Details of 6 competition films from the North East India in the Mumbai
International Film Festival for Documentary, Short and Animation Films
(MIFF 2014) 3-9 Feb. These films are showing in Tata Theatre from 5-8
Feb.

1.    ‘Rahashyar Bitchaku (Assam) by Altaf Mazid

This film is on popular and prolific writer Ranju Hazarika, writing
since the 1970s onwards, regaling readers with characters from his
work from the time of their childhood. His themes range from detective
/horror stories to social romance on subject as varied as alien
creatures invading our earth, explorers dying mysteriously in deep
Amazon forests, on death silently hitting those who hear mystical
musical tune, or an impossible love between two people of diverse
social status. His close to 700 published books are nearly all best
sellers.

2.    Resonance of mother’s melody (Assam) by Dip Bhuyan

Kongthong, a remote Khasi village in Meghalaya of the Indian
sub-continent is characterised by a unique age-old practice of
communication through whistling. It is perhaps the only place in India
where people communicate among themselves through whistling and using
different tunes to call each other. After knowing this, a young
researcher went to the place with a group to explore the things. She
observed it and had interactions with the villagers, headman and
others and finally came out with some interesting facts. The
researcher could discover that every child has his/her own special
tune given at the time of birth by the mother and at a later stage of
growth, a shorter version of that tune is used for communication. The
documentary film starts with the journey of the researcher and goes on
with the things of the place and finally ends with various findings of
her research.

3  ‘Lady Musket’ (Mizoram) by Malsawmkima Chhangte

This film depicts an unusual event in the life of the of a young Mizo
girl. It attempts to illustrate a different aspect of the role of
women in early Mizo life from the stereotypical girl who either stays
at home, works in the field or is basically unable to fend for
herself.
It starts with a brief narration of the old way of life of
the Mizo with visual imagery (sketches) depicting the narration.
Emphasis laid on the danger of the life of the people who are always
at war with each other. The Scene then dissolves into a scene where
the protagonist is being stalked by two warriors from a neighbouring
tribe, is abducted and carried back to the enemy village. The ambush
party stops for a rest at a thlam (hut) where the girl somehow manages
to escape and take revenge on her captors

4.    ‘Snake under the bed’ (Manipur) by Romi Meitei

Ningthou who is from a far village, bought a boot for his personal use
from a market. He thought his newly purchased boot would be very
helpful for agricultural activities. But his fate disheartens him.
There was an order issued from State home ministry that no one is
allow to use army military accessories. Everyone who posses such items
were burning to ash so that they can be safe. But Ningthou doesn’t
want to loose his new boot so easily as he didn’t use for a once. He
hides his boot one place to another and keeps shifting/changing the
places. He has no place to hide, he is really afraid. Finally he
throws away his precious boot into a big canal in the middle of the
night. The next early morning Army founds his boot.

5.    My Grandpa's Home (Manipur) by Alexander Leo Pou

This film captrues the intimate dying moments of the Poumais tradition
and culture.

6.    The Skiff (Manipur) by Kh. Biswamittra Singh

He is poor. He is in his teens. He is from a rural area closed to
Imphal. He has the National characters –hard working, sincerity,
punctuality, discipline, firm determination, sacrificial spirit and
observes Brahmacharya by controlling his semen. He is Tomcha. In
India, people are eagerly looking forward for “Vision 2020”. It is the
National ethos and dream of the country. But many plan-periods could
not go through the frozen layers of poverty. “Below Poverty Line” is
reddish in colour and still found very clear. None of the National
Lenders moulds National Pillars of the future. But Tomcha is as poor
as the lonely skiff in the stormy ocean of life.

On 4 February 2014 12:56, Altaf Mazid <[email protected]> wrote:
> Seven films from the North East India in the Mumbai International Film
> Festival for Documentary, Short and Animation Films (MIFF 2014) –
>
> ‘Rahashyar Bitchaku (Assam) by Altaf Mazid, Resonance of mother’s
> melody (Assam) by Dip Bhuyan, ‘Lady Musket’ (Mizoram) by Malsawmkima
> Chhangte, ‘Snake under the bed’ (Manipur) by Romi Meitei, My Grandpa's
> Home (Manipur) by Alexander Leo Pou. The two other films in the
> information section of the festival is ‘NH39’ by Waribam Dorendra and
> ‘Manipuri Pony’ by Aribam Syam Sharma.
>
> http://miff.in/about/
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06thLIpYGpA
>
>
>
> Altaf Mazid
> 2 Udayachal Path
> Christian Basti
> Guwahati 781 005
> India
> Desk  +913612342236
> Cell    +919435193663
> www.sauravkumarchaliha.org



-- 
2 Udayachal Path
Christian Basti
Guwahati 781 005
India
Desk  +913612342236
Cell    +919435193663
www.sauravkumarchaliha.org

_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
[email protected]
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

Reply via email to