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Surprises in the package: Chennai Int'l film festival

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  • Surprises in the package: Chennai Int'l film festival

    SURPRISES IN THE PACKAGE

    The Hindu, India
    December 18, 2004

    THE CHENNAI International Film Festival (on till December 27),
    organised by the Indo Cine Appreciation Foundation, has expanded this
    year to screen five films a day at Anand and Little Anand Theatres,
    and four films at the Film Chamber of Commerce.

    Anand is the place to be on December 18 where award winning
    Armenian-born, Canada-bred Atom Egoyan's "Ararat" (2004) is being
    screened. The film probes into tragedies of living families and
    distant history. Raffi's cans of films are relentlessly examined by
    about-to-retire customs officer David, struggling with his own
    adjustment problems with gay son's lifestyle. The interrogation
    becomes a quest for identity through deceit, denial and repression.

    The day ends with a Brazilian romp in "Celeste and Estrela" (2003)
    where Paulo Estrela narrated a hilarious story of falling in love
    with film maker Celeste who is passionate about making a
    gut-wrenching film about her motherland. Finding funds is an arduous
    struggle. We flit in and out of corporate houses, studios, script
    writing classes, location shoots, and into the dreams of Celeste and
    Estrela. Betse de Paula's film foams with farce and irony, turning an
    amused but sympathetic eye on men and women with and without
    missions.

    A wistful note

    Known more for his kooky grotequerie, Giuseppe Pupi Avati strikes a
    wistful note in "The Heart is Everywhere" (Italy, 2003). A
    nondescript teacher's son is urged by cranky father to find a wife,
    stumbles into a home for the blind and meets the stunning woman,
    robbed of her eyes in an accident. Silvio Soldini's "Agata and the
    Storm" trickles into a woman's craze for younger men and her
    lost-and-found brother's infidelities.

    Karen Shakhnazarov's "The Rider Named Death" (Russia) shows Moscow at
    the dawn of the 20th Century. This is the acclaimed depiction of the
    plot to assassinate a Grand Duke in his home and at the Bolshoi
    theatre.

    A sweet-sad tale

    The CIFF also brings "Shwaas" (Marathi, Sandeep Sawant), India's
    entry for the Oscars on December 19. This debut film is a sweet-sad
    tale of a grandfather trying to do his best for the grandchild with
    retinoblastoma, who must lose both his eyes to survive. The film had
    a commercial success in Maharashtra before winning the National Award
    for Best Film. The day also brings "Nizhalkuthu" (Film Chamber
    Theatre), part of the festival's retrospective on one of India's best
    film makers. Adoor Gopalakrishnan's narrative resounds with the
    echoes of a parable. We watch the village hangman at home,
    interacting with family and community, until the ominous call comes
    for him to discharge his duty. The son has to shoulder the job now.
    The eerie count down begins...

    Catch up with "Goodbye Lenin" if you haven't seen it already. A young
    man struggles to save his politically active mother from the shock of
    learning that her world has crumbled. (She goes into a coma in
    Communist East Germany and wakes up in a capitalist nation). Visually
    thrilling moments include the floating of Lenin's figure above and
    across the street, pointing a grim finger at pedestrians below.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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