Thursday evenings
6:00-9:00pm
June 21 - August 9, 2007
1121 Humanities
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Thursday June 21 – Umrao Jaan (2006) In Hindi and Urdu with English subtitles “Umrao Jaan” is a retelling of the historical Indian
tale covered in a 1981 Bollywood classic and stars Aishwary Rai who
is often hailed as the queen of Bollywood. Ms. Rai plays Ameeran, the
daughter of a man who testified against a criminal, Dilwar Khan. Khan
kidnaps her and sells her to a maternal madam who changes Ameeran’s
name to Umrao Jaan and grooms her into a performing courtesan. |
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Thursday June 28 – Wheel of Time 2003 In Tibetan with English subtitles German director Werner Herzog’s absorbing documentary “Wheel
of Time” is structured around the 12-day ritual creation of the
magnificent, fragile Kalachakra sand mandala, also known as the wheel
of time. In 2002, Werner Herzog went to India to observe the festival
of Kalachakra, the ritual that takes place every few years to allow
Tibetan Buddhist monks to become ordained. The resulting documentary
is a look at an endangered culture whose very way of life is threatened.
It is about being plunged into an intensely devotional world, feeling
its tug and sensing its extreme austerity. |
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Thursday July 5 – Salaam Bombay ! (1988) Hindi with English subtitles “Salaam Bombay!” is a 1988 Hindi film directed by Mira Nair and screenwritten by her longtime creative collaborator, Sooni Taraporevala. The film chronicles the day-to-day life of children living on the streets of Mumbai. Despite the movie's often dark subject matter, “ Salaam Bombay!” is ultimately a tale of hope and perseverance. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. |
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Thursday July 12 – Paruthi Veeran (2007) Tamil with English subtitles “Paruthi Veeran” tells a simple story of a village lout
coming of age and getting refined through the alchemy of love. The
trick and the success of the story lie in the small details that are
rich and believable. Indiaglitz reports that director Ameer Sultan “has
brought alive rustic simplicity and complexity on our screens. You
come out of ‘Paruthi Veeran’ smelling of baked earth with
an echo of pastoral patois.” |
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Thursday
July 19 – Pather Panchali (1955,
restored and reissued in 1995) Like millions of people around the world, the embattled family of Satyajit Ray’s 1955 masterpiece “Pather Panchali” must scratch a subsistence living out of the earth. The overlying story is of shame and disappointment. The family owes
its sinking fortunes to the failure of Harihar, the head of the household,
to find steady work. A poet, playwright and itinerant priest, he is
a dreamer and an optimist who leaves home for months at a time in search
of employment. But as the film makes devastatingly clear, dreams, in
and of themselves, are no substitute for food, clothing and shelter. |
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Thursday
July 26 – The Terrorist (2000) Malli, the title character of Santosh Sivan’s remarkable film,
is a 19-year-old who lives in a guerilla camp in the South Indian jungle.
Aside from her occasional execution of a traitor and the constant threat
of a government ambush, her life seems in many respects perfectly ordinary.
When Malli is chosen for a suicide mission, her peers respond with
envy and admiration. Malli’s cause is never specified, but “The
Terrorist” was suggested by the suicide bombing that killed Rajiv
Gandhi, the Indian prime minister, in 1991. |
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Thursday August 2 – In Custody (1993) Urdu with English subtitles Deven’s position as a professor of Hindi at a local college
is only a means to an end. His first love is the Urdu language and
in particular Urdu poetry. Deven’s multiple attempts to interview
the great Urdu poet, Nur, act as a metaphor for the clash between modernization
and tradition. The story is both a lyric appreciation of poetry and
a comedy of errors about literary lives. |
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Thursday August 9 – Dor (2006) Hindi with English subtitles. Nagesh Kukunoor’s latest movie “Dor” is a moving
tale of two women – one who undertakes a long journey to save
her love, and another who dares to break the shackles of tradition
and choose life as her heart wants it. The fate of these two women
is invariably strung together by one incident that changes both their
lives forever. |