Thu Sep 25th, 2008 7:00 PM
Eviction
Grady Walker, 2006, Nepal/Bhutan/USA, Nepali/English, 10 minutes, DVD
The Kingdom of Bhutan evicted 1/6 of its population in the early 1990s. EVICTION offers a glimpse into this undocumented tragedy and focuses on the 106,000 refugees still languishing in camps in eastern Nepal. Bhutanese Nepali refugees arrived in Seattle
My Daughter the Terrorist
Beate Arnestad, 2007, Norway, English, Tamil, 52 minutes
Why do two young girls choose to become suicide bombers?
This fascinating documentary is an exceedingly rare, inside look at an organization that most of the world has blacklisted as a terrorist group. Made by the first foreign film crew to be given access to the Tamil Tigers (LTTE) of Sri Lanka, the film offers important insights into the recently re-ignited conflict in Sri Lanka.
Twenty-four-year-olds Dharsika and Puhalchudar have been living and fighting side-by-side for seven years as part of LTTE’s elite force, the Black Tigers. Their story is told through cinema verité footage, newsreel footage, and interviews with the women and Dharsika’s mother. The women describe heartbreaking traumas they both experienced at the hands of the Sri Lankan army, which led them to join the guerrilla forces. As they discuss their readiness to become suicide bombers and their abiding loyalty to the unnamed “Leader” – who they are sure would never harm civilians – grisly images of past LTTE suicide bombings provide somber counterpoints. Their curiously flat affects raise the possibility that they have been brainwashed. This even-handed documentary sheds light on the reasons that the Tamil Tigers continue their bloody struggle for independence while questioning their tactics.
* Post film discussion
Thu Sep 25th, 2008 9:00 PM
10th Avatar
Charuvi Agarval, 2007, India, 3 minutes, Digital
Television’s influence is so great that it has left us completely mesmerized and has become our new form of worship. Our faith in the divine power has been challenged several times, through the ages. According to Hindu mythology an avatar appeared who relieved man’s distress and re-established the belief in God and the avatar. Nine incarnations of God or avatars have appeared thus far and the 10th avatar appeared with the fusion of mass media and formal worship. This is the story about the challenge divine worship faced as cable TV encroached our “idle” time.
Pakistan's Dame Edna
2006, Pakistan/UK, Urdu, English, 14 minutes, Digital
One of the last things you would expect to see on TV in Pakistan is a transvestite host tackling issues Muslim society would prefer to ignore. But Ali Saleem, Pakistan’s Dame Edna, is in her element.
“I am going to be the biggest Diva this country has ever produced!” Ali Saleem proclaims. In the guise of a snobby middle age dame, Saleem hosts one of Pakistan’s most cutting edge TV shows.
Nosh-e-Jan
Gazelle Samizay, 2008, Afghanistan
In Nosh-e Jan (Bon Appetit) the viewer is invited to witness the ritual of passing and consuming secrets within an Afghan-American family. The ritual serves as an outlet of expression for the women that bear the secrets, without violating the strict code of keeping face. The secrets are shared in three different languages (Pashto, Dari, and English), each of which signifies a different generation in the family. While the women are the main transmitters of the secrets, the impact on men must not be forgotten.
Flying on One Engine
Joshua Z Weinstein, 2008, USA/India, 52 minutes, Digital
Wheelchair bound, without a larynx, and diagnosed with a life-threatening aortic aneurysm, Dr. Sharadkumar Dicksheet now lives only (and barely) so he can travel to India to perform free operations in marathon-like surgery sessions where up to 700 children receive treatment for their cleft lips and other deformities. Although Dicksheet survives off of social security while living in his Brooklyn apartment, his life is drastically different in India where the eight-time Nobel Prize nominee is treated like a living god. FLYING ON ONE ENGINE shows how this quirky, funny, and sometimes difficult character overcomes his own ailments by curing others.
From Dr. Dicksheet:
"$150 may mean the difference between a child suffering from disabilities and torment all of his or her life AND a full productive life.
Infants born with Cleft Lips or Palates are unable to suckle milk and die of starvation or malnutrition, or are abandoned or killed by their parents. Abandoned children live as outcasts and are further vulnerable to starvation, malnutrition, violence and death. With Dr. Dicksheet's free surgery camps, the parents are empowered to take action and shape the destiny of their children. Thus he restores the physical functions of children and reduces their vulnerability to malnutrition, ill health and violence.
You can change the life of one child by donating $150 towards the INDIA PROJECT."
Sun Sep 28th, 2008 12:00 PM
Prarambha
Santosh Sivan, 2007, India, Tamil with English subtitles, 14 minutes
Prarambha (The Beginning), directed by renowned cinematographer and director Santosh Sivan, features the South Indian Superstar Prabhudeva as a truck driver who discovers a little boy in the back of his van. The boy is on a journey to find his mother, who left him upon discovering that she was HIV positive. Prarambha is one of four short dramatic films by cutting-edge Indian directors Mira Nair, Vishal Bhardwaj, Santosh Sivan and Farhan Akhtar that aim to dismantle myths and misconceptions about HIV/AIDS.
Migration
Mira Nair, 2007, India, Hindi with English subtitles, 18 minutes
Mira Nair's film, Migration, deals with AIDS as the great class leveler in society by following its transmission through interweaving stories linking urban and rural India. Shiney Ahuja plays a rural labourer who leaves his wife for work in Mumbai, where he gets mixed up in a dangerous triangle with a frustrated wife, performed by Sameera Reddy, and her closeted husband, played by Irfan Khan. Migration is one of four short dramatic films by cutting-edge Indian directors Mira Nair, Vishal Bhardwaj, Santosh Sivan and Farhan Akhtar that aim to dismantle myths and misconceptions about HIV/AIDS.
Blood Brothers
Vishal Bhardwaj, 2007, India, Hindi with English subtitles, 19 minutes
Blood Brothers
Blood Brothers is directed by award-wining new wave director Vishal Bhardwaj (Omkara) and stars Siddhartha (Rang de Basanti) as a young man who gets a positive HIV diagnosis and allows his life to fall apart. Pankaj Kapoor plays his laconic doctor. Blood Brothers is one of four short dramatic films by cutting-edge Indian directors Mira Nair, Vishal Bhardwaj, Santosh Sivan and Farhan Akhtar that aim to dismantle myths and misconceptions about HIV/AIDS.
In addition to the AIDS JaaGO collection, we will screen Jyotis Hope, a short film produced by I-Tech. After the films, there will be a discussion lead by University of Washington School of Medicine students who have worked in the high HIV prevalence area of Namakkal, Tamil Nadu.
* Post film discussion with UW Med Students, I-Tech
Sun Sep 28th, 2008 2:30 PM
Every Good Marriage Begins With Tears
Simon Chambers, 2007, UK, English, 62 minutes
East London Muslim girl Shahanara is changing from pink hotpants into a saree, to meet her husband at the airport. She has only met him once before, when she was married in a union arranged by her Bangladeshi family. Shahanara only agreed to the marriage to try and heal old wounds with her father, who had banished her from her family for her Western ways.
Meanwhile, her devout Muslim sister Hushnara is being groomed for her own arranged marriage, something that at 19 she doesn’t feel at all ready for. This is a lively, funny and affectionate film about a British Muslim family, made all the more revealing because of the filmmaker’s long standing friendship with them. It is also a frank and absorbing view of a community from the inside.
Sari (W)Rap
2007, US, English, 3 minutes
Comedienne Rasika Mathur celebrates the famous fabric from India with some infamous musical genre spoofs.
It's all part of entertaining the world through education and music. Wait educating the world through entertainment...Hell, it's SchoolHouse Rock meets India! - Rasika Mathur
Tasveer Youth Initiative
Following a brief post-film discussion of “Every Good Marriage...”, the group will present their own short personal video based on stories of arranged marriages from their communities in Seattle. This is the group’s first production.
The Tasveer Youth Initiative is founded upon the idea that film provides a compelling medium through which the voices of young South Asians can be projected. It allows young South Asians in the greater Seattle area to express their views on pressing socio-cultural issues through the viewing and creation of films and documentaries. The group will provide a venue to discuss topics ranging from queerness in the South Asian community, to the Hindi/Muslim divide and, the groups focus for this year's film festival, arranged marriages.
* Post film discussion with Tasveer Youth Initiative on Arranged Marriages
Sun Sep 28th, 2008 4:30 PM
Donkey in Lahore
Faramarz K-Rahber, 2007, Australia,Pakistan, Urdu/English, 117 minutes
Donkey in Lahore is an observational documentary that follows the quixotic courtship of Brian, an ex-goth puppeteer from Australia, and Amber, the traditional Muslim girl he met and fell in love with during a short trip to Pakistan in 2000. Upon his return to Australia, Brian decides to convert to Islam and return to Pakistan to seek her hand in marriage. Can this unlikely couple survive the challenges they are about to face?
Sun Sep 28th, 2008 7:00 PM
Kagbeni
Bhusan Dahal, 2007, Nepal, 120 minutes, 35mm
Upon returning to his village after a long spell in Malaysia, Krishna travels to a neighboring village with his childhood friend Ramesh. On their journey they encounter a hermit who returns Krishna’s kindness with a strange gift — a monkey’s paw that will grant your wish. Unaware of its ominous powers, Ramesh makes a wish. Thus begins the journey of betrayal and revenge.
A Silent Monsoon
Pravesh Gurung, 2006, Nepal, 34 minutes
Set in a Nepali village Jhari reveals Durga’s struggle to save her twelve- year-old daughter Laxmi from their profession of prostitution. As night falls and the monsoon clouds gather, will Durga be able to fight the society, her fate, and set Laxmi free?