00 pm - SHORTS PROGRAM 2

Saturday, April 14 at 3:00 pm

LOVESICK - 74 min

After discovering the first cases of HIV in India in 1986, Dr. Suniti Solomon left a prestigious academic job to build her own clinic focusing on treating HIV/AIDS patients. Several decades and breakthroughs in treatment later, her clinic is one of the highest regarded in the country and her patients are living longer lives. While surviving, some of her patients are not thriving. Being Indian, they feel immense societal and personal pressure to marry, but simultaneously face a stigma of being HIV-positive. Now in the twilight of her impressive career, Dr. Solomon takes the next step in her treatment by creating a matchmaking service for those seeking marriage. Through the service we meet Manu and Karthik, two of her patients who want to share their lives with someone but are fearful they never will. Shot over eight years and told with compassion and care, filmmakers Ann S. Kim and Priya Giri Desai give us a surprising and hopeful story about the universal healing ability of companionship and love.

Saturday, April 14 at 4:45 pm

PRAKASAN


In this witty and sweet fish-out-of-water comedy, director Bash Mohammed illustrates the virtues of cinematic simplicity in a classic story told with empathy and skill. The outrageously endearing Dinesh Prabhakar plays the titular Prakasan, a young man lucky enough to be born into a paradisiacal forest brimming with fresh fruit where he can make love to his girlfriend in luminous natural pools. Yet Prakasan is dying to see the big city, so when he receives a job offer from a World Bank program, he happily leaves his idyllic home behind.

Saturday, April 14 at 6:45 pm

DARK WIND - 99 min



IFFLA regulars Sanjay Mishra (MASAAN, ANKHON DEKHI) and Ranvir Shorey (A DEATH IN THE GUNJ, TITLI) bring to life this sensitive yet pointed dramatization of climate change’s effects on a diverse cross-section of Indian society. In the Mahua region of Rajasthan, once known for flourishing farmlands, the ever-decreasing rainfall has left farmers without a crop to sell, and therefore with no money to repay their hefty bank loans. Hedu, the father of one such farmer, fears his son’s misfortune will lead him to drastic action. He pays a visit to a notorious debt collection officer, known as the “god of death” for his vicious tactics, looking to strike a bargain. But the agreement they reach might offer solutions for some, and total ruin for others.

Saturday, April 14 at 9:00 pm

ASK THE SEXPERT - 83 min



The most popular column in a daily newspaper in Mumbai is one people are hesitant to admit they read. With many states banning sex education in schools and a general taboo around any kind of public talk about sex, 93-year-old Dr. Mahinder Watsa’s column is a lifeline to millions. With humor and kindness, he addresses topics like masturbation, premature ejaculation, gender equality, and sexual pleasure in non-moralistic terms. In addition to the column, the need amongst the people for honest and factual discussion about sex leads him to answer hundreds of emails and even counsel couples and strangers who arrive at his home unannounced.

Saturday, April 14 at 9:15 pm

TAKE OFF - 132 min



Sameera (Parvathy), a nurse in Kerala, is determined to move to Iraq in order to make more money and pay off her suffocating student loans. Her husband and his family disapprove, leading to a divorce and his taking custody of their young son. Still unwavering in her decision, she agrees to a marriage with her work colleague Shaheed (Boban) and the two move to Tikrit, Iraq in 2014. Despite assurances from Indian and Iraqi officials that things are normal, the two are quickly involved in the daily violence from ISIS forces. Soon the city falls and Sameera is trapped, forcing her and Indian diplomats into a complex negotiation for the lives of herself, the other nurses and her husband. Parvathy gives a mesmerizing and layered performance of Sameera, an independent, fierce, yet vulnerable woman, that has won her many accolades including the Best Female Actor Award at the International Film Festival of India, the first ever for an Indian actor. First-time director’s Mahesh Narayanan’s TAKE OFF is both a compelling thriller and an exciting example of contemporary Malayalam cinema.

Sunday, April 15 at 12:00 pm - TRIBUTE TO SRIDEVI (1963-2018)

CHANDNI (1989) - 187 min



IFFLA is honored to present this special memorial tribute to the late Sridevi, courtesy of Yash Raj Films. CHANDNI is a glorious ode to one of the finest actors of her generation at the peak of her career, beloved for her prolific work in Hindi as well as South Indian cinema. Fans of the late Vinod Khanna will also relish his performance in this film with evergreen songs, unexpected pathos and unabashed melodrama. Nearly 30 years later, the film remains one of Yash Chopra’s finest, and enshrines Sridevi with a character that arguably most closely matches her vulnerable and graceful real life persona.

Sunday, April 15 at 3:30 pm

THE ASHRAM - 90 min



Ben Rekhi brings together a star-studded cast for a story of mystical intrigue in the Himalayas with a twisty plot and startling climax that is sure to provoke discussion. Following the trail of his missing ex-girlfriend, Jamie (Sam Keeley) discovers a remote monastery in the mountains founded by a guru with allegedly miraculous powers. As Jamie tries to pry secrets from the guru’s devoted acolytes (played by Kal Penn, Radhika Apte, and Oscar-winner Melissa Leo) he becomes more convinced that they know more about his lover’s disappearance than they’re telling him.

Sunday, April 15 at 7:00 pm - CLOSING NIGHT GALA


VILLAGE ROCKSTARS - 87 min




Dhunu, a free-spirited tomboy, lives with her widowed mother and older brother as they struggle to get by in their small village in Assam. One day, after seeing a band at a local event playing with Styrofoam “guitars”, she dreams of owning a real one of her own and becoming a rockstar. She saves money and forms a supporting band with the local boys, but her rockstar hopes seem impossible without magical thinking. After an epic rainfall destroys the local crops, Dhunu is caught between the fantasy life of youth and the harsh reality of adulthood. Having shot the film in her own home village of Chhaygaon, filmmaker Rima Das, who is the film’s director, writer, editor, director of photography, production designer, costume designer and casting director, shows the beauty of the landscape and people without hiding from the culture of conformity that threatens young girls. Premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival, VILLAGE ROCKSTARS has a soul and vision rare in Indian cinema today and marks Das as a major emerging filmmaker.

For more information, please visit: IFFLA2018

Friday, March 2, 2018

César Winners 2018

43rd César Winners

The 43rd César Awards ceremony took place tonight at Salle Pleyel in Paris. Penelope Cruz was the recipient for the honorary César. Manu Payet was the chairman of the ceremony. BPM (120 battements par minute) won 6 awards in total including Best Picture followed by Au Revoir Là-Haut with 5.



The following are the winners:

BEST FILM
BPM (120 battements par minute), director: Robin Campillo

BEST ACTOR
Swann Arlaud, Bloody Milk (Petit paysan)

BEST ACTRESS
Jeanne Balibar, Barbara

BEST DIRECTOR
Albert Dupontel, Au Revoir Là-Haut

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Antoine Reinartz, BPM

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Sara Giraudeau, Bloody Milk (Petit paysan)

BEST NEWCOMER, MALE
Nahuel Pérez Biscayart, BPM

BEST NEWCOMER, FEMALE
Camélia Jordana, Le Brio

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Robin Campillo, BPM

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Albert Dupontel & Pierre Lemaitre, Au Revoir Là-Haut

BEST DEBUT FEATURE
Bloody Milk (Petit paysan), director: Hubert Charuel

BEST FOREIGN FILM
Loveless, director: Andrey Zvyagintsev (Russia)

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Vincent Mathias, Au Revoir Là-Haut

BEST COSTUMES
Mimi Lempicka, Au Revoir Là-Haut

BEST SCORE
Arnaud Reotini, BPM

BEST EDITING
Robin Campillo, BPM

BEST SET DESIGN
Pierre Quefféléan, Au Revoir Là-Haut

BEST SOUND
Olivier Mauvezin, Nicolas Moreau, Stéphane Thiébaut, Barbara

BEST DOCUMENTARY
I Am Not Your Negro, director: Raoul Peck

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
Le Grand méchant renard et autres contes, directors: Benjamin Renner & Patrick Imbert

BEST SHORT FILM
Les Bigorneaux, director: Alice Vial

BEST ANIMATED SHORT
Pépé le morse, director: Lucrèce Andreae




For a complete list of nominated films, please visit:
http://cinemaniaquefilms.blogspot.com/2018/01/cesar-awards-nominations.html