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sur
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries
Beyond Borders - With Shubha Mudgal And Tina SaniWritten by Raza Rumi · September 03, 2008 ·Originally posted at RazaRumi.com. Days after the recent skirmishes at the Line of Control, when the composite dialogue between India and Pakistan was threatened, an alternative reconciliation was underway in Lahore. Music became the metaphor of shared ground between the two countries, challenging divides between them that can become violent.
Lahore hosted the legendary vocalist Shubha Mudgal for a few days. The crusade launched by Beyond Borders Television, a production house and sister company of The Friday Times and Good Times, is a unique development in Pakistan’s media world. It is Beyond Borders’ mission statement to produce programming for regional channels that promotes understanding between peoples. Undaunted by visa restrictions and overcoming official barriers, Beyond Borders organised Mudgal’s visit to Lahore to record a tripartite discussion between Mudgal, Tina Sani and Jugnu Mohsin, the compere.
The night before the recording, there was a get-together at the home of Jugnu Mohsin and Najam Sethi. It was a typical July evening, marked by the promising stillness of the monsoon. The fragrance of tuberoses, motia and lillies had made the atmosphere surreal and when the power breakdown happened, and candles were lit, it was like a slice out of some previous age. This was also the day of my homecoming: I had returned to Lahore after a year. I recalled a fleeting meeting with Mudgal in Delhi that had left an indelible impression of her unassuming and cheerful personality. The possibility of meeting Mudgal again on the day the exile returned to his country was the best of surprises. In the bargain, spending time with Tina Sani was a great bonus. Khalid Ahmed, executive director of Beyond Borders and a man who has won his spurs both as a theatre artist, director and screen actor, was in Lahore from Karachi to oversee the recording. When I entered Jugnu Mohsin’s living room, he was sitting there with his full head of silver hair all askance as in the famous Einstein look. There was also a sprinkling of Lahore’s literati and intelligentsia, the proliferation of which has lagged behind annual population growth rates. One of the tragedies of Lahore since the time of General Zia ul Haq has been the inwardness of the public intellect and its retreat into private spaces, that is until the 2007 lawyers’ movement that has hopefully changed the contours of public life for time to come. The varied guest list was eclectic: Pakistan’s premier historian, Ayesha Jalal; the incisive writer Ahmed Rashid; and the famous British journalist Christina Lamb were present. Lamb, with her long association with Pakistan was as dismayed as the rest of us with the rise and rise of extremism in the once peaceful land of the Indus, at how those taking the name of Allah had decided to appoint themselves His representatives and had reached the precincts of Peshawar. These are bizarre times, full of cacophonous constructions of discourses, jihads and nationalisms. Ghazala Rahman and Nuscie and Jeelo Jamil joined the gathering later, to be followed by the dynamic Principal of the National College of Arts, Naazish Ataullah. Also present were the exuberant young Mira Sethi and her friend Hira Nabi; and thus the reception of Shubha Mudgal was not restricted to the fast-fossilizing intelligentsia of the older generations. The overdose of camera flashes amid the dim lighting indicated that Mudgal had arrived. Flanked by Tina Sani and accompanied by a music devotee from Karachi, Dr Ghazala Aziz, Shubhaji made a graceful entrance. Dressed in an understated sari, she sported a mangal sutara as her only piece of jewelry, a stark contrast to the ostentatious display popular on this side of the border. Smiling effusively and doing her namastes and handshakes with a personal touch, here was a legend of our times, a voice that is already in conversation with immortality. Shubha Mudgal is a diva of Hindustani classical music and its myriad genres such as Khayal, Thumri, and Dadra among others. Of late she has also espoused modernity and dabbled in popular Indian pop music; this has not pleased all the puritans of music but has provided the youth of the Subcontinent with access to her majestic voice. Shubha Mudgal was born in 1959 in Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh. Her parents, professors of English literature, were ensconced deeply in the classical Hindustani music tradition as well as in Kathak. Mudgal was made to learn Kathak initially, though later she devoted herself to learning classical music. It was her first guru, Pandit Ram Ashreya Jha in Allahabad, who chiseled her talent and instilled rigour and patience into Mudgal. Later she also learnt with the maestros Pandit Vinaya Chandra Maudgalya and Pandit Vasant Thakar in Delhi, Pandit Jitendra Abhisheki, Naina Devi, and Pundit Kumar Gandharva. Thus she has had the best musical training and developed her unique style perfecting various musical forms. Mudgal recounted these stages of her training when she addressed her Lahori admirers, who listened to her with respect and a fondness that is usually expressed for long lost friends. In Lahore, Mudgal appeared comfortably at home. Perhaps this is because of the Delhi mood that Lahore shares, for reasons of history and a shared culture that refuses to dissipate despite the partition of 1947. The home-cooked dinner, sensitive to Mudgal’s vegetarianism, was a chance for a breather before this little gathering picked up. Tina Sani is the other star who attracted the attention of the guests at the mehfil. Tina’s is also an unassuming persona, charming in manner; her large, intelligent eyes support her conversation. Within minutes, the dining room was converted into a small arena of interaction, of spontaneous musical renditions and of fascinating discussions. Some were seated on sofa chairs while others sat on the floor continuing the exchange on India, Pakistan, music and all that is common to the two countries. Indeed, Pakistanis and Indians can be most gracious as hosts and guests, and the camaraderie expressed could not be ignored by the visitors from the West, Christina Lamb and her colleague Justin. Mugdal was requested by Khalid Ahmed to sing; and this began an endless series of lilting melodies, a collage of the best of her thumris and geets including the famous line, “laga chunri mein daagh,” from the film with the same title. She sang from her soul and left everyone spellbound. Tina Sani sang her hallmark Faiz’s poem “Bahaar ayee (spring arrives), but her most captivating rendition was a wistful ghazal by Bahadur Shah Zafar where he laments the beloved streets and forgotten faces of pre-1857 Delhi. Sani was superb as she sang this, and the reaction she elicited had everything to do with the precariousness of genteel life in today’s Pakistan. And then she sang “Bahaar aye” which lifted everyone’s spirits. Hope, as they say, sprang eternal. Conversation then veered towards the modernist interpretation of Faiz’s poetry by Tina Sani as she brought a new sensibility to her renditions with the outstanding compositions of Arshad Mahmood. Sani recalled how she had never known Faiz as a person but her interaction with him had started through his poetry and her own readings of the great poet. I asked Shubha Mudgal to sing a few lines from the Sufi ghazals that she had rendered at the famous Jashn-i-Khusrau concerts in Delhi. The fulsome nature of Mudgal’s voice is well suited to the soulfulness of Sufi poetry. We were told how Mudgal had been taught by her Guruji to consider music and devotion inseparable realities. Small wonder that she turned to mystical compositions across religious divides. Shubha Mudgal has over time proven her versatility and eagerness to experiment. This is why Sufi chants have relevance for her. In fact the roots of Hindustani classical music are located in the shrines of India, especially in the bold new phase initiated by Amir Khausrau and his patronage of Qawwali. The melodies and innovations of Amir Khusrau were to shape the future of classical music, especially the ascendancy of the Khayal style in the Mughal era.
Mudgal had sung Ghoom tana with Salman Ahmed of Junoon; the central motif of the spinning wheel represents divine motion. Her solo album The Awakening also contains a few Sufi melodies, testifying to Mudgal’s belief that there is an intrinsic link between all forms of music. Ali Moray Angana and Kar Sajda are therefore melodies that are not only relevant to Muslims and their belief systems but central to the ethos of Hindustani classical music as well. This was a splendid evening that became more memorable when Jugnu Mohsin spoke of her own adulation for Farida Khanum and all the stories of her personal musical evolution. Naazish Ataullah also shared her childhood memories of the centrality of music in her daily life, narrating tales of eccentric Ustads; of migrant relatives from India who came with nothing except their highly developed musical tastes and talents; and of how an age intertwined with music and musical training crumbled after 1947. But music, the great uniter, is eternal. It has acquired newer dimensions and forms; though this centuries old classical music requires patronage as well as a renewed interest from all walks of life. This is why Beyond Borders has undertaken the momentous task of bridging divides, reclaiming shared heritages, and contributing to the transformation of the Subcontinent into a region where musical notes may eventually subdue martial tunes.
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#1 17 Sep 2008 01:06
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Sponsor

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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries
Breaking Boundaries
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#2 17 Sep 2008 01:10
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries
Madhusree Chatterjee , Indo-Asian News Service New Delhi, September 24, 2008 For centuries, musical legacies have crossed geographical boundaries, says world music guru Laurent Aubert, citing how Hindustani classical got its Persian influence and how the Beatles opened the window to Indian notes. "Countries like India do not need technological giants like Japan and the US to master technologies. Expertise is available in India too - though I personally feel that technology has closed the door on musical subtlety and purity of ambience," said Aubert. Aubert, curator of the Geneva Ethnographic Museum and the director of the Ateliers d'ethnomusicologie, says global migration has changed the tenor of music irrevocably.The Ateliers d'ethnomusicologie is an institute dedicated to the dissemination of world music. "Hindustani classical has been influenced by Persian music since the 16th century after the Mughals arrived from Persia," Aubert told IANS in Delhi. The advent of Islamic rule over northern India caused musicians to seek patronage in the courts of new rulers. Most of them, of foreign origin, had strong cultural and religious ties outside India. Several centuries of interaction with the ruling gentry from Persia caused Hindustani music to absorb influences from the Islamic world, primarily greater Persia. It gave birth to genres like kheyal, ghazal and thumri - and smaller offshoots like dhrupad, dhammar and tarana, the professor said. Similarly, American music also underwent a prolonged period of assimilation from the 16th to the 19th century when slaves from Africa were brought to the new land to work in the tobacco and cotton plantations. "Initially, their cultures were banned. But gradually, the slaves began to play their music in secluded pockets and created new music. It was a fusion of their African remembrance with the instruments, sounds and influences of people they met," he said. The consequence was an explosion of new genres that like the blues and jazz emerged in the US, reggae in Jamaica, Salsa in Cuba and Puerto Rico while Samba captured the popular fancy in Brazil, Aubert said. In the last decade, the cross-cultural journey of music was felt in Britain when Bhangra travelled to Asian-Punjabi homes in Britain... Aubert, who has authored a book A Music of the Other: New Challenges for Ethnomusicology in a Global Age, was in the capital to address students of sociology and musicology at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) at the behest of the Swiss Arts Council. "We are surrounded by new musical encounters today as never before and the experience of music from elsewhere is progressively affecting all arenas of human conscience," said Aubert, who is also secretary general of the International Archives of Folk Music. However, migration music, felt Aubert, had a certain conservatism because of the memories involved. "One such example is the music of Ziyodulloh Shahidi of Afghanistan, the founder of modern Tajik music. In the 1960s and 70s, Shahidi taught his sons the music of his youth which he learnt as a student at the conservatory of Moscow in the 1940s," Aubert said. At the seminary, Shahidi embarked on a synthesis of Russian, Caucasian and Central Asian musical traditions - inspired by the movements of people across Asia following political change. In the last decade, the cross-cultural journey of music was felt in Britain when Bhangra travelled to Asian-Punjabi homes in Britain with the exodus of Punjabi youth to the country from India in search of better livelihoods. "The trend saw new forms of Bhangra like the Bhangra pop take the musical centrestage," he said. Migration, said Aubert, brought people, music and technology together. "I am seeing more technology in music these days and better distribution through the web which was not there before. "Countries like India do not need technological giants like Japan and the US to master technologies. Expertise is available in India too - though I personally feel that technology has closed the door on musical subtlety and purity of ambience," said Aubert, a lover of Hindustani classical music and Beatles. "Music has also developed links with identity, which has a lot to do with politics. It is either fundamentalist or open minded." Beatles set a fine example of migration music in the 1960s when they espoused the cause of freedom, sexual liberation and opened the window to India through their association with Pandit Ravi Shankar and the late transcendental meditation guru Mahesh Yogi. Aubert will present a paper on Alan Danielou, a music maestro who carried Rabindra Sangeet to Europe and was a close confidant of Rabindranath Tagore.
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#3 27 Sep 2008 00:54
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries
Yeh Dil Aap Ka Huwa
Yeh Dil Aap Ka Huwa is one of Pakistan's most ambitious film projects to date.
Director Javaid Sheikh's big budget love story features an all-star cast, headed by heartthrobs Mommar Rana and Sana. It also borrows talent from its Bollywood neighbours, with Saroj Khan handling choreography and singers such as Kumar Sanu, Sonu Nigam and Kavita Krishnamuthy lending their vocals on the soundtracks.
Much has been said about the Lollywood industry and its current output of films. But renowned Pakistani actor/director Javaid SheikhÕs much anticipated release of Yeh Dil Aap Ka Huwa, is set to prove that the industry has much to offer. Cinema Bollywood is bringing this exclusive blockbuster to the norwegian cinema and would be having two shows at Soria Moria on Saturday 15. february.
The movie was shot entirely on locations in Spain and Switzerland and is centered around two Pakistani families living in Spain. It is a love triangle with all the twists and turns that keeps your hearts beating fast.
The cast includes superstars, Sana, Moammar Rana, Salim Sheikh, Babar Ali, Veena Malik, and Jawed Sheikh himself, playing the elder brother of one of the young men involved in a romantic triangle.
The film has had huge success in Pakistan & United Kingdom. Cinema Bollywood is presenting the Lollywood blockbuster in Oslo, along with the stars present at Soria Moria on the 15 th of february.
Director: Javaid Sheikh Producer: Akbar Khan Starring: Mommar Rana, Sana, Saleem Sheikh, Veena Malik, Babar Ali and Javaid Sheikh Music: Amjad Bobby Singers: Kumar Sanu, Sonu Nigam, Kavita Krishnamuthy, Rahim Shah and Shiri Length: 185 minutes Distributor: Kay Express International Ltd.
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#4 09 Oct 2008 09:09
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries
Pakistani singers leave behind a message of love in Nainital By Vipul Goel, Nainital, Oct.24 : A visiting group of Pakistani singers enthralled music lovers in Nainital with the melody of their soulful songs during the annual autumn festival. The Pakistani singers won hundreds of hearts with their renditions, which strengthened the general belief that music was a universal language and it transcends geographical boundaries.
The singers demonstrated that music could lay a firm foundation of Indo-Pak friendship.
"It's very beautiful. The love and the affection that we have got and the enthusiasm that we have noticed in the people here, makes us feel that there is no difference whether we are in Pakistan or India. The message is that there is no difference between India and Pakistan. There is brotherly feeling in the people of both the countries for one another," said Nayla Jahan, a Pakistani singer.
Habib Ali, a popular singer from Pakistan, said during the festival that the music is the voice of soul. It spreads the message of love.
"Music is love...If a person is tensed and he listens to music, he feels happy. So music is a medium, which spreads feelings of love everywhere...I want that we will continue coming to India to perform and good artistes from India will come to perform in Pakistan. We wish that Allahtallah would retain the feeling of love in the people of both the countries. There will be no tussle between both " said Habib Ali, the Pakistani singer.
Farha, another Pakistani artiste, opined that both India and Pakistan were not short of artistes. And, both countries have tradition of music, be it vocal or instrumental, or performing arts.
"Both Pakistan and India are rich in musical heritage. Both the countries have a number of artistes and singers. We are not two countries; India and Pakistan are one. There is a feeling of brotherhood in the people of both the countries. The people in both the countries have feelings of love for each other. When Indians come to Pakistan, we give them love and honour. In the same way, when we come here to India we receive lot of love from the people here," said Farha Lal, another Pakistani singer.
The singers, visiting Nainital for the first time, said that the place is one of God's most beautiful creations. They expressed a desire to return here again and again.
Deriving its name from the Naini Lake around which the town is located, Nainital is a major tourist destination in the Kumaon Himalayan region of Uttarakhand State.
The five-day autumn festival started concluded on Wednesday (October 22).
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#5 29 Nov 2008 23:41
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sur
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 10619
Location: Virginia
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries

Music without boundaries
Andhra Pradesh - Hyderabad Staff Reporter Date:01/05/2008 | Pakistani singer Najam Sheraz in city |
— Photos: Mohd. Yousuf
Soul stirring: Pakistani singer Najam Sheraz on Wednesday. Hyderabad: His music comes from the soul and his voice is a rage back home in Pakistan. Meet Najam Sheraz, one of Pakistan’s most sought after musicians. The singer from Multan was in Hyderabad to inaugurate ‘Irani Chai’, a restaurant at Banjara Hills on Wednesday. Najam’s musical journey started right from 1987 with a band called Brother Rhythm. But recognition came to him when his song ‘Menu Tere Naal’ was claimed to be rewritten as ‘Bheege Hont Tere’ in the Bollywood flick, ‘Murder’. “I got a call from a friend in Colombo saying that the song was being aired. I heard the song and contacted Mahesh Bhatt, the director of the movie and the issue has been resolved,” says the singer. “I was given due credit for the song but I felt bad when I was not nominated for the music awards,” he adds. Mr. Najam cut a new album, ‘Najam- The Album’, which consists of 11 numbers. “The album is soulful. The lyrics talk about life and issues related to women, which need to be addressed immediately,” says the singer, who recorded the Pakistani national anthem two years ago. Blues, folk, jazz and eastern classical are some of the genres that inspires Mr. Najam. The singer is happy that most Pakistani singers like Atif Aslam and bands like Junoon and Strings have managed to make it big in India. “It’s very difficult to break into the Indian music industry and consistently churn out hit numbers like some of the Pakistani singers have done in the past,” he signs off.
____________ "I am a dreamer,I collect all the smiles from My yesterday,
Neatly pack them into words and hide them in my heart,
I call them "MEMORIES" Music has no boundary.
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#6 29 Nov 2008 23:50
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Music
Moderator

Joined: November 2006
Posts: 3966
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries
Pakistani singers leave behind a message of love in Nainital By Vipul Goel, Nainital, Oct.24 : A visiting group of Pakistani singers enthralled music lovers in Nainital with the melody of their soulful songs during the annual autumn festival.
The Pakistani singers won hundreds of hearts with their renditions, which strengthened the general belief that music was a universal language and it transcends geographical boundaries.
The singers demonstrated that music could lay a firm foundation of Indo-Pak frienship.
It's very beautiful. The love and the affection that we have got and the enthusiasm that we have noticed in the people here, makes us feel that there is no difference whether we are in Pakistan or India. The message is that there is no difference between India and Pakistan. There is brotherly feeling in the people of both the countries for one another," said Nayla Jahan, a Pakistani singer.
Habib Ali, a popular singer from Pakistan, said during the festival that the music is the voice of soul. It spreads the message of love.
"Music is love...If a person is tensed and he listen to music, he feels happy. So music is a medium, which spreads feelings of love everywhere...I want that we will continue coming to India to perform and good artistes from India will come to perform in Pakistan. We wish that Allahtallah would retain the feeling of love in the people of both the countries. There will be no tussle between both " said Habib Ali, the Pakistani singer.
Farha, another Pakistani artiste, opined that both India and Pakistan were not short of artistes. And, both countries have tradition of music, be it vocal or instrumental, or performing arts.
"Both Pakistan and India are rich in musical heritage. Both the countries have a number of artistes and singers. We are not two countries; India and Pakistan are one. There is a feeling of brotherhood in the people of both the countries. The people in both the countries have feelings of love for each other. When Indians come to Pakistan, we give them love and honour. In the same way, when we come here to India we receive lot of love from the people here," said Farha Lal, another Pakistani singer.
The singers, visiting Nainital for the first time, said that the place is one of God's most beautiful creations. They expressed a desire to return here again and again.
Deriving its name from the Naini Lake around which the town is located, Nainital is a major tourist destination in the Kumaon Himalayan region of Uttarakhand State.
The five-day autumn festival started concluded on Wednesday (October 22).
--- ANI >
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
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#7 26 Apr 2012 07:49
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Music
Moderator

Joined: November 2006
Posts: 3966
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 Re: Breaking Boundaries
Many nominations for Indian films The HinduActress Charlotte Rampling (centre), with Wilfrid Wong ,Chairman of Hongkong International Film Festival Society (left),and Angelina Maccarone ,Director of 'The Look'. Photo: Lekha J Shankar At the recently held Hong Kong Film Festival, the Indians made their presence felt in the Asia Screen Awards section. Lekha J Shankar The Hong Kong International Film Festival (HKIFF) is an arresting mixture of high glamour, strong cinema, impressive funding programmes and important business propositions. For a first-timer, it's daunting to traverse through its various sections such as the Hong Kong Film and Television Mart, the HAF or Hong Kong Film Financing Forum, the Asia Screen Awards, and finally, the film festival itself. All the four parts of the festival come under the umbrella of the mega Hong Kong Expo, which organises a huge range of trade events throughout the year. The Hong Kong Film and Television Mart, organised by the Hong Kong Development Council, is the biggest in Asia. This year, it boasted of a record 648 exhibitors from 30 countries, including a large section devoted to Animation and Digital entertainment. China had about a 1,000 participants, and most of the exhibitors present admitted that the huge Chinese market was their target. After all the box office revenue in the country exploded by 30 per cent last year! The Indian booth had top companies such as NFDC and Shemaroo Entertainment among others. The Punjab tale
The HAF , celebrating it's 10th year, had a record number of 32 projects, including documentaries for the first time. From India it was Gurvinder Singh with his new project, ‘The Fourth Direction,' a story set in the turbulent Punjab of the 1980s, when they agitated for a separate State. Singh's last film, ‘Alms for a Blind Horse' went to several festivals, including Venice. Following the four-day Film Mart, came the glittering Asian Film Awards event, which was attended by the ‘Who's Who' of the Hong Kong film industry. The maximum awards were won by Iran's Oscar-winning film ‘Separation,' whose lead actress Leila Hattami confessed that she was surprised by the global success of the film. Another film that won five top awards, was the Hong Kong drama, ‘A Simple Life.' It is a small, stark movie that has taken the industry by storm, at a time when big budget films reign supreme. Its Director, Ann Hui, Hong Kong's best-known female filmmaker, was presented the Lifetime Achievement Award. “The award won't stop me from making more films,” laughed the director, who, in spite of constant fund-problems, has already started working on her next movie. Among the Indian films, Zoya Akthar's ‘Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara' got three nominations (Best Film, Editing, Production Design), Vidya Balan for Best Actress (‘The Dirty Picture'), A.R. Rahman for Best Composer (‘Rockstar'), ‘RA One' for Best Visual Effects. But none of them bagged an award. The Director in Focus, was renowned filmmaker Peter Chan. Twelve of his films were screened at the festival. In the course of an interview at his swanky office, Chan, who served on the Jury of International Film Festival of India (IFFI) in 2008, observed that current film trends in Hong Kong had totally changed and were dictated by the huge market from mainland China. He said he planned to shoot his next film in China, on a contemporary theme. The Opening film, ‘Love in a Buff' by popular Hong Kong director Ho Cheun Pang. who has now shifted base to Beijing, was a sell-out and was thoroughly enjoyed by the audience. A movie that excited cinema lovers , was ‘The Look'. It was an arresting documentary on enigmatic actress Charlotte Rampling, seen through the eyes of her friends and colleagues, which created waves at Cannes last year. Rampling attended the event with Paris Festival director Aude Hesbert, who plans to do a focus on Hong Kong Cinema, at her festival this year. Rampling told this writer that she had not seen many Indian films, nor been to India, but would certainly like to do so. Keannu Reeves was the other Hollywood actor who attended the festival. He conducted a Master Class, to a sell-out audience of film fans. More than 250 films were screened and this writer caught many interesting ones in the DVD room, due to difficulty of access in the main halls. This was a negative point as tickets were not ‘reserved' for foreign guests as is the norm, but depended totally on availability and sale of tickets. This reinforced the ‘business' side of the event. Li Cheuk-To, artistic director of the festival, informed that with its modest budget of 20 million HK dollars, the ticket-sales definitely mattered. However, he was proud of their strong and unique choice of films this year, which included a section on ‘restored' classics, four Retros of great filmmakers, not to forget a special section on the little-known Hong Kong ‘Amoy' cinema, as well as the old and popular Wong Fei-Hung film series. “We are also proud of the free screenings of our Joint University programme of films,” he stated. ‘Delhi Belly' was the only film from India and he hoped there would be more next year. The festival's Executive Director Roger Garcia was proud of the exclusive screening of the Mark Cousins' 5-part epic ‘The Story of Film - an Odyssey.' All in all, the Hong Kong film festival had plenty going for it. One could not do as much as one wanted, at this mega festival, but one got a vivid taste of it's multi-layered character
____________ Music forms a part of me again It gives Shape to my faceless Expressions...To my Thoughts. {Alochana}
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#8 26 Apr 2012 07:49
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