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Kolkata, Nov 16: Throwing a challenge to the opposition Trinamool Congress, which has launched a fresh movement on the land acquisition issue in the north eastern fringes of the city, the West Bengal government Tuesday offered to return 11 per cent of the acquired land if Mamata Banerjee's party allowed Tata Motors to establish their second small car unit at Singur.

The state government arm, Housing and Infrastructural Development Corporation (HIDCO) has acquired large tracts of land in the Rajarhat-Newtown area to set up a satellite township christened Jyoti Basu Nagar.

On Saturday, Banerjee led a rally in the area and threatened legal steps if 10 percent developed land was not returned to farmers.

'She has demanded that 10 per cent of the developed land in the township be returned to the farmers. Whatever be the odds, I will return 11 percent of the land there to the farmers. But Banerjee will have to agree to let the Tatas set up their factory in Singur if the state government returned 10 percent of the acquired land there to the farmers,' Housing Minister Gautam Deb told media persons here.

Deb said once Banerjee agreed to his proposal, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee will talk to the Tatas. Banerjee then should let Tata Motors start the second factory of Nano there.'Thus we can have a settlement in Singur'.

Tata Motors had abandoned plans to set up their small car Nano plant at Hooghly district's Singur, about 40 kms from Kolkata, in Oct, 2008, after Banerjee's Trinamool led an intense peasant agitation demanding return of 400 acres of the 997.11 acre acquired land to farmers from whom the land had been 'forcibly' acquired.

After Singur and Nandigram, Rajarhat on the northeastern fringes of the city is turning into a new political flash point on land acquisition. Banerjee, who had spearheaded the land acquisition protests at Singur and Nandigram earlier, took out a large rally Saturday that traversed some areas of Rajarhat.

She alleged that to develop the area into an industrial town, the state government has forcibly taken away 25,000 acre agricultural land from the farmers, most of whom were religious minorities and backward classes.

'They were not paid any compensation for the land. Till now 200 farmers, whose land was forcibly taken away, have not received any payment,' she said.

Launching a scathing attack on Banerjee, Deb said 'She has become a symbol of destruction. She has finished Singur. She has finished Nandigram. Now she is trying to finish Rajarjhat. But she should remember Rajarhat is not Singur. Singur will be her waterloo'.


(IANS)

Saturday, November 13, 2010

MCK: Kolkata Film Festival 2010 Updates


What is common among Monalisa Dasgupta, Sangeeta Datta, Shila Datta, Uri Chakraborty and Sharmila Maiti? These gutsy young women reflect the minority presence at the 16th Kolkata Film Festival (KFF) this year.

Other than international greats like Liv Ullman and Marta Metzaros, these are the only Indian women whose films have been chosen for screening under different sections of the festival.This hardly skims the surface of women filmmakers in the country and compares very poorly indeed with the quantitative inputs over previous years. Let us take a closer look.

Urmi Chakraborty, who made news with her National Award-winning feature film Hemanter Pakhi (2002) switched over to documentaries after this film.Her documentary Infiltrators (1999) also, bagged a National Award.

Trials of Sri Aurobindo is a 23-minute documentary that scans the great spiritual leader’s ideology, spiritual concepts and philosophy as one way of enlightening and informing the present generation and reminding them about values that are in a state of sad decay among today’s youth and national leaders.

Matangini Hazra is a short fiction film produced by Films Division and directed by veteran documentary maker Sheela Datta. It is named after one of the most memorable freedom fighters in Bengal who, in her ripe age, fell to bullets shot at her by the British police as she led a procession to claim Tamluk Thana in Bengal’s Medinipur district on September 29, 1942.

Noted television and theatre actress Chhanda Chatterjee has played the title role with support from Bibek Adhikari as Ajoy Mukherjee who later became the CM of West Bengal and was Matangini’s political guru.

Sadhan Pramanik, a local headmaster of Tamluk, has played an important role. Datta, who hasscripted the film, said she did her research at the local public library at Tamluk that has a massive collection of books, documents and newspaper clippings of the freedom fight in and around the area.

“Matangini was also called Gandhi Buri (The Old Gandian) because of her dedication to Mahatma Gandhi’s ideology of non-violence,” informed Datta. Datta is all praise for the cooperation she got from the local people and from a few living compatriots of Matangini

Beyond Borders, directed by Sharmila Maiti, is a docu-fiction inspired by the Partition of India. Ghatak’s films explored the condition of the refugees who were forced to migrate into the Eastern state of West Bengal.

The three noted actresses who played the mother, daughter and sister in Ghatak’s Meghe DhakaTara come together in front of the camera in an informal ambience and through their memories of their work in the film, also trace their personal experiences of the Partition.

The second part is fictional. It draws parallels with Meghe Dhaka Tara with a contemporary, urban and modern Kolkata. It is about Nita whose situation is no different from Nita from Ghatak’s film. The over-generous outsourced material notwithstanding, Beyond Partition would have come across as a reasonably good film.

NRI Monalisa Dasgupta‘s Lost Mother is a 85-minute long docu-fiction about the director’s journeying into India to find her own feet and also to create a bridge between her growing son and herself by making a film on a rural-based NGO for women. She fictionalises her personal story for the film calling herself Mithu while she documents the work of the NGO which is factual.

However, her film is very self-indulgent as she does not articulate the voices of the women and the girls the NGO works to help them gain self-sufficiency by keeping their answers off the sound-track of the film. Technically, it is a well-made film but suffers from the usual melodrama with the protagonist’s meeting with her former lover who is a wandering singer.

Sangeeta Datta’s full-length feature film Life Goes On is the most lavishly mounted and commercially viable film among all the five films of Indian women directors. The story is about an upper-class Bengali family settled in London for 40 years. It consists of Sanjoy Banerjee, a doctor, his wife Manju and their three daughters.

The film opens with the sudden death of the mother and the rest of the film shows how the family copes with this loss. The film has mind-blowing music by the director’s son Shoumik and two Tagore songs translated into Hindi by Javed Akhtar. The film has already been premiered at the UK as part of a retrospective of films starring Sharmila Tagore who plays Manju in the film opposite Girish Karnad who portrays her arrogant husband.

Questions that arise here are – why so few women when women are venturing into film-making every other day by droves in our country, in every section – feature, documentary, docu-fiction, the works? Are they wanting in marketing and promotion? Do exhibitors, distributors and festival organizers shy away from women directors? These are questions that need to be introspected upon. Think about them, do.

Original Source: CT


With a bouquet of 127 films from 38 countries, the 16th Kolkata Film Festival, one of the biggest cultural galas of West Bengal, opened here Wednesday.

Ramananda Sengupta, a renowned cinematographer of yesteryears, inaugurated the festival by lighting the ceremonial oil lamp.

'The festival will showcase 127 films from 38 countries. We have tried to reach out to all those countries. In this festival, we have tried to collect all the colours of rainbow,' said West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, while addressing the inaugural function.

The festival will screen films by iconic Japanese director Akira Kurosowa and movies based on stories by Rabindranath Tagore to celebrate his 150th birth anniversary, he added.

'This year we have one more attraction. We will be showing the documentary 'Sikkim' directed by Satyajit Ray,' Bhattacharjee said.

Veteran film director Mrinal Sen and actor Soumitro Chattopadhyay also attended the opening.

A Costa Rican film, 'Of Love and Other Demons', directed by Hilda Hidalgo, kicked off the eight-day carnival, the second oldest film festival of the country.

The film festival will conclude Nov 17.

(IANS)



Long waited kolkata festival has started in city.Get yourself ready for great music, thought-provoking theatre and taste bud-tickling cookery shows till January 31.A opening at the Nicco Park Big Lawns on Saturday has a opportunity for music-lovers. Singer KK will enthral the audience at a programme to be held under the banner of Times of Youth. On Sunday, Runa Laila ( Short note on Runa Laila:Laila sang playback for many movies in Bangladesh and India and, before the independence of Bangladesh, in Pakistan. She is especially known for her songs “Dama Dam Mast Qalandar” and “Mera Babu Chhail Chhabeela Main to Nachoongigi,” which have been covered by numerous artists.) will transport the audience back to the Eighties with her evergreen hits at the same venue.

Later more music and high-voltage drama to come up at the GD Birla Sabhagar(Location:29 Ashutosh Chowdhury Avenue Calcutta -19 kolkata. Tel: 24747449,24615579).

Munawar Masoom and Niyazi Brothers will perform qawalis on January 25, theatre personality Rajesh Gopie will take the stage over the play Out of Bounds’.

Celebrities like Chiranjib Chatterjee, Rajesh Dubey and Manoj Ashwal shall be seen dishing out mouth-watering fare at restaurants like Afraa and Mainland China. Shabana Azmi and Farooque Sheikh will come together to deliver yet another memorable performance of Tumhari Amrita (A Hindi play directed by Feroz Abbas Khan)

Rajasthani Roots will perform fusion music on January 29 at the Tollygunge Club Lawns (Tollygunge Club is an all in one club which is based in a place called Tollygunj or simply Tolly. The club is famous for the variety of facilities which it offers. This club situated at southern Kolkata boasts of a 18-hole golf course, tennis courts, squash courts, billiards and pool, recreation and health club, mini indoor as well as a an Olympic size outdoor swimming pool, Equestrian specialties etc. )

Shubha Mudgal will belt out her fusion numbers in the backdrop of the magnificent Prinsep Ghat on January 30 under the “Dharohar” section of the festival.Baul band Brahmakhyapa will charm the audience at South City Mall(Prince Anwar Shah Rd, Jadavpur, Kolkata, West Bengal, India).

Shabana Azmi and Javed Akhtar shall stage for Kaifi Aur Main (About the Theatrical Show: Kaifi Aur Main:Kaifi Aur Main is a theatrical collage based on the reminiscences of Kaifi and Shaukat. Scripted by Javed Akhtar, the narrative traces Kaifi and Shaukat’s journey of life from childhood in Mijwan; their unusual romance culminating in a marriage that lasted 55 years; life in Bombay in the 50s; the Progressive Writer’s Movement; Kaifi’s social and cultural activism; his path-breaking work as a lyricist in Hindi cinema; his fight against life-threatening illness; and their relentless fight to make Mijwan a place of progress. Kaifi Aur Main is also a celebration of Kaifi Azmi’s poetry and his unparalleled contribution to Indian Cinema. Written by Javed Akhtar. Starring Shabana Azmi & Javed Akhtar. Direction by Ramesh Talwar.) in evening at GD Birla Sabhagar

The festival comes to an end with renowned band Saptakshara setting the stage on fire at the Prinsep Ghat on January 31. Percussionists Vikku Vinayakram and Selvaganesh, Pandit Jasraj, Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia and Swapan Chaudhuri will also perform the same evening.

Original News Source: timesofindia


Wednesday, November 10, 2010

MKC: Durga Puja 2010 Pictures