Saturday, August 28, 2010

SYDNEY - INDIAN, NEPALI & DIASPORIC LESBIAN AND GAY FILM FESTIVAL


Photo: You Can’t Curry Love
Reid Waterer
USA, 2009, 23 Min

Satrang: South Asian Queer Film Festival, Sydney

The second edition of Satrang: South Asian Queer Film Festival will take place at the University of Technology, Sydney, over two weekends in September (18, 19, 25 & 26).

The festival will kick off with the Australian premier of yet-to-be-released Bollywood movie Dunno Y … Na Jaane Kyun (being tagged as India’s answer to Brokeback Mountain), followed by a Q&A with the film’s leading stars, Kapil Sharma and Yuvraaj Parashar, who’ll be flying to Sydney all the way from Mumbai – Bollywood HQ in India – to be part of the festival.

“The film promises to break new ground by telling the story of a serious relationship between two Indian men,” informs festival director and Sydney-based television producer, Sadhana Jethanandani. “It comes on the heels of the Delhi High Court overturning a law criminalising homosexuality, so it’s quite relevant … and controversial as it’s not making a caricature of its protagonists, but capturing a change in the society,” she adds.

Satrang, the festival title, means “seven colours” in Hindi language and refers to the rainbow. It’s organised by Trikone Australasia, a not-for-profit social support group for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) community of South Asian discent in Australia.

“The name of the festival is also reflective of the many different experiences and stories of South Asian queer people, which are being projected on the big screen over four days of colour, celebration, hope and unity,” says Jethanandani.

Other major entries in the film festival include director Shamim Sarif’s The World Unseen and I Can’t Think Straight, director Sridhar Rangayan’s 68 Pages and director Nani Sarah Walker’s Other Nature.

In the short films category, some of the entries are director Sarav Chithambaram’s It’s My Life – A South Asian Queer Story In USA, director Manoj Pandey’s Struggle Within and director Faryal’s Pictures of Zain, a tale of a Pakistani woman who embarks on a journey of self discovery after the death of her gay son, confronting her prejudices and making amends with his grieving lover on the way.

As always, the festival is a reflection of queer life and movements in South Asian countries. “Nepal may be a small country, but the extent of changes that are taking place in that society, with regards to gay rights, is phenomenal. And it’s reflected in the number of films on those themes that are being made in Nepal, with three of them [two short films and one feature film] being part of this festival,” says Jethanandani.

For more information and booking details please go to:
http://www.trikone.org.au/film-festival.php

Monday, August 23, 2010

BOLLYWOOD DREAMING


Photo thanks to:
http://www.tandanya.com.au/ed10/message-sticks-2008-indigenous-film-festival/

I recently saw this cute little documentary about an Aboriginal African-American teenager – Jedda Rae Hill from Broome, Western Australia. Jedda is into boxing, skating and dreams about being a Bollywood star.

This is a must watch for all Australians. The film has successfully toured the short film circuit but it needs to be seen more by South Asian Australian communities who are normally at a loss for not connecting with Aboriginal peoples and cultures.

Director: Cornel Ozies
Producer: Dot West
Writer: Mitch Torres
Duration: 7mins
Genre: Documentary
Year: 2007


Here is a link to the film on youtube
Enjoy!!!


BOLLY WOOD – The name given to India’s hugely successful Hindi speaking film industry. Some time wrongly quoted to include other film industries in India as well. India has a thriving Tamil, Telungu, Bengali, Malayalam and other flilm industries with an international and domestic reach.

DREAMING/DREAM TIME - To put it simplistically, Dreamtime is Aboriginal Australians contemporaneous worldview.
“There are at least four aspects to Dreamtime – The beginning of all things; the life and influence of the ancestors; the way of life and death; and sources of power in life.
Dreamtime includes all of these four facets at the same time, being a condition beyond time and space as known in everyday life. The aborigines call it the ‘all-at-once’ time instead of the ‘one-thing-after-another’ time.”

http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/australian-aborigine-dream-beliefs/