UK Asian Film Festival offers a ray of hope

UK Asian Film Festival
Festival returns with Ray Of Hope theme

Venues across London, Leicester, Coventry and The Modern Films website 26 May–6 June. BFI Southbank to host Opening and Closing Films

The theme of the programme of the world’s longest running South Asian film festival outside India is Ray Of Hope. This year's line-up highlights stories of resilience and bravery, celebrating those who take a stand against oppression and injustice. At a time of great division and inequality, this year’s festival will feature characters, stories and storytellers that strive for a better world through films that highlight inclusivity, kindness and, above all, empathy. 

UK Asian Film Festival historically showcases South Asian feminist films and the work of pioneering female artists and auteurs.  The festival will run from 26 May–6 June 2021 in venues across London, Leicester, Coventry and on the Modern Films website.

The opening film will be the UK Premiere of Raahgir (The Wayfarers) (UK/ India, 2019, Dir: Goutam Ghose) on Wednesday 26 May at BFI Southbank. Featuring Adil Hussain, Tillotama Shome, Neeraj Kabi, this epic and elemental journey through relentless monsoon and breathtaking nature tells the story of a man and woman driven by hunger to search for work in the nearest town. Nathuni leaves behind a paralytic husband and two children, while Lakhua is a permanent wonderer who lives on the fringes of society. In sharing their difficult journey, they exchange life stories and find themselves drawn into a life and death struggle. The screening will be followed by a recorded Q&A. 

The Closing Film will be the World Premiere of The Beatles And India (UK/ India, 2021, Dir: Ajoy Bose, Co-Director Peter Comption) on Sunday 6 June at BFI Southbank. A unique, historical chronicle of the enduring love affair between The Beatles and India that started more than half a century ago. Rare archival footage, recordings and photographs, eye-witness accounts and expert comments along with location shoots across India bring alive the fascinating journey of George, John, Paul and Ringo from their high octane celebrity lives in the West to a remote, Himalayan ashram in search of spiritual bliss that inspires an unprecedented burst of creative song-writing. It is the first serious exploration of how India shaped the development of the greatest ever rock band and their own pioneering role bridging two vastly different cultures. The screening will be followed by followed by a Q&A and the presentation of the UK Asian Film Festival Awards. 

Screening highlights include the UK Premiere of Zindagi Tamasha (Circus Of Life) (Pakistan, 2020, Dir: Sarmad Khoosat) on Thursday 27 May at Genesis, London and Friday 28 May at Belgrade Theatre, Coventry. Directed by one of Pakistan’s most lauded auteurs, whose previous credits include the iconic drama series Humsafar (2011) and feature film Manto (2015), Zindagi Tamasha tells the story of Rahat, a struggling cleric: he sings hymns to the Prophet; takes care of his bedridden wife; and is considered a pillar of a conservative community. But he has a guilty pleasure – enjoying old Punjabi movies. At a wedding, edged on by friends, he breaks into a dance paying homage to his film idols. The video of a bearded man dancing effeminately goes viral and Rahat’s life unravels as he is shunned by friends and shamed by family. 

The award-winning film has been caught up in a blasphemy controversy, with its theatrical release in Pakistan suspended while the federal government referred it to the Council of Islamic Ideology, despite being cleared by the country’s censor board. Islamist political party, Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan, warns of unrest if the film releases due to what it perceives as the ‘blasphemous’ content of the film. Despite the banned status in its country of origin, Zindagi Tamasha still went onto become Pakistan's official entry for selection for the Best International Feature category at this year's Oscars. 

Documentary Feature, I Am Belmaya (UK/ Nepal, 2021, Dir: Sue Carpenter, Belmaya Nepali) will be screening on Thursday 27 May at Watermans, London and on Thursday 3 June online at Modern Films. I Am Belmaya is the rousing documentary about a young woman's transformational journey from oppressed wife to pioneering filmmaker. Born as a dalit in a patriarchal community, orphaned at the tender age of nine and trapped in an abusive marriage with a baby daughter at 21, Belmaya has had a difficult life. Yet during her darkest days, she decides to return to her love of photography and filmmaking, as we witness a young woman take charge of her own destiny and prove what can be achieved if we allow every human being the opportunity of becoming. As Belmaya grows in confidence and ability, she turns from subject to co-director of her own story in this fascinating tale of how making a documentary about a young girl’s inspiring story becomes itself a defining part of her journey to award-winning filmmaker. Screenings will be followed by a Q&A with the directors. 

The World Premiere of Toofan Mail (India, 2021, Dir: Akriti Singh) takes place on Thursday 27 May at Belgrade Theatre, Coventry and Friday 28 May at Rich Mix, London. This was a heist like no other. There was no gun, no elaborate escape plan, and they almost got away with the whole thing. It also happens to be a true story. In 1974, a woman landed at the New Delhi Railway station and asked to meet Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by claiming she was the Queen of Awadh; a story which quickly became a media sensation. Director Akriti Singh’s film is a fictional retelling of the crazy events that followed, which remain a living, breathing testament to the idea that truth is, in fact, far stranger than fiction. 

The UK Premiere of Fireflies (India, 2019, Dir: Prakash Deka) goes live on Friday 28 May online at Modern Films. Jahnu lives in a remote village in rural Assam and dreams of getting an operation to become a woman. The villagers mock him for his femininity and treat him as an outcast. In a world where you’re made to deny your identity to protect your family’s reputation, Jahnu has no chance at living freely. Fireflies, a battle cry for acceptance and sensitivity, follows his journey of embracing his truth. In a world where there are thousands of Jahnu’s who struggle every day to fight for basic acceptance and self-respect, Fireflies offers a turbulent yet beautiful tale of resilience and embracing who you are rather than conforming to the limited views of society. 

The UK Premiere of Gutter Boy (India, 2020, Dir: Anupam Khanna Baswal) takes place on Friday 28 May at Watermans, London and online at Modern Films on Tuesday 1 June. When we hear terms like ‘gutter’ and ‘sewage’, we picture dirty, underground tunnels that we have the privilege of never having to see or experience. But not everyone has that privilege. Some are made to live in it and risk their lives as a means to earn a living. Sandeep belongs to a poor, lower caste family. Struggling to earn a living, he moves to the big city in the hopes of a better life. Instead he is merely reminded of his place in society when the only job he's offered is of a sewage cleaner. Gutter Boy is the piercing story that examines the caste divide, societal segregation and how we dehumanise those we see as lesser to have them do the jobs no one else would. 

The World Premiere of Khape (India, 2020, Dir: Suchita Bhhatia) takes place on Saturday 29 May at Belgrade Theatre, Coventry; Thursday 3 June at Watermans, London and online at Modern Films; and Saturday 5 June at Piccadilly Cinema, Leicester. Aditya Lakhia (Lagaan) stars in a moving Gujarati drama about Ali, a young boy who works as a labourer to help support his poverty-stricken family. Despite living in a community where education is frowned upon as a waste of time, Ali’s father insists he be educated for the opportunities it offers. Khape explores the power of education to break down barriers and help people rise above their circumstances to aspire to a better life. 

The UK Premiere of Nirvana Inn (India, 2019, Dir: Vijay Jayapal) takes place on Saturday 29 May at Rich Mix, London. What is it like to be haunted by your past? Boatman Jogiraj Chakraborthy (Adil Hussain) acts on his suicidal thoughts and capsizes his vessel mid-journey, killing every passenger on board. Months later, he signs up to be the caretaker of Himalayan resort, Nirvana Inn, only to find that the guests who check in are the very people he presumed dead. Are these literal 'ghosts' or projections of Jogi's guilt? Or is the inn a kind of purgatory, a layover he will only be able to move on from once he atones for his sins? Nirvana Inn depicts Jogi’s descent into paranoia amid the increasingly unsettling atmosphere but offers no easy answers. 

The UK Premiere of Holy Right’s (India, 2020, Dir: Farha Khatun) takes place from Sunday 30 May online at Modern Films. A devout Muslim woman Safia from Bhopal joins a program for training women as Qazis. The film delves into the tensions and negotiations that mark her journey as she treads into a territory that is usually uncharted for women. The film archives the Muslim women's movement in India against an arbitrary oppressive practice. How do these individual journeys merge with the collective voice of Muslim women's movement in a country where the socio-political scenario is increasingly becoming more volatile?

The UK Premiere of Not Today (India, 2020, Dir: Aditya Kripalani) takes place on Monday 31 May at Rich Mix, London. A 24-year-old from a traditional Muslim family in Mumbai goes to work secretly as a suicide prevention counsellor. On her first day, she encounters a 52-year-old man standing atop a high-rise, wanting to jump. In trying to bring him down, she discovers that he too has been a Suicide Prevention Counsellor for 15 years. But what happens when those who are tasked with listening and supporting have the largest burden to bear themselves? At a time when mental health is arguably more important than it's ever been with so much of the world struggling through unprecedented times, Not Today seeks to foster important discussions with warmth and compassion.  

The UK Premiere of Ginsberg’s Karma (India, USA 2021, Dir: Ram Devineni) takes place from Tuesday 1 June online at Modern Films. This is an insightful and entertaining look at a transformative phase in the poet Allen Ginsberg’s life. His first trip to India in 1962 would transform him into America’s first hippie. While in India, he experimented with mind-altering drugs, spiritualism, and became a political activist. The documentary follows poet Bob Holman as he travels to India to piece together Ginsberg’s life there, and interviews many of the writers who knew him during his trip. Ginsberg’s adventures and what he experienced in India are the bridge between the Beat generation of the 1950s to the hippie counterculture of the 1960s in America. 

The UK Premiere of The Other Side of the River (India 2020, Dir: Darshan Ashwin Trivedi) takes place on Friday 4 June at Watermans, London. Four ordinary children with extraordinary dreams live on the banks of a river, constantly fantasizing about the world that lies on the other side of it in this heartfelt slice-of-life drama. But their simple dreams of crossing the river to explore what lies beyond is shot down and discouraged by their families and those around them, who desperately cling to their way of life and are reluctant to embrace the changing times. The Other Side of the River is an allegory about the curiosity and capability of the young who dare to question, discover and chase progress, in a world set on limiting them and maintaining the status quo. 

The Short Film Screening of this year’s shortlisted competition films, themed Ray Of Hope, takes place on Monday 31 May at Soho Screening Rooms, London and online at Modern Films on Friday 4 June. Shorts comprise Baang by Junaid Imam Shaikh; Hiding by Nirusha Wijayamohan; Incredible Insight by Kushal Dasgupta; Last Night In Vegas by J. Nicholas Meese; Look At Us by Hussina Raja; Passport Ladakh by Sean Whitaker; Refrigerate After Opening by Kevin Ung; The End by Adeel uz Zafar; Uchki by Bharat Mohan Sunita; and Untouchability by Haresh Narayanan. 

The Feature Presentation of The Great Indian Kitchen (India, 2020, Dir: Jeo Baby) takes place on Tuesday 1 June at Rich Mix, London. There have been many films that discuss patriarchy but you’ve never seen patriarchy brought to life in such an impactful and cinematic way. The Great Indian Kitchen is a singular and uniquely immersive experience that takes you into the life of a newly married girl, as you witness her day-to-day routine of tending to the needs of her husband and in-laws. What begins as routine and responsibility slowly becomes nothing short of a harrowing ordeal. Not only is it phenomenal filmmaking, The Great Indian Kitchen is a penetrating portrait of the life that too many women in India lead. 

The Feature Presentation of Granada Nights (UK, 2020, Dir: Abid Khan) takes place on Wednesday 2 June at Rich Mix, London. Who among us hasn’t wanted to escape into the unknown in search of adventure and distraction to mend a broken heart? After his girlfriend leaves him, a British-Pakistani tourist (Antonio Aakeel – Tomb Raider) seeks closure and connection in the vibrant city of Granada, Spain. There, he befriends an unlikely group of international students and learns to heal from the old and open himself up to the new in this sparkling coming-of-age tale of love, loss and new beginnings that marks the directorial debut of British-Pakistani writer-director, Abid Khan. 

In relation to UK Asian Film Festival 2021, Founder and Director, Pushpinder Chowdhry, says, “We are thrilled to bring the magic of the cinema back again! After a year of virtual living, we are proud to be working with our partners to create safe spaces for our audiences to enjoy films in person. We have shifted our dates during this exceptional time to adhere to government regulations and to take into account religious festivities to make sure we continue to serve all South Asian communities. We have also curated a selection of online premieres to make sure we reach new, UK-wide audiences.” 

UK Asian Film Festival Creative Director, Samir Bhamra, says, “Cinema has been a ray of hope for all of us during this pandemic. Its power to entertain, provide escapism and boost our wellbeing has held us all together during this pandemic. And just as characters in films go on a journey of growth, UKAFF has expanded to Coventry this year. Working in partnership with Belgrade Theatre, we are delighted to be one of the key headline events during the UK City of Culture to celebrate the best of South Asian culture, positivity and creativity.” 

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For UK Asian Film Festival Full Programme details visit: www.ukaff.com

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