FILM CLUB SCREENING "Vaastu Hara" by G. Aravindan to Mark 60 yrs. of India's Freedom at India Habitat Centre - 13th August, 2007
- Time : 6:45 pm
- Language : Malayalam
- Year : 1990
- Duration : 103mins
- Movie Synopsis : ‘Vaastu Hara’
- Aravindan’s last film is based on a story by the author of Chidambaram (1985). Making a virtually unprecedented, and deeply moving, departure from a cinematic tradition that has always emphasised regional identity, the film is set in Calcutta. The story tells of Venu (Mohanlal), a Malayali officer in the rehabilitation ministry of the Andaman Islands, who selects candidates for a refugee aid programme enabling them to settle in the islands with state assistance. He meets an old Bengali widow (Mitra) who is not eligible for the programme, but he discovers that she is the abandoned wife of his uncle from Kerala. Re-establishing family links, he also befriends her hostile daughter (Gupta) and her son, a political refugee. Their brief acquaintance ends at a shipyard where he hoards his emigrant refugees on deck and leaves for the islands once more. From its remarkable opening sequence, as the camera tracks through abandoned refugee shelters built during the 1943 famine and Partition, with a voice-over in Malayalam recapitulating that tragic history and the Kerala peoples’ commitment to the plight of the Bengalis, Aravindan makes clear his intention to transcend a localised and increasingly cynical view (cf. Chidambaram and Oridathu, 1986) and to move towards something like a national perspective on the contemporary. In the process he also abandons much of his early pictorialism in favour of e.g. the remarkable shots of Mohanlal walking through the crowded Calcutta streets, or standing on the terrace of his cheap hotel, and especially in the last sequence aboard an ancient and grossly overcrowded ship overrun with impoverished refugees, as Venu tries to bring some order into the chaos. Several well-entrenched naturalist conventions, however, prevent a further formal elaboration of the style, such as the dialogue problems (Mohanlal speaks in Malayalam and English, Neelanjana Mitra in Bengali, highly accented Malayalam and English, and Neena Gupta only in English), but the acting is uniformly in tune with Joseph’s deliberately rough-edged camera.
- Director : G. Aravindan.
- Entry : Limited passes available at the Programme desk for non Habitat Film Club members from Aug 1.
- Place : India Habitat Centre ( IHC ), Lodhi Road, New Delhi-110003
- Parking : Gate No. 3 ( Cars ), Gate No. 2 ( Bikes & Bicycles )
- Click here for more events at India Habitat Centre
- Click here to Know More About India Habitat Centre
- Upcoming Screenings to mark 60 years of India's Independence :
- FILM CLUB SCREENING "Iqbal" & "Shatranj Ke Khiladi" to Mark 60 yrs. of India's Freedom at India Habitat Centre - 15th August, 2007
- Related Events : Click here for more Movies
FILM CLUB SCREENING "Vaastu Hara" by G. Aravindan to Mark 60 yrs. of India's Freedom at India Habitat Centre - 13th August, 2007
Reviewed by rohit malik
on
Monday, August 13, 2007
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