LIFF 2020 Mini-Festival Launches!

Roam Rome Mein, Film still. 2019

An All Women Line-Up adorns the “in-cinema” slice of the hybrid London Indian Film Festival

The Bagri Foundation London Indian Film Festival and Birmingham Indian Film Festival, UK & Europe’s largest South Asian film event, are back at BFI Southbank London, Ciné Lumière London, and Millennium Point (Birmingham) from 17th to 20th September. The Festival is supported by The Bagri Foundation, and a BFI Audience Fund Award, awarding National Lottery funding.

This strong all women line-up follows the hybridised festival’s successful outing on their own platform, LoveLIFFatHOME.com which beholds In Conversation events with top film talent from Oscar nominees Mira Nair and Deepa Mehta, India’s A Listers Shabana Azmi, Anurag Kashyap, Ayushmann Khurana, and crossover talents, Freida Pinto & Adil Hussain (Life of Pi, Star Trek), alongside LIFF “best of” classic features and short films.

The festival runs in accordance with UK government guidelines, with health and safety measures that cinemas have mindfully set up.

Two people sit in the dark on an amusement park ride.
Cargo film still. 2019.

 

 

 

 

 

At BFI Southbank, Arati Kadav brings the Anurag Kashyap produced Sci Fi film Cargo, and Deepti Gupta showcases top Indian musician Sona Mohapatra, getting candid about the discrimination of women in music, having faced death threats, and ousted big names in the Indian Me Too movement, in the documentary Shut Up Sona.

A woman sits on a TV stage in a pink wig with an empty picture frame hanging in front of her.
Shut Up Sona film still. 2019

 

 

 

 

 

At Ciné Lumière, the festival is bookended with a double bill with the highly anticipated Busan hit Roam Rome Mein, the directorial debut by Brick Lane actress, Tannishtha Chaterjee, who also stars in it, alongside an Italian cast, and Indian stalwart, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, & Bollywood star Vidya Balan produced short film Natkhat (The Brat) that she also stars in.

A woman of Indian background looks shocked. A gold background, dark hair, pink lips and bright purple and pink shirt.
The Miseducation of Bindu film still. 2019.

 

 

 

 

The ups and downs of the American Asian immigrant experience is examined often comedically, in The MisEducation of Bindu by Prarthana Mohan, starring David Arquette, Priyanka Bose and rising Hollywood star, Megan Suri, executive produced by the Duplass brothers.

A group of men are gathered on a stage together with audiences sitting in front posing for a picture. It's a bright day and there is a blue background.
The Casteless Collective, Film still. 2019.

 

 

 

 

 

A screening of German film maker Maja Meniers’s Sheffield Doc Festival hit, Breaking Barriers – The Casteless Collective about a musical uprising from an underprivileged slum area in Tamil Nadu, South India to fight caste discrimination, empower women and support the LGBTQ+ community, will close the festival.

QUOTES

Cary Rajinder Sawhney MBE, Executive & Programming Director of LIFF

“It’s been an adventure this year to transform Europe’s largest South Asian film festival into both a digital version that continues to attract good audiences and an actual physical film festival and we are delighted to be dipping our toes into cinemas again with the support of our regular cinema partners BFI Southbank and Ciné Lumière and new partners Millennium Point in Birmingham, presenting a power packed all female programme”.

Title Sponsor, Alka Bagri, trustee of the Bagri Foundation

“Championing diverse filmmaking has always been a big part of the work that the Bagri Foundation does, and to highlight this stellar line-up of women-made films, is a particular delight. The highs and lows of human lives, told through the female gaze, continues to be rare. We congratulate LIFF on their resilience in this tough year, and as cinemas reopen to the public, for those who feel comfortable, we hope you enjoy this glimpse into important narratives on the big screen.”

Ben Luxford, BFI Head of UK Audiences

“During these extremely challenging times the Festival has not only adapted to new circumstances, they’ve developed innovative ways to engage with people across the UK. The team at LIFF have done an incredible job delivering their programme and have unearthed some truly astonishing rare gems for audiences to enjoy. Thanks to National Lottery funding, the BFI is extremely proud to have supported this activity and we hope to see it continue.”

CINEMA LISTINGS

Double Bill – Roam Rome Mein (Every Inch of my Being) & short film Natkhat (The Brat)


Brick Lane actress Tannistha Chatterjee’s directorial debut is a psychological drama as Raj (Nawazuddin Siddiqui), travels to Italy, in search of his missing sister and the magical characters he meets on a journey of awakening.

Vidya Balan stars as a doting mother trying to teach her young son about the importance of gender equality in the short film Natkhat (Brat).
Thu 17 Sep, 20.00 at Cinè Lumière

https://www.institut-francais.org.uk/cine-lumiere/whats-on/festivals-series/bagri-foundation-london-indian-film-festival/

Cargo

A spaceship that stores the dead and prepares them for rebirth is the setting in the out of this world spectacular fantasy parable by Arati Kadav, executive produced by Anurag Kashyap starring Vikrant Massey, Shweta Tripathi and Nandu Madhav.
Fri 18 Sep, 20.30 | BFI Southbank

Book tickets here.

The MisEducation of Bindu
Prarthana Mohan directs a funny and charming coming-of-age story about a high-school teen trying to fit in starring Megan Suri, Priyanka Bose, David Arquette, executive produced by Hollywood’s Duplass brothers.
Sat 19 Sep, 19.30 at Ciné Lumière

Book tickets: https://www.institut-francais.org.uk/cine-lumiere/whats-on/festivals-series/the-miseducation-of-bindu/

Shut Up Sona

Outstanding doc directed by Deepti Gupta about singer and #MeToo activist Sona Mohapatra’s fight for equal rights despite opposition from internet trolling and anonymous death threats.
Sat 19 Sep, 20.40 | BFI Southbank
Book tickets here.

Breaking Barriers

Directed by German director Maja Meiners, this documentary follows a protest music band in South India, mixing folk music with rap and rock to take on the big social issues facing Indian society including caste discrimination, the oppression of women, LGBTQ+ people and those from underprivileged and marginalised backgrounds, as represented by the band members themselves, who are led by PA Ranjith, a very famous and controversial director in Tamil cinema.

Sun 20 Sep, 17.00 at Ciné Lumière

Notes to editors:

About the Bagri Foundation

  • The Bagri Foundation is a UK registered charity, inspired by unique and unexpected ideas that weave the traditional and the contemporary of Asian culture. Through a diverse programme of film, visual arts, music, dance, literature, courses and lectures, the Bagri Foundation gives artists and experts from across Asia, or those inspired by the continent, wider visibility on the global stage. www.bagrifoundation.org

The BFI Audience Fund invests £5.6m of National Lottery funding each year to expand access and encourage greater enjoyment of cinema by connecting audiences with great films – in venues, at events and online. We do this by supporting:

  • leading organisations in their field, including film festivals, to deliver culturally rich and nationally significant programmes and events on a year round basis
  • projects which help exhibitors and distributors bring the best of UK and international cinema to audiences across the UK through events, distribution releases, multiplatform distribution proposals, touring film programmes and more
  • initiatives that address under-representation and are innovating audience development

www.bfi.org.uk/audience-fund

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