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Screen
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Published: Volume 15, Issue 9, September, 2007
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Myriad movies, passionate actors and an exciting art auction. Sage Mehta gets a taste of Asian and Arab cinema at the Osian’s Cinefan Film Festival in New Delhi
The first movie I see, on his recommendation is Driving to Zigzigland. It is about a struggling Palestinian actor and taxi driver, Bashar, living in Los Angeles. After the film, while checking my email at a computer cluster, I notice the man sitting next to me looks surprisingly familiar. A moment later, I realise he is the lead actor of the movie I had just seen. “Excuse me,” I ask him politely, “Were you in Zigzagland?” “Zigzigland,” he corrects me. Embarrassed, I quickly ask him his name. “Bashar,” he says, the same as the character in the film. Coincidence? No, it turns out that the entire story is autobiographical. His wife, who also plays his girlfriend in the film, is sitting next to him and joins the conversation. She had written the script and directed the film.
I meet the Bengali actresses, Rituparna Sengupta and Raima Sen, at the VIP Lounge. They are here for the screening of their film, Anuranan: The Resonance, which explores the relationship of two couples – Rahul-Nandita (Rahul Bose and Rituparna Sengupta) and Amit-Preeti (Rajat Kapoor and Raima Sen). Sen describes her experience while portraying Preeti as “difficult since the character was older, more mature and married” as opposed to her real self. Did playing the more mature woman have any effect on her? “No,” she says. Once the film is done, I completely disengage from the character.” Day 3 That same evening, I head to Taj Mansingh for the first section of the Osian’s auction. By invitation only, the room is filled with bidders. They raise their paddles when the auctioneer calls the price. Then, he looks to the phones and books to see if the floor is matched. Many climb steeply past their listed prices, but the majority seem to fall within estimates. Back in Mumbai, I hear from a gallery director that the sales were disappointing.
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