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United by common feelings
WHAT is Asian cinema? Do films made in Asian nations as far apart
as Lebanon and Taiwan have any links at all? Can people, divided
by race, colour, language, religion, history, myth and creed,
have much in common? At Cinefan, New Delhi (August 26 - September
2), the Asian film quarterly Cinemaya's third annual Asian film
festival, this was a subject for thought and discussion.
Even the jury for the festival's competition section reflected
diversity. President Sumitra Peries, hoping to resume her
interrupted film career after her stint as Sri Lankan Ambassador
in France, has over 40 years experience in the field. She had
edited husband Lester James Peries' films until the 1970s besides
making her own features.
Actor and film-maker Nana Djorjadze, in a cloud of auburn curls,
was from remote Georgia, where film-making is a daunting task
(``In winter we have only a few hours' electricity''). But that
has not stopped her from winning the Golden Camera Award at
Cannes and an Oscar nomination.
Pouran Derakhshandeh was the first woman to become a film-maker
in Iran, and the first Iranian to make a feature film in
Hollywood (``Love Without Frontier'' the closing film of the
festival). She has made television documentaries on social issues
for 20 years. Her feature, ``Lost Time,'' was banned for some
years because its radical protagonist insists she is not a
``child producing factory''. She plans to continue the protest in
her next film about a divorced woman wanting to live her life
alone on her own terms.
India's actress-star Sharmila Tagore has been a consistent
achiever in art as well as middle-of-the-road and mainstream
productions. Who can forget her winsome innocence in Satyajit
Ray's ``Apur Sansar'' and ``Devi''? Or her enchantment in the
blockbuster ``Aradhana''?
Film critic and journalist Philip Cheah, director of the
Singapore international film festival, was the sole male
representative in this woman-dominated panel.
The jury members believed that without special fora like Cinefan,
the Asian film-maker could be swept out by the Hollywood-
Bollywood currents. They also stressed that despite its
dissimilarities, Asian cinema revealed commonalities in the way
Asians feel, think and express themselves through dialogue and
body language. While Tagore and Peries pointed out that family
values and relationships were ascendant in Asian cinema,
Djorjadze added that philosophically, historically and
psychologically, Asians were given to inward turning, ``We look
inside to find quietness, stillness. The West looks inside to
find it is crazy.''
Asian films had audiences across the continent waiting to be
tapped. But the mindset had to be created to savour the fare,
besides networking a distribution system. Co-productions could
promote interaction among the Asian nations.
The lone male member saw ambiguity as the hallmark of Asian
cinema. ``Compared to the West, Asia is more grey in its
metaphysics, in its response to everyday life,'' said Philip
Cheah. ``War and the dysfunction of the family unit are major
themes.'' Cheah and guest film-makers from other Asian nations
declared that Asian films mirrored the socio-political upheavals
caused by long term repression. Having run out of narrative
skills, the West has turned its attention to the Asian cinema of
today with its storehouse of stories and modes of telling them.
The awards reflected these perspectives. The Cinefan Award 2001
for Best Film went to ``This is My Moon'' (Sri Lanka) ``for its
stark depiction of the dehumanising forces of war and its numbing
consequences on the lives of the ordinary people.'' Director
Asoka Handagama described the film as his response to the
bloodshed in his country.
At the awards ceremony, he declared that he was proud to be
seated next to Adoor Gopalakrishnan whose films had inspired him
to become a film- maker.
Handagama begins with the rape of a Tamil woman by a Sinhalese
soldier when she inadvertently falls into his bunker. She follows
him when he deserts and returns home, an extra mouth in family
and village ravaged by extreme poverty. There is no employment
except in the army and death brings compensation which can buy a
``tractor''. As the man says fatalistically, ``When we shoot it
is not because of anger, when we don't shoot it is not because of
love.''
The strength of the film was in its evocation of terror and
desolation in war-torn daily life, its weakness was the studied
narrative- visual design which had few surprises. Serious
Malayalam cinema has done it all before - in deliberate pace,
style, visual patterning, sparse dialogue punctuated with pause
and silence.
The Netpac Award went to ``Demons'' (Mario O'Hara, Philippines)
for personifying violence through magic realism. The hair raising
end stressed that after a point, evil corrupts beyond redemption.
Ibrahim Kadir (``A Poet'', Indonesia) and Ellie Suriarty Omar
(``Spinning Top'', Malaysia) won awards for Best actor and
actress.
* * *
Throwing light on Asia
THE Cinefan festival of Asian films is the natural extension of
Cinemaya, the 13-year-old Asian film quarterly, which strives to
create an awareness of Asian cinema in the sub-continent.
Aruna Vasudev (editor, Cinemaya; director, Cinefan) explained
that the competition section (12 films) was introduced this year
to draw greater viewer and media attention to the festival, and
thereby to Asian endeavours in moviedom.
This year's choice, besides the Asian Panorama, Iranian package
and Indian comedy, brought Eurasian perspectives in the ``West
looks at the East'' segment, and in the Focus on Turkey.
Sponsorship by the Government and other corporate sources,
besides assistance from several foreign embassies, enabled the
committed Cinemaya team to expand Cinefan 2001 (55 films in three
venues).
Increasingly, such festivals ``which create audiences for good
cinema'' have become significant circuits for the less-dominant
streams. But Vasudev added that they were becoming prohibitively
expensive to conduct with hiked rates and control by commercial-
minded sales agents.
GOWRI RAMNARAYAN
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