Cinema is most powerful
mass media that promotes Rapid Diffusion of Ideas: I&B Minister
S.
P. Balasubrahmanyam conferred Centenary Award for
Indian Film Personality of the Year 2016
Im Kwon Taek
conferred Lifetime Achievement Award
47th
International Film Festival of India inaugurated at Goa
Shri
M. Venkaiah Naidu, Minister of Information & Broadcasting has said that
cinema should reflect larger social concerns besides focusing on entertainment
only. It should focus on promoting national consciousness and social
integration as cinema is religion without boundaries. Films should illuminate
the mind and heart, engaging audience both intellectually and emotionally. It
should expose the people to ideas, problems and developments happening in the
society and make them think critically and look for alternate solutions and
actions. In a country like India, with its several social problems, a case
could be made for social realism in our films. Cinema was a work of art and there
has to be a certain ‘take away’ for the audience who gave over two hours of
their valuable time for watching a film. The Minister said this while
delivering his address at the inaugural ceremony of the 47th edition of
International Film Festival of India which began in Goa today.
Elaborating further about the role of cinema and
social change, Shri Naidu
said that demonetization scheme of the Government was a national project of
behavioral change of an unprecedented scale and urged the film makers to
analyze and present the consequences of this change to the people in a creative
manner. He further mentioned about 1946 movie ‘Vijayalakshmi’
produced and directed by late Shri B.R.Pantulu which was based on the first demonetization in
our country. The movie had brilliantly presented the negative role of money
sharks working for their own interest at the cost of the common man. Shri Naidu said that the
situation today was also similar and hence the Prime Minister for this very
reason had set in motion the current process of change that would bring
benefits to the citizens of the country.

Speaking about the importance of rich content in the
movies, Shri Naidu said
that cinema needed to coexist with reality. It was necessary to pass the test
of ‘2Rs’ - Reason and Reality. Many of the commercial films were crashing
because of lack of creative content. Taking example of the movie ‘Sholay’, he said that movie was a huge success because it
was not formulaic in the strict sense of it though it was a commercial
production. The Minister added that certain relationships and values were so
finely woven into the theme that people across the country owned it up and made
it a landmark film.

Elaborating further, about the role of cinema as a
powerful mass communication medium, the Minister said that Cinema spoke with
the language of universality rising beyond the limitations of social and
geographical boundaries. It promoted rapid diffusion of ideas which manifested
themselves consciously or otherwise in the relaxing environments of cinema
halls or homes, when the audiences were more susceptible.
Speaking on the occasion, Shri
Naidu briefly reflected on the course of evolution of
cinema in India and where it was headed today. From the days of projecting
anecdotes from Hindu mythologies, came the era of social films that began to
portray the situation of contemporary life. He added that movies like Mother
India captured the emotions, then prevailing in the country. The Minister said
that some of the movies in the recent times were both entertaining and
stimulating that did the role of informing, educating and enlightening while
some movies had also propagated the Gandhian way of
living where the humanistic approach to mankind was highlighted.
The Minister also spoke about the Government
initiatives to support the film industry in the form of a single window Film
Facilitation Office in National Film Development Corporation and a National
Film Heritage Mission to restore and digitize film
archives.
Earlier, Shri Naidu also congratulated PV Sindhu
on her stunning success in China Open bringing laurels to the nation.
Honorable Governor of Goa, Smt. Mridula
Sinha, Union Defence
Minister, Shri Manohar Parikkar, Chief Minister of Goa, Shri Laxmikant Parsekar, Mr. Cho Hyun,
Ambassador, Republic of Korea, Secretary I&B, Shri
Ajay Mittal, and Shri Ramesh Sippy were also present on
the occasion

Chief Minister of Goa, Shri Laxmikant
Parsekar in his address said that IFFI provided a
common platform to cinematography of the world. The movie selection at IFFI
reflected the diversity of world cultures.
Also speaking on the
occasion, Secretary I&B, Shri Ajay Mittal said that Films
were one of the most powerful mediums to reach out to society today. IFFI was
one of the most prominent film festivals in India and Asia endeavoring to
encourage and uphold an exceptional film culture in India.
S. P. Balasubrahmanyam,
Award winning and acclaimed singer was conferred the Centenary Award for Indian
Film Personality of the Year 2016 for his contribution to Indian Cinema. He
holds the record in the Guinness Book for singing and recording more than
40,000 songs and has won the National Award six times He was honoured with the Padma Shri (2001) and Padma Bhushan (2011) by the Government of India. This year, Mr Balasubrahmanyam has completed
five decades in the film industry.
Internationally acclaimed Korean Writer
and Director, Im Kwon Taek
(Im Kwa
Teek) was conferred ‘Lifetime Achievement Award’. In
his career span of five decades, he has directed more than 100 films and has
been honoured with a number of awards, including Best
Director Award at Cannes Film Festival, 2002 for his movie Chihwaseon
(chhih-wasaion).
Republic of Korea was the partner
country for IFFI 2016. Shri Ramesh
Sippy, eminent director known for his seminal
contribution Sholay was the Chief Guest for the
opening ceremony.
There would be 15
films from across the globe, including two Indian films from Indian Panorama
section in the International Competition Section. Under the section
‘International Competition’, awards will be given for Best Film, Best Director,
Best Actor – Male, Best Actor – Female and Special Jury Award. This year,
the festival line-up included 26 Asian and 108 Indian Premieres in the
International Cinema section.
The opening film of the festival was the
grand masterpiece, After-Image, a creation of veteran writer and director,
late. Andrzej Wajda (andre wajda).
This movie is a passionate biopic about avant-garde painter Wladyslaw
Strzeminski (Wlady-slaw Strz-aim-inski). The closing film or 47th IFFI would be the
South Korean official entry for the Academy Awards, The Age of Shadows,
directed by Kim Jee Woon.
IFFI 2016 in
collaboration with the International Council for Film, Television and
Audiovisual Communication (ICFT), Paris and UNESCO would also present the
“ICFT- UNESCO Gandhi Medal” to a film, which reflects the ideals of peace,
tolerance and non-violence.
The International Jury for IFFI 2016
Ivan Passer (ivan
passer)- Chairperson (Czech Republic, USA) - internationally
acclaimed Writer and Director, he is a significant figure in the Czech New Wave of
the mid-1960s and collaborated as a writer with legendary filmmaker Milos Forman (Miloš Forman )
in Oscar nominated films, A loves
of a blonde (1965) and Fireman’s blonde (1967). He has received Special Prize for Outstanding Contribution to World
Cinema at Karlovy Vary International Film Festival
Larry Smith - Member (UK) - internationally
acclaimed Cinematographer and Director, best known for his
collaborations with director Nicolas Winding Refn and Stanley Kubrick..
Lordan Zafranovic (lordan zafra-novich) - Member
(Croatia) - internationally
acclaimed Writer and Director. His most important work is the cult film Occupation in 26 Pictures (1978).
Zafranović has been praised as "one of the
great masters of modernism. He started his feature film career by directing
film, Sunday (1969). His documentaries Eyes of Beijing
(2003) and China’s Terracotta Warriors (2003)won awards for best director at the
Belgrade Festival of Documentary and short film. Documentary and experimental
film Symphony of the Heaven City (2004) won the UNESCO Prize
for the best documentary in 2004
Nagesh Kukunoor
- Member (India) - Internationally acclaimed filmmaker from India, Kukunoor is known for his narrative style and distinct
scripts. Hyderabad Blues 1&2, Rockford, Iqbal and
Dor are some of his most acclaimed films.
Leila Kilani (Laila Kilani)
- Member (Morocco) - She is a director and writer, known for Sur La Planche (2011), Tangier, the Burners' Dream (2003), Our Forbidden Places (2008).
IFFI 2016 would also organize a special
tribute section in the memory of Polish filmmaker Andrzej
Wajda (andre wajda) and Iranian filmmaker Abbas
Kiarostami (abbaas kirastomi) , who passed away this year.
The 47th edition
of IFFI would screen three films for specially-abled
children with special audio described technology under the Accessible India
Campaign/ Sugamaya Bharat Abhiyan. This screening would take place in collaboration
with UNESCO and Saksham.
Inspired by the
Government’s Clean India Drive, IFFI 2016 would showcase a special package of
20 award winning short films based on the Swachh Bharat theme. These 20 films were short listed from 4,346
entries and awarded at the ‘Swachh Bharat Film Festival’ organized by National Film
Development Corporation on 2nd October in New Delhi.
At 47th
IFFI, National Film Archive of India has also organized a Multi-Media
Exhibition on the theme ‘Azadi 70 Saal:
Yaad Karo Qurbani’, to commemorate 70 years of India’s Independence
and its depiction through films.
One minute silence was
observed at the start of the IFFI 2016 inaugural ceremony for the people who
lost their lives in the tragic train accident today.
The 47th edition
of the International Film Festival of India would continue up to November 28th,
2016. The film festival besides showcasing films from across the
globe would also bring interactive sessions, workshops and informative classes
from global masters of the art in Direction, Documentary film making, Editing,
Art Direction, Cinematography, VFX & Animation and Action Direction.
CP/GV