Category: Punjabi Cinema



Gurvinder Singh won the best director prize for the Punjabi film “Anhe Ghorey Da Daan” (Alms of the Blind Horse) in the 59th National Film Awards announced here today.
Based on a Punjabi novel of the same title by Gurdial Singh, the film is set in a village called Patinda, where villagers work on the fields of the local landlord. It deals with the plight and problems of the farmers as well as the landlords.
Vidya Balan was named the best actress for her performance in ‘The Dirty Picture’ while Marathi film ‘Deool’ and ‘Byari’, both dealing with man’s engagement with religion, shared the best feature film award. ‘Deool’ lead star Girish Kulkarni won the best actor award.
Balan’s win for “The Dirty Picture”, based on the life of actress Silk Smitha, was on expected lines as she had won almost all Bollywood ‘best actress’ awards for her role in the film. “The Dirty Picture” also shared awards for make-up and costume design with the Marathi film “Balgandharva”.
The Tamil-language “Azhagarsamiyin Kuthirai” was declared the best popular film. The feature film awards were announced by jury chairperson Rohini Hattangady at a news conference here today. The awards will be given away by the President at a later date. Among the honours that came Bollywood’s way, “Chillar Party” walked away with three prizes: best original screenplay, best children’s film and a shared award for best child artist – with Partho Gupte also winning for “Stanley ka Dabba”.
Shah Rukh Khan’s “Ra.One” won the national award for best special effects. “Game” picked up two of the three awards for audiography while “Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara” won the third. Bosco and Caesar bagged the choreography award for the ‘Senorita’ song in “Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara”.
More on “Anhe Ghorey Da Daan” (Alms of the Blind Horse) can be followed at

http://www.facebook.com/#!/groups/145592502208349/

Following is the comment published in latest issue of HUN 20 (Jan-April 2012)


Two films of Punjab after the 1947 bloody partition Sunday 11 September
4pm – 6.30pm followed by a Q&A
Kitte Mil Ve Mahi Where The Twain Shall Meet (2005) 70 mins
Language: Punjabi with English Subtitles
Director/ Producer Ajay Bhardwaj

Rabba Hun Kee Kariye Thus Departed Our Neighbours (2007) 65 mins
Language: Punjabi with English Subtitles
Director/ Producer Ajay Bhardwaj

A double bill of two seminal documentaries, from the Delhi based Indian Film maker Ajay Bhardwaj, on contesting perceptions of Punjab, a state partitioned on religious lines amidst widespread bloodshed in 1947.
In “Kitte Mil Ve Mahi” the director journeys through the Doaba region to explore the unique bond between Dalits and Sufism in an unfolding a spiritual universe that is both healing and emancipatory and hinting at the economic, religious and idealogical marginalisation of Dalits.
“Rabba Hun Kee Kariye” captures feelings of guilt and remorse about the genocidal violence on the Indian side of Punjab in 1947.These stories, almost like folklore, are part of the memory – scape of rural Punjab. In this documentary these long suppressed experiences become accessible in public domain for the first time.
The screening of Rabba Hun Kee Kariye will be followed by a Q&A with Dr Meena Dhanda, Amarjit Chandan and Amin Mughal.
Showing at:
Watermans
40 High Street
Brentford
TW8 0DS
Box Office: +44 (0)20 8323 1010

www.watermans.org.ukTicket price: £10 for both films and Q&A
- Hide quoted text -
About Ajay Bhardwaj
Ajay Bhardwaj (b. 1964) is a documentary filmmaker based in Delhi. He holds two Master’s degrees, in the fields of Political Studies and Mass Communications, and has worked in media for the past two decades. His documentaries have been screened at international film festivals, academic conferences, and community and activist events.

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more at the following link:

http://nawanzamana.in/nz/index.php?limitstart=11

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Anhey Gorhey da Daan ਅੰਨ੍ੇ ਘੋੜੇ ਦਾ ਦਾਨ (Alms of the Blind Horse) a film in Punjabi directed by Gurvinder Singh and based on the novel of the same title on the so-called Dalit theme by Gurdial Singh has been selected for the 68th Mostra Internazionale d’Arte Cinematografica – Venice International Film Festival – to be held from 31st August 2011 to 10th September 2011. This is the first Punjabi film to make it to an international Film Festival of great repute and that too in the Competition section.

The film produced by the Indian National Film Development Corporation (NFDC) was shot in Bathinda earlier this year. It has all non-professional local Punjabi cast except the one main role played by Samuel John of Patiala.

Sudershan: An Insitiution of Simplicity was made by Peoples vocie a decade ago. The film is directed by noted documentray film director Daljit Ami.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aAdVenXVXs

 

Punjabi film-Pagdi Sambhaal Jatta-Director Iqbal Chana, lyrics by Sant Ram Udasi, Darshan Khatkar, Krishan Korpal and others

http://ghulamkalam.blogspot.com/2010/01/blog-post_22.html

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