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51st International Film Festival of India

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

51st International Film Festival of India
Opening filmAnother Round
Closing filmWife of a Spy
LocationDr. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Indoor Stadium at Panaji, Goa, India
Founded1952
Awards

Into the Darkness

Hosted byGovernment of Goa
Directorate of Film Festivals
No. of filmsScreened: 224
Premiered: 162
Festival date16–24 January 2021
Websiteiffigoa.org
International Film Festival of India

The 51st International Film Festival of India was held from 16 to 24 January 2021 in Goa. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic the festival went hybrid, there was physical and virtual screening of 50 films out of 224 films across various categories.[1][2][3] Bangladesh was country of focus in the festival with four films of the country included in 'country of focus' section.[4]

The festival highlighted autism spectrum disorder (ASD) by premiering a film by Shreedhar, In Our World in non-feature film, Indian Panorama section on 18 January 2021.[1]

The opening and closing ceremonies of the festival were aired live on DD India and DD National channels on 16 January and 24 January 2021, respectively.[5][6]

Events

[edit]

Being a ‘hybrid’ film festival, a few events are organised online also.

Retrospective films

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  1. Live Flesh, Bad Education and Volver by Pedro Almodóvar (Spain)
  2. The Square and Force Majeure by Ruben Östlund (Sweden)
  3. One on One by Kim Ki-duk (South Korea)[7]

Master classes

[edit]

Shekhar Kapur, Priyadarshan, Perry Lang, Subhash Ghai and Tanvir Mokammel are scheduled to hold master classes.

In-conversation sessions

[edit]

Tribute

[edit]

Tribute to the celebrated filmmaker Satyajit Ray marking his birth centenary by screening his classic works:[8]

Tribute to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose on the occasion of his 125th birth anniversary by screening film:

Online events

[edit]
  1. 50 films out of 224 films across various categories are scheduled to be screened online.
  2. Opening and closing ceremony live telecast
  3. Q&A sessions
  4. Film appreciation sessions by Film and Television Institute of India professors: Mazhar Kamran, Madhu Apsara and Pankaj Saxena
  5. Mid fest world premiere of Mehrunisa[10][11]

Jury

[edit]

Sources:[12][13][14]

International jury

[edit]

Feature film jury

[edit]
  • John Matthew Matthan, filmmaker, screenwriter and producer, Chairperson
  • Dominic Sangma, filmmaker and screenwriter
  • Jadumoni Dutta, filmmaker, screenwriter and producer
  • Kala Master, choreographer
  • Kumar Sohoni, filmmaker and writer
  • Rama Vij, actor and producer
  • B. Ramamurthy, filmmaker
  • Sanghamitra Chaudhuri, filmmaker and journalist
  • Sanjay Puran Singh Chauhan, filmmaker
  • Satinder Mohan, film critic and journalist
  • Sudhakar Vasantha, filmmaker and producer
  • T Prasanna Kumar, film producer
  • U Radhakrishnan, ex-secretary, Federation of Film Societies of India

Non-feature film jury

[edit]
  • Haobam Paban Kumar, feature and documentary filmmaker, Chairperson
  • Atul Gangwar, director, screenwriter, and producer
  • Jwngdao Bodosa, filmmaker
  • Mandar Talauliker, filmmaker
  • Sajin Babu, filmmaker
  • Satish Pande, producer and director
  • Vaijayanti Apte, script writer and producer

Winners

[edit]

Sources:[15][16]

Special awards

[edit]

Official selections

[edit]

Source:[17][20][14]

Opening film

[edit]
  • Another Round (Denmark), by Thomas Vinterberg, it was Denmark's official entry to the Oscars, in 2020.[21]

Mid fest film

[edit]
  • Mehrunisa (Austria), directed by Sandeep Kumar, stars formidable actor Farrukh Jaffar (88). The film revolves around the story that lends wings to a woman's lifelong dream.

Closing film

[edit]

Kaleidoscope section

[edit]

Twelve foreign films were screened in this section.

These include:

  1. Night of the Kings by Philippe Lacôte (France)
  2. Love Affair(s) by Emmanuel Mouret (France)
  3. The Big Hit (Un triomphe) by Emmanuel Courcol (France)
  4. Window Boy Would also Like to Have a Submarine by Alex Piperno (Uruguay)
  5. Forgotten We’ll Be by Fernando Trueba (Colombia)
  6. Haifa Street by Mohanad Hayal (Iraq)
  7. We Still Have the Deep Black Night by Gustavo Galvao (Brazil, Germany)
  8. Parthenon by Mantas Kvedaravicius (Lithuania)
  9. Apples by Christos Nikou (Greece)
  10. My Little Sister by Stephanie Chuat and Veronique Reymond (Switzerland)
  11. The Death of Cinema and My Father Too by Dani Rosenberg (Israel)
  12. Valley of the Gods by Lech Majewski (Poland)

Golden peacock award

[edit]

In international section, 15 films are competing for the Golden Peacock Award. Argentine filmmaker Pablo Cesar is head of its international jury panel.

The films competing for the Golden Peacock Award are:

  1. The Domain by Tiago Guedes (Portugal)
  2. Into The Darkness by Anders Refn (Denmark)
  3. February by Kamen Kalev (Bulgaria, France)
  4. My Best Part by Nicolas Maury (France)
  5. I Never Cry by Piotr Domalewski (Poland, Ireland)
  6. La Verónica by Leonardo Medel (Chile)
  7. Light For The Youth by Shin Su-won (South Korea)
  8. Red Moon Tide by Lois Patiño (Spain)[22]
  9. Dream About Sohrab by Ali Ghavitan (Iran)
  10. The Dogs Didn’t Sleep Last Night by Ramin Rasouli (Afghanistan, Iran)
  11. The Silent Forest by KO Chen-Nien (Taiwan)
  12. Bridge by Kripal Kalita (India)
  13. A Dog and His Man by Siddharth Tripathy (India)[23][24]
  14. Thaen by Ganesh Vinayakan (India)

† Award winning film

Indian panorama award

[edit]
Feature films
Non feature films
  • 100 Years Of Chrysotom - A Biographical Film (English)[30]
  • Ahimsa- Gandhi: The Power Of The Powerless (English)[31]
  • Catdog (Hindi)
  • Drama Queens (English)
  • Green Blackberries (Nepali)[32]
  • Highways of Life (Manipuri)
  • Holy Rights (Hindi)
  • In Our World (English)[33]
  • Investing Life (English)
  • Jaadoo (Hindi)[34]
  • Jhat Aayi Basant (Pahari/Hindi)[35]
  • Justice Delayed But Delivered (Hindi)[36]
  • Khisa (Marathi)
  • Oru Paathiraa Swapnam Pole (Malayalam)[37]
  • Paanchika (Gujarati)
  • Pandhara Chivda (Marathi)[38]
  • Radha (Bengali)[39]
  • Shantabai (Hindi)
  • Still Alive (Marathi)
  • The 14th February & Beyond, by Utpal Kalal (English), It's an investigative film on Valentine's Day[40]

In memoriam

[edit]

A special section in this festival will be organized in honour of the artists who died in the year 2020 to pay homage to them.[41]

World panorama

[edit]

Source[43]

  • Only Human by Igor Ivanov (Macedonia)
  • The Lawyer by Romas Zabarauskar (Lithuania)
  • Rupsa Nodir Banke by Tanvir Mokammel (Bangladesh)
  • Buiten Is Het Feest by Jelle Nesna (Netherlands)
  • 3 PUFF by Saman Salour (Andorra)
  • The Atlantic City Story by Henry Butash (USA)
  • Gesture by Pouya Parsamagham (Iran)
  • Zhanym, Ty Ne Poverish by Ernar Nurgaliev (Kazakhstan)
  • Running Against The Wind by Jan Philipp Weyl (Germany, Ethiopia)[44]
  • Spring Blossom by Suzanne Lindon (France)
  • The Audition by Ina Weisse (Germany)
  • Moral Order by Mario Barroso (Portugal)
  • Unidentified by Bogdan George Apetri (Romania)
  • The First Death of Joana by Cristiane Oliveira (Brazil)
  • The trouble with Nature by Illum Jacobi (Denmark, France)
  • The Castle by Lina LužYtė (Lithuania, Ireland)
  • Maternal by Maura Delpero (Italy)
  • A Fish Swimming Upside Down by Erliza Pëtkova (Germany)
  • Fauna by Nicolás Pereda (Spanish)
  • Suk Suk by Ray Yeung (Hong Kong)
  • Long Time No See by Pierre Filmon (France)[45]
  • Summer Rebels by Martina Sakova (Slovakia)
  • In The Dusk by Šarūnas Bartas (Lithuania)
  • A Common Crime by Francisco Márquez (Argentina)
  • Lola by Laurent Micheli (Belgium, France)
  • The Voiceless by Pascal Rabaté (France)
  • The Taste of Pho by Mariko Bobrik (Poland, Germany)
  • Stardust by Gabriel Range (UK)
  • Funny Face by Tim Sutton (USA)
  • Naked Animals by Melanie Waelde (Germany)
  • Las Niñas by Pilar Palomero (Spain)
  • Kala Azar by Janis Rafa (Netherlands, Greece)
  • История Одной Картины by Ruslan Magomadov (Russia)
  • Paradies by Immanuel Esser (Germany)
  • Borderline by Anna Alfieri (UK)
  • A Simple Man by Tassos Gerakinis (Greece)
  • 180° Rule by Farnoosh Samadi (Iran)
  • Here We Are by Nir Bergman (Israel, Italy)
  • The Border by Davide David Carrera (Colombia)[46]
  • End Of Season by ElmarImanov (Azerbaijan, Germany, Georgia)
  • This Is My Desire by Arie Esiri, Chuko Esiri (Nigeria, USA)
  • Karnawal by Juan Pablo Felix (Argentina)
  • Parents by Eric Bergkraut, Ruth Schweikert (Switzerland)
  • The Voice by OgnjenSviličić (Croatia)
  • Spiral...Fear Is Everywhere by Kurtis David Harder (Canada)
  • Isaac by Angeles Hernandez & David Matamoros (Spain)
  • Farewell Amor by Ekwa Msangi (US)
  • The Man Who Sold His Skin by Kaouther Ben Hania (Tunisia, France)
  • Roland Rabers Cabaret of Death by Roland Reber (Germany)
  • Children of the Sun by Prasanna Vithanage (Sri Lanka)

Country in focus

[edit]

Four Bangladeshi films will be showcased in this section.

Goan films

[edit]

Source[47]

  • Shinvar - The Downpour
  • Written in the Corners

ICFT UNESCO Gandhi Medal

[edit]

The IFFI presents ICFT Prize consisting of the UNESCO Gandhi Medal in collaboration with International Council for Film, Television and Audiovisual Communication (ICFT) Paris.

  • 200 Meters by Ameen Nayfeh (Italy, Sweden, Jordan, Palestine, Qatar)
  • An Old Lady by Lim Sun-ae (South Korea)[48]
  • Berlin Alexanderplatz by Burhan Qurbani (Germany, Netherlands)
  • The Lamp of Truth by Thanesh Gopal (Canada)
  • Palmyra by Ivan Bolotnikov (Russia)
  • Prawaas by Shashank Udapurkar (India)
  • Red Soil by Farid Bentouumi (Belgium, France)
  • Summertime by Carlos López Estrada (USA)
  • Thahira by Siddik Paravoor (India)
  • Unsound by Ian Watson (Australia)

Debut director

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  • Gold For Dogs by Anna Cazenave Cambet (France)
  • Otto the Barbarian by Ruxandra Maria Ghițescu (Belgium, Romania)
  • Ravine by Balázs Krasznahorkai (Hungary)
  • Valentina by Cássio Pereira dos Santos (Brazil)[49]
  • Wildfire by Cathy Brady (Ireland, UK)

Special screening

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Swati Mathur (15 January 2021). "First hybrid edition of IFFI to go live from January 16; of 224 films, nearly 50 to be available online". Times of India. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Film Guide - 51st IFFI". IFFI. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  3. ^ Tushar Jadhav (15 January 2021). "51st International Film Festival of India to begin from Jan 16". News on Air: All India Radio. Archived from the original on 28 January 2021. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  4. ^ Tushar Jadhav (11 January 2021). "Bangladesh to be country of focus at 51st International Film Festival of India". DD News: GOI. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  5. ^ "51st edition of IFFI set to start in a hybrid mode for the first time: Opening Ceremony tomorrow". PIB GOI. 15 January 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2020 – via Press release.
  6. ^ 51st International Film Festival of India - Closing Ceremony - IFFI 2021. Doordarshan National. YouTube. 24 January 2021.
  7. ^ "Late South Korean director Kim Ki-Duk's 'One on One' screened at 51st International Film Festival of India". The New Indian Express.
  8. ^ "Dhritiman Chatterjee inaugurates special segment on celebrating 100 years of Satyajit Ray at 51st IFFI".
  9. ^ "Film fest to pay tribute to Netaji on Jan 23 - Times of India". The Times of India.
  10. ^ "Mehrunisa". Sandeep Kumar Films. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  11. ^ Admin, India Education Diary Bureau (21 January 2021). "Ab Begum Hero Banegi: Mehrunisa".
  12. ^ "51st edition of IFFI begins in Goa". WION. 16 January 2021. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  13. ^ "International Jury for IFFI announced with filmmaker Pablo Cesar of Argentina as Chairman". News on Air: All India Radio. 5 January 2021. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  14. ^ a b "Indian Panorama announces official selection for 51st International Film Festival of India, 2020". PIB GOI. 19 December 2020 – via Press release.
  15. ^ "Danish film 'Into the Darkness' wins Golden Peacock award at IFFI". WION. 24 January 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  16. ^ "51st International Film Festival of India: Winners list". Indian Express. 24 January 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  17. ^ a b c Shekhar, Mimansa (16 January 2021). "IFFI 2021: Everything to know about the film festival". Indian Express.
  18. ^ "Biswajit Chatterjee has been conferred Indian Personality of the Year Award at 51st IFFI". Times of India. 16 January 2021. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  19. ^ "Veteran actor Biswajit Chatterjee crowned as Indian Personality of Year at IFFI 51 Closing Ceremony".
  20. ^ "IFFI 2020: Regional films dominate Indian Panorama line-up". Deccan Herald. 20 December 2020 – via PTI.
  21. ^ "51st International Film Festival of India in Goa from Jan 16, to open with Vinterberg's 'Another Round'". Business World. 2 January 2021 – via ANI.
  22. ^ "Notes from a festival: Wordless experiments". Cinema Express.
  23. ^ "A Dog and His Man – an off-beat tale of unconditional love". 23 January 2021.
  24. ^ "A Dog and His Man – an off-beat tale of unconditional love". pib.gov.in.
  25. ^ "'I want to save our generation from item dances': Durba Sahay".
  26. ^ "Why IFFI-selected Odia feature film, Kalira Atita, is a wake-up call to global warming and its washing out of lands, people and memories". 21 January 2021.
  27. ^ "Notes from a festival: Saving the world". Cinema Express.
  28. ^ "'Karkhanisanchi Waari' is about interpersonal conflicts & how a family reacts after oldest person passes away': Mangesh Joshi".
  29. ^ Admin, India Education Diary Bureau (21 January 2021). ""I told the Director I don't know how to act, but only to live": Actor of eponymous film Thahira".
  30. ^ "'100 Years of Chrysostom – A Biographical Film' aims to take forward vision of Chrysostom Metropolitan': Blessy Ipe Thomas".
  31. ^ "IFFI Spotlight: Revisiting Gandhi and learning peace lessons on day 6 of the film fest". Free Press Journal.
  32. ^ "Film showing hurdles of NE kids screened at IFFI - Times of India". The Times of India.
  33. ^ "'Our film is window to see world which needs to be understood with love': Shreedhar B S". UNI India.
  34. ^ "Don't blame Children, Society should take responsibility for children's development: Jaadoo Director". 20 January 2021.
  35. ^ "Something holds back women from supporting the next generation: Jhat Aayi Basant Director". 21 January 2021.
  36. ^ "'Justice Delayed but Delivered' film shows how person takes claim of constitutional rights, says director". BW Businessworld.
  37. ^ "'We are happy to see our film being screened at IFFI': Sharan Venugopal".
  38. ^ "'Too small to ask questions when young, too big to ask when old': Himanshu Singh".
  39. ^ "'Idea of letting go of a person you love, for his or her benefit, has always made me wonder': Bimal Poddar".
  40. ^ "'The 14th February & Beyond explores commercial nature of Valentine's Day & mental health crisis caused by it': Utpal Kalal".
  41. ^ "IFFI 2021 to pay homage to Irrfan Khan, Sushant Singh Rajput, Rishi Kapoor, Chadwick Boseman". Firstpost. 14 January 2021. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  42. ^ Shivam Parashar (22 January 2021). "Irrfan's Paan Singh Tomar to be screened at IFFI in Goa". India Today. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  43. ^ "IFFI Unveils List Of Films Under World Panorama Section". Business World. 13 January 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2021 – via ANI.
  44. ^ "'Running Against the Wind is inspired by Salaam Bombay & Slumdog Millionaire: Jan Philipp Weyl".
  45. ^ Admin, India Education Diary Bureau (21 January 2021). "Films like Long Time No See must be shot in real locations, studios limit reality: Director Pierre Filmon".
  46. ^ Admin, India Education Diary Bureau (22 January 2021). ""The Border was my answer to the lack of human connections in a globalized world": Director Davide David".
  47. ^ Kimberly Colaco (14 January 2021). "Meet these Goan directors whose films have made it to IFFI 2021". Times of India. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  48. ^ "Notes from a festival: When the victim gets treated as a criminal". Cinema Express.
  49. ^ "The film produced in Uberlândia will be shown at the festival in India - Diário de Uberlândia". 21 January 2021.
  50. ^ "Acasa-My Home portrays journey of family forced to adopt city life: Director | Headlines". Devdiscourse.
  51. ^ "'I am Greta' shines at 51st International Film Festival of India". The New Indian Express.
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