Khanna said his fil had gone to more than 20 film festivals around the world but the first confirmation for his movie came from NYIFF.
“The story is a piece of my heart, it may be technically weak, financially bankrupt but it is emotionally overwhelming,” he said, adding that India’s regional stories are “more powerful” and tell about the amazing resilience of its people.
The festival will showcase 30 feature-length films, including three documentaries, as well as bring to the New York audience 30 shorts, 19 regional films, including Bengali, Assamese, Marathi, Tamil, Malyalam cinema, Festival Director Aseem Chhabra said.
“There will be a strong representation of regional cinema from India, including a Ladakhi-Kashmiri children’s film,” Chhabra said.
Consul General of India in New York Sandeep Chakravorty said the strong regional content of the film festival was very important.
“This is what India is all about. Unfortunately, the image abroad is Bollywood all the time but Indian cinema is more than Bollywood. It is regional films, documentary films, film by very sensitive and intelligent people,” Chakravorty said.
He stressed that India lived in its regions and is an amalgamation of cultures.
“We will be mistaken if we think Indian cinema is only Bollywood, it’s not. Some of the finest work in Indian cinema is happening outside of Bollywood, it’s important to bring that forward,” Chakravorty said.
IAAC Vice Chairman Rakesh Kaul said the arts organisation wanted the festival to bring diversity of India to the New York audience, who will get to see the magnificence of India through the festival’s line-up.
Kaul said they have ensured that the content of the films selected for the festival is “bold stories that courageous directors stake themselves on”.
“You will see how bold these stories are, what courage the directors display because these stories will move you in a manner like nothing that you have experienced in the multiplexes you go to see Bollywood or Hollywood fare,” Kaul said.
Through the festival, the audience will see that the profound strength of India is its imagination, he said.
The film festival, now in its 19th year, has been a popular annual fixture on the New York arts calendar, thanks to the pioneering work done by Aroon Shivdasani, who was the Executive and Artistic Director of Indo-American Arts Council and retired last year after leading the organisation for two decades.
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