DISSENT ! ANAND PATWARDHAN
SCREENING - DISCUSSION
“I would like my films to make a difference in the real world. I'm not content to make a film and let it sit idle or let it go only to some film festival or museum and be appreciated by a tiny fraction of well-to-do people. I want the films to be in the mainstream and do as much as I can to get into that mainstream, so that they have an impact in the real world.” Anand Patwardhan
Talk with Anand Patwardhan, in the context of Filmer à Tout Prix, in collaboration with LUCA and INSAS. In collaboration with Flagey.
Filmer à Tout Prix will show two films by Anand Patwardhan: Bombay: Our City (1985) and Jai Bhim Comrade (2012). Check their website for details.
Anand Patwardhan - Bombay: Our City
1985, 35mm, 82', colour.
Bombay: Our City tells the story of the daily battle for survival of the 4 million slum dwellers of Bombay who make up half the city's population.
Anand Patwardhan - Jai Bhim Comrade
2011, 35mm, 199', colour.
India’s caste system still pervades the country’s social and political life. The lowest caste the Dalit or “untouchables” and the music of their resistance is explored in Anand Patwardhan’s documentary.
Behind the images of an aspiring pluralistic democracy and a rising economic superpower, there exists an other India. One that is swept by continuous waves of religious and ethnic violence, more often than not abetted by the highest levels of government and law enforcement. One that is haunted by an acute rise in mass poverty and social inequality, to some extent still hinging on the enduring legacy of the caste system. One that is driven by a quest for militarism, steeped in a long history of Partition and nationalist militancy. This reality of India, a complex and painful entanglement of religion, ethnicity, warfare, gender and class, has been systematically neglected by most if not all traditional mass media, locally as well as internationally. One could say that countering this indifference is exactly what defines the value and politics of Anand Patwardhan’s documentary work: the commitment to report on the harrowing injustices that are left on the wayside of contemporary history, to oppose the hegemonic discourses and intervene in the debates raging through the political landscape. Moreover, in relentlessly focussing on the struggles that his own country is facing, his films do not only address local questions, but also stir up some of the key issues playing out in the world at large, notably problems of identity, community, racism and populism. And yet, the practice in which his films are inscribed is not the informative or investigative model of journalism, it is altogether something different: cinema. It is precisely through the aesthetics of cinema that Patwardhan accomplishes what is perhaps the essential politics of his work: the construction of a multifaceted world in which actions, gestures and words are displaced from their frame of common assumptions of condition and fate, and are given as possible tools of empowerment.
DISSENT! is an initiative of Argos, Auguste Orts and Courtisane, in the framework of the research project "Figures of Dissent" (KASK/Hogent), with support of VG & VGC.
Dit evenement is onderdeel van DISSENT ! Cinema of Politics, Politics of Cinema
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vr 08.11.2013
20:00 - 23:00 -
Praktische info
Flagey
Place Sainte Croix / Heilig Kruisplein
1050 Brussels
www.flagey.be - Kunstenaars