Best Audiography award to State technician
Spl Correspondent
 NEW
 DELHI, May 19 – Debajit Changmai has made Assam proud today after he 
bagged the best award for Audiography in the 58th National Film Awards 
that were announced today. Changmai,
 an alumni of the Jyotichitraban Film and Television Institute, 
Guwahati, bagged the award for his re-recording works done for the final
 sound track for the Hindi film Ishkiya.Meanwhile,
 Jetuka Patar Dare has been awarded Best Assamese film for heart-warming
 portrayal of the rural landscape with focus on the need for 
self-reliance in the development process.The
 film has been directed by Jadumoni Dutta and produced by Md. Noorul 
Sultan and honoured with Rajat Kamal, which carries a cash award of Rs 1
 lakh.The 58th National Film Awards was announced by chairperson J P Dutta here 
today at a crowded press conference.Oinam Doren, a film maker from Manipur 
bagged the Best Ethnographic Film for his production
 Songs of Mashangva, which is in Tangkhul, Manipuri and English. The 
film has been awarded Rajat Kamal for an insightful foray into the 
complex and layered life of a ‘song’ and it carries within it for a 
community. It inquires into the shared critical history of a community 
in the specific context of an overarching missionary presence and how it
 has affected their lives.The jury appreciates it for the courageous, yet 
poetic exploration of the subject from the ethnographic perspective, said 
Dutta.Director
 Bachaspatimayum Sunzu, also from Manipur, bagged the best Science and 
Technology Film for his film Heart to Heart. The film produced by Rotary
 Club Imphal was awarded for a very well constructed reality with an 
engaging dramatic sensibility that depicts the grimness of natural 
health maladies. It guides the viewer through emotions and playful 
spirit of the child.With
 the help of medical awareness, the film enlightens viewers with 
awareness of congenital heart defect and its promising treatment. The 
film has been honoured with Rajat Kamal.Another
 production from the North-east, The Zeliangrongs in Manipuri and 
English has won an award in the Special Mention category. The film 
directed by Ronel Haobam has won the award for its well-researched 
endeavour to reflect a composite group of ethnic communities of common 
origin and socio-cultural background, which highlights the rich cultural
 heritage and the tribes’ traditional way of life, which is on the brink
 of extinction.

(The Assam Tribune, 20.05.2011)

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