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By screening
films by both men and women the festival hopes to challenge the
mainstream ideology and mythology surrounding Asian women. Taking
part in this year's festival are Mira Nair, who is enjoying great
success with her film 'Monsoon
Wedding', Gurinder Chadha and the cast of her new film 'Bend
it Like Beckham' and Meera Syal, who will discuss the changing role
of Asian women in comedy.
Films
screenings and activities at the National Film Theatre (NFT) run
from 25th April to 5th May 2002. The festival continues with workshops
and seminars, culminating in 'Rippling Echoes'
a celebration of film fashion to be held at Bafta on 18th May 2002.
This year's 'Tongues on Fire' also dovetails with the BFI (British
Film Institute)' ImagineAsia'
film festival.
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FESTIVAL
PROGRAMME
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| Saturday
9th March 2002 |
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Screening of Mira Nair's documentary
'Laughing Club of India'
together with a workshop for women to celebrate International
Women's Day. Venue:
Apna Ghar Community Group, Ilford.
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| Wednesday
20th March 2002 |
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Screening of 'Raat
aur Din' followed by a Q&A with Dr Bhugra's
on the subject of 'Psychoanalysis in Hindi Cinema' chaired
by Dr Rachel Dwyer.
Venue: SOAS, 46-47 Russell Square London WC1B 4JP
Click
here for a venue map.
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| Saturday
23rd March 2002 |
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Hari
Bhari
This
film by Shyam Benegal explores the attitudes toward sexuality,
fertility and female empowerment in a Muslim landholding family.
Set in Uttar Pradesh 'Hari Bhari' traces the challenges and
conflicts that arise when mother, daughter, daughter-in-law
and granddaughter occupy the same household.
Venue: BAFTA, 195 Piccadilly, London W1J 9LN.
Click
here for a venue map.
0208 965 7578
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| Thursday
4th April 2002 |
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Kuch
Kuch Night
Sounds
of Bollywood beats, house and bhangra mixed by the legendary
DJ Ritu. Filmi tracks, new and old, meet garage and R&B
at this night designed for lovers of Asian cinema. Don your
favourite saris and salwars (but leave the trainers at home)
for a Kuch Kuch night at the Millennium Club.
Venue:
The Millennia Club, 167 Drury Lane, Covent Garden, London
WC2B 5PG. Click
here for a venue map.
0207 831 9399. Tickets cost £10
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| Thursday
11th April 2002 |
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Kuch
Kuch Hota Hai (Something
is Happening)
This is a story of two best friends at college, Rahul (Shah
Rukh Khan) and tomboy Anjali (Kajol). Unknown to Rahul, Anjali
has fallen in love with him so when Rahul confesses that he
is in love with Tina (Rani Mukherjee), Anjali is heartbroken
and leaves. The romance is rekindled nine years later when
Rahul and Anjali are reunited. Directed by Karan Johar.
Venue: Warner Brothers Cinema, St George's, St Ann's Road,
Harrow, Middlesex HA1 1HS. Click
here for a venue map.
0208 965 7578.
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| Wednesday
10th April 2002 |
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Mother
India
Nominated
for an Oscar in 1958, 'Mother India' remains one of the enduring
classics of Indian commercial cinema. Director Mehboob Khan
controls the film's emotional rollercoaster ride masterfully
through many spectacular action sequences from epic flood
scenes to the joy of Indian weddings.
This
screening will be followed by a discussion with teachers and
students of Cranford Community College. The Public screening
of 'Mother India' takes place on Friday
3rd May (see below) and will be repeated throughout
May 2002.
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| Thursday
18th April 2002,
10.00am - 4.00pm |
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Vaisakhi celebrations with Bollywood cinema
Venue: Jagoo Punjabi Women's Group.
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| Friday
26th April 2002 |
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A
Quiet Desperation
Screening
of 'A
Quiet Desperation' directed Shakila
Taranum Mann. When Shammi, already haunted by troubling memories,
finally returns home to Southall after hearing of his brother's
death, he embarks on a dark but enlightening personal odyssey.
'A Quiet Desperation' is a sensitive and illuminating drama
set in a vividly invoked London community. NFT
3, 6.10pm
Soske
Screening
of 'Soske'. This documentary
concerns three political refugees from Sri Lanka, Burundi
and Chechnya. A split screen allows simultaneous entries into
their lives. The refugees have University degrees and good
careers but are now idly sitting at home. As they move deeper
into the system they experience the shift in people's attitudes
from condescension to competition. 'Soske' means why in the
language of the gypsies. NFT 3, 8.30pm.
Alemaari
'Alemaari'
(Thirst) by Kavita Lankesh is a docu-drama inspired by the
scarcity of drinking water in rural India. Pallavi leaves
her newfound love and career in Bangalore and returns to her
birthplace, an isolated village, to conduct a survey for drinking
water. She also has questions about her parent's past, but
caste, customs and politics become barriers. NFT3,
8.30pm.
Venue:
National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere Road,
London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Saturday
27th April 2002 |
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Salaam
Bombay!
The
first feature from documentarist Mira Nair is a heavily researched
story about an 11 year-old street boy trying to make his way
living in Bombay's red-light district. Through his experiences
we see the patterns of abuse and affection linking characters
in this community, who are all seen with considerable compassion.
NFT2 3.20pm. Again on Mon 29 Apr
NFT2, 8.45pm.
Kama
Sutra
Also
by Mira Nair, this film is a seductive, sexual and visually
stunning exploration of friendship and rivalry between a princess
and a servant in the sixteenth-century Indian court. The servant
girl seduces the princess' groom on the wedding night. Both
women use the teachings of the Kama Sutra, the ancient treatise
on love and sexuality as weapons in their complex relationships.
Rekha plays the consummate courtesan who trains the young
women in the erotic arts. NFT2 8.40pm.
Again on Saturday 4th May NFT2, 8.40pm.
Daughters
of this Century
Veteran
director Tapan Sinha planned this film as a millennial tribute
to Indian women. It comprises five short stories about female
oppression by reputed writers of the twentieth-century, including
Rabindranath Tagore whose story concerns victimisation due
to ignorance and superstition. Shabana Azmi delivers a powerful
performance as the widow Kadambini and Jaya Bachchan plays
the untouchable Abhagi in a story of tragic poverty.
NFT 2, 5.40pm
Kabhi
Kabhie (Sometimes)
Yash
Chopra's epic romance 'Kabhi Kabhie' is a story about a young
poet Amit (Amitabh Bachchan) and beautiful Pooja (Rakhee Gulzar).
Amit
and Pooja imaging a perfect future together, but destiny has
other plans. Pooja bows to the wishes of her parents and marries
Vijay (Shashi Kapoor). Amit drifts away from his poetry and
attempts to leave behind his memories of Pooja by marrying
Anjali (Waheeda Rehman). NFT1,
6.30pm
The
screening will be followed by an interview with Yash Chopra
arguably India's most successful director of commercial films.
His position in the Hindi film industry is unique and he is
now the subject of a new biography by Rachel Dwyer. NFT1
8.00pm
Venue:
National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere Road,
London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Monday
29th April 2002 |
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'Mitr'
(My Friend)
California's
Silicon Valley is home to a large Indian-American population
and Revathy's film uses the experiences of one fictional family
to explore the feelings of doubts and disenchantment that
afflict women who have neglected their own needs in favour
of family. NFT 2, 6.20pm
Venue:
National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere Road,
London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Tuesday
30th April 2002
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Young Tongues Event
Organised by the BFI, the 'Young Tongues' event will present
works of GCSE & A-Level students of Harrow and other North
West London schools and colleges. Gareth Thomas MP is the
guest of honour and the discussion will be chaired by Satwant
Gill and Varsha Patel.
NFT 1, 11.00am - 1.30pm
Monsoon
Wedding
Why
do Indian weddings bring out the worst in people? Is it the
close proximity in which relatives (who do not really like
each other much anyway) have to live together for the festivities?
Or is it just because you see people as they really are? Mira
Nair's brilliant film 'Monsoon
Wedding' follows all the participants in a modern-day
Delhi wedding. Foot-tapping music and a riot of colours invoke
the visual style of Nair's earlier film 'Salaam Bombay'.
NFT
1, 6.15pm. Again on Thu 2nd May, NFT 1 6.15pm and Fri 3rd
May, 6.20pm.
Mississippi
Masala
Mira
Nair's second film deals with the issue of racism in an Indian
migrant family. A family expelled from Uganda in 1972 by Idi
Amin now manage a motel in small-town Mississippi. When the
daughter falls in love with a black man, played by Oscar-winner
Denzel Washington, two worlds collide and frightful memories
of the expulsion are relived, unveiling deep-seated prejudice
and insecurities. NFT 2, 8.40pm.
Again on Sat 4th May NFT 2, 3.45pm.
Venue:
National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere Road,
London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Wednesday
1st May 2002 |
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'Daughters
of History'.
Conventional accounts of the 1971 liberation struggle in Bangladesh
have focused on male leadership and courage. The role of women
in the movement is veritably absent from its annals. Director
Shameen Akhter offers a different perspective and approach
to understand and appreciate women's involvement in the freedom
struggle in a feminist re-reading of national history. NFT
2, 6.00pm
Bend
it Like Beckham
Mixing
fantasy with football from a feminine perspective, Gurinder
Chadha's feature film explores the conflicts and contradictions
of being young, female, Asian and soccer obsessed. Eigtheen-year-old
Jess's parents want her to be a demure daughter like her sister
Pinky. Jess wants nothing more than to be like her hero, David
Beckham. When she joins her local ladies football team she
is forced to choose between duty and passion, family and football.
This screening will be followed by a Q&A session with
Director Gurinder Chadha, scriptwriter Paul Berges and members
of the film cast.
Venue:
National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere Road,
London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Thursday
2nd May 2002 |
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'India
Cabaret' and 'The Laughing Club of India'
Two documentaries by Nair. The multi-award-winner 'India Cabaret'
explores stereotyped notions of respectability and morality
in Indian women, focusing on two Bombay strippers, while 'The
Laughing Club of India' concerns a rather different kind of
institution, the clubs where, for health reasons people gather
for the business of seriously for 40 minutes of a day. NFT
2, 8.40pm
Venue:
National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere Road,
London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Friday
3rd may 2002 |
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The
Guardian Interview with Mira Nair.
Mira
Nair's career has spanned continents and genres. Born in India
and educated at Harvard, an early interest in acting soon
saw Nair move behind the camera. A number of acclaimed documentaries
were followed by Academy-Award nominated 'Salaam Bombay!'
and the love story 'Mississippi Masala'. Her current film
'Monsoon Wedding'
is one of the "must see" movies this year. NFT1,
8.45pm
'Mother India'
Nominated
for an Oscar in 1958, 'Mother India' remains one of the enduring
classics of Indian commercial cinema. Director Mehboob Khan
controls the film's emotional rollercoaster ride masterfully
through many spectacular action sequences from epic flood
scenes to the joy of Indian weddings. It tells the story of
Radha, the quintessential village woman (played by legendary
Nargis), who discovers that she has been married into a family
in considerable debt. But she loves her new husband (Raaj
Kumar) and toils with him in the fields to pay off the local
money lender, Sukhilala. He outsmarts them however and the
debts rise. After a terrible accident Radha is left to face
the future alone, and against impossible odds she battles
to protect her honour, children and ultimately her village.
NFT3, 2.00pm and 7.00pm.
The
screening of 'Mother India' is brought to you by Imagine
Asia, a celebration of South Asian film by the BFI (British
Film Institute).
Venue:
National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere Road,
London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Saturday
4th May 2002 |
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'Babu'
Actress
Zeba Bakhtiar makes her directorial debut with a melodrama
about love, lust and respectability. Inspired by real-life
characters she met eight years ago, Bakhtiar felt compelled
to make a story that reflects injustice. Babu is the illegitimate
son of a businessman who transports young women to Dubai.
He falls in love with the orphan Ghazal, who is being groomed
by his mother for the trade in flesh NFT
2, 6.00pm.
Venue: National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere
Road, London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Sunday
5th May 2002 |
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Meera Syal talks about 'Asian Women
in Comedy'.
Meera Syal
Meera
Syal was commissioned by the BBC to write a three-part series,
'My Sister Wife', a story looking at both a traditional and
modern idea of marriage. Her screenplay, 'Bhaji on the Beach',
aroused both praise and criticism from Asian community leaders.
She co-wrote and starred in the BBC2 hit comedy series 'Goodness
Gracious Me'. Her first novel, the best-selling 'Anita and
Me', won a Betty Trask Award and was shortlisted for the Guardian
Fiction Prize. It is currently being filmed in the UK. Her
most recent novel 'Life
Isn't all Ha Ha Hee Hee' is reviewed on this site. NFT1,
6.15pm
Venue: National Film Theatre, South Bank Centre, Belvedere
Road, London SE1 8XT. Click
here for venue map.
Tickets cost £7.20 , Concs. £5.50 (NFT Members
£6.20/£4.50)
0207
928 3232. Click
here for the NFT website.
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| Friday
10th May 2002 |
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Bollywood
Dreams - Images from Bollywood Cinema
Amrik
Chhokran's exhibition of photography 'Bollywood Dreams' aims
to be the purest form of distraction and escapism for its
audience. Using influences from Pop Art, Dada, Surrealism,
Film, Bollywood, Music, Popular Culture and Hindu Philosophy
Chhokran's work digitally manipulates images using layers,
montage, collage and text over images using the latest in
computer technology. Nehru
Centre, 6.45pm.
'Dancing at the Crossroads'.
This is a documentary of 40 Western women's journey to Tibet
for an audience with the Dalai Lama. Nehru
Centre, 6.30pm.
Venue: The Nehru Centre, 8 South Audley Street, London, W1K
1HF
Click
here to view map
0207
491 3567. Click
here for The Nehru Centre website.
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| Saturday
18th May 2002 |
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Rippling
Echoes
'Tongues
on Fire' in association with haute-couture house 'Chiffons'
brings together the stage event 'Rippling Echoes' in an explosion
of colour, movement, and fashion. Pali Chandra (Creative Director)
and his team of vibrant artists and technicians will take
you on a journey of Bollywood style and fashion.
BAFTA, 6.30pm.
Venue:
BAFTA, 195 Piccadilly, London W1J 9LN.
Click
here for a venue map.
0208 965 7578.
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Tongues
of Fire Asian Women's Film Festival 2002 ends.
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