SAIFF film fest begins tonight

This year’s South Asian International Film Festival kicks off tonight in Manhattan with Hari Om featuring Cicatrix’ favorite, Vijay Raaz. Here’s the full program. The festival lasts through Sunday, Dec. 11.

Widely touted as one of the best films to come out of India in the last decade, Hari Om takes us on an unforgettable tour of Rajasthan as an autorickshaw driver and a French tourist set out on a cross-cultural journey through the beautiful region looking for a glimpse of the “real” India…

Selections from the top-shelf roster include: Being Cyrus, a dark comedy about a Parsi family featuring Bollywood megastar Saif Ali Khan in his English-language debut, and The Blue Umbrella, director Vishal Bhardwaj’s hotly anticipated follow-up to his 2003 masterwork, Maqbool. Both Cyrus and Umbrella were the subjects of a New York Times feature piece last week extolling the rise of New Wave Bollywood, which departs from song-and-dance conventions to present a fresh look at Indian society…

Other featured selections include: Kya Kool Hai Hum, the sleeper Bollywood superhit; Sancharram (The Journey), Liga Pullapully’s controversial depiction of lesbian love in an idyllic Kerala village; Bachelor, the hit romantic comedy from Bangladesh; Naked In Ashes, the acclaimed documentary about a young yogi; and Kal, Ruchi Narain’s revelatory look at Indian youth. SAIFF is also proud to present a special program for children on Saturday, December 10th, featuring the family films Duratta from Bangladesh about a runaway tyke, and Hanuman, the animated box-office hit from India. [SAIFF press release]

Being Cyrus on Thursday night looks promising.

Related posts: Indo indie, Dueling film festivals in Manhattan, Film festival hosts 14 South Asian premieres in New York

9 thoughts on “SAIFF film fest begins tonight

  1. I would actually recommend “Hanumaan” to people. I saw it recently on a desi-video-store VHS copy, and enjoyed it.

    It’s a little didactic at times (ok, very didactic), but the animation is quite decent — visually stimulating. You wouldn’t guess that this is India’s first fully animated feature.

    Looks like a good festival overall… I’m regretting that I now live too far away from NYC to make it.

  2. I went to ‘Hari Om’ today. Just simply unwatchable. I mean so bad that even the gratuitous shots the cried out ‘exotic india’ were atrocious. I actually had to walk out after 20 minutes, such was my state of apathy, boredom and slight disgust. its unbelievable that shit like this is opening these desi festivals. Surely our cultural heritage can aspire us to something a little more polished. i mean, we did at one point have Ray and Ghatak, Bimal Roy and Guru Dutt amongst a long list. My favorite shot was the one of the french heroine chick running full tilt up the last slope of amber fort in jaipur still in heels. They should have opened with ‘Being Cyrus’ — it promises to be a far better movie. Anyway, the whole thing was really sad. There was a huge mike fiasco that continued for one whole hour, then poor Bhanu Athiya (famous costume designer – ‘Gandhi’ etc) looked like she was going to pass out on stage with no mike power and film noir lighting and a general state of personal collapse – and then the spectacle of Vijay Raaz (who was so good in Monsoon Wedding) having to ham up a tapori rickshaw driver in Jaipur. Interestingly one of the first credits was a thank you to Desh Deshpande (billionaire founder Sycamore networks) Kanwal Rekhi also millionaire techie and founder of TIE and Rajat Gupta ceo of McKinsey, amongst others.)

  3. the sleeper Bollywood superhit; Sancharram (The Journey), Liga PullapullyÂ’s controversial depiction of lesbian love in an idyllic Kerala village

    WOW! Malayali lesbo movie! Brilliant, Finally people are challenging our social norms. I find malayali people so uptight, and truly love it when something like this comes up. This should really ruffle their feathers!

    I hope it comes out on DVD. Sadly we don’t have any South Asian International fesivals in South Africa. We only get the cheesy IIFA and such coming here.

  4. Saw the description of “Hari Om” and just knew it had to be one of those “India is so quaint and exotic” movies. Being Cyrus sounds a bit more promising, but can anyone tell me whether the image of Saif Ali Khan lying in a bathtub has been lifted straight from one of those movies about angst-ridden people, like “Garden State”? It looks kind of familiar to me, but I can’t quite place it.

  5. I saw Hari Om in London a few months ago. My brown best friend refused to go, saying he was sure it would be a cliche, so I quivered next to the brown boyfriend, wondering the entire time whether he was finding it stereotypical. But he enjoyed it, said it made him want to visit that part of India. I was surprised at the ending, having been expecting something fake and Bollyistic. I dunno, I loved the absurd chase scene at the end. Sometimes you just have to enjoy cheesy films for what they are. In this case, one big tourist board ad for Rajasthan. 😉

  6. I saw Hari Om at the Toronto film festival two years ago. It was not the movie I was hoping for. It was boring, Eurocentric and annoying. Much as I love Vijay Raaz, it was just not an interesting film. I do agree though that it definitely worked as a Rajasthan tourist board ad! 🙂