FOUR DAY FEMALE
FILM FESTIVAL
If women
are to be able to focus on artistic pursuits, what they need most is support
from other women, Rajashree Warrier, dancer, said on Thursday.27th
September,2012.She was speaking at the inaugural ceremony of the Female Film
Festival.More often than not, women are able to devote time to art after
meeting their family and societal commitments.That said, women have the
advantage over men in being able to face society in a very natural way. They do
not put on masks, she said.In her inaugural address, Mayor K. Chandrika pointed
out that though there were many women acting in movies, there very few women
who operated the camera, directed movies or did other technical work.The
four-day film festival has been organised jointly by the Kerala Sthree Padana
Kendram, the Kerala University Union, the Chalachithra Academy and the FFSA.More
than a dozen feature films from Iran, Egypt, the U.S., Germany, Israel, France,
and Ireland and 11 documentaries are being screened.
The inspiration for the women characters he
depicts in his movies is drawn from his own mother, director T.V. Chandran has
said.He was speaking at an open forum on how directors portray women in films
organised here on Friday,28th September,2012, as part of the ongoing
Female Film Festival The suffering, both mental and physical, faced by his
mother in a joint family system touched his mind from a young age, Mr. Chandran
said.“My mother as the eldest daughter-in-law of the house was expected to
provide food for all the guests who would be unexpectedly brought home by my
father and his brothers. If the food provided was not to their satisfaction,
they had the curious habit of throwing out the vessel in which the food was
served. The after-effects of such throwing would be borne by my mother in the
kitchen. At the end of all this, she would go and make for herself some
‘puttu.’ Even though I would have eaten dinner, I made it a point to eat a
piece of this ‘puttu,’ he said.
Mr. Chandran recounted how when the censor board viewed
his ‘Susanna,’ many members of the board wanted the movie to be banned. This
included the women members. When Mr. Chandran told them that it was his mother
who inspired the lead character, the members were all the more shocked.
“Eventually, it was Asha Parekh, an actress all of us assumed was only good for
dancing scenes in commercial cinema, who saw the movie and said it was a good
one and need not be banned,” Mr. Chandran told the gathering.His film
‘Kathaavasheshan’ was the result of a traumatic phone call he received from his
son in Ahmedabad during the Gujarat riots. The suicide of the lead character in
the movie was what his son wanted to do after watching children burn during the
riots, he said. Director K.R. Mohan was present on the occasion.
Prof.
John Kurakar
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