The second edition of the Transmissions ’13: A Festival of Independent Cinema organised by the Lightcube Film Society will be held in Sri Aurobindo Centre for Arts and Communication, New Delhi from November 14-18, 2013.
The festival will showcase experimental films, short films, feature films and student films. The festival will also host panel discussions, video sessions, lectures, post-film discussions. Film literature, film criticism magazines, posters will also be up for sale during the festival.
Some of the films to be screened are 23 Winters by Rajesh Jala, City of Photos by Nishtha Jain, Chitrasutram by Vipin Vijay, Riyaaz by Gurvinder Singh and Ekti Naadir Naam by Anup Singh.
The pass to the festival will cost Rs 500 for general public and Rs 300 for students. Buy tickets from here. For more details call at 7838340196 or 9910161947 or write to lightcubefilmsociety@gmail.com / anuj.malhotra@lightcube.in
Schedule:
14th November 2013
4:30 Pm – 5 Pm: Opening
6:30 Pm: 23 Winters (2013)
Dir.
The festival will showcase experimental films, short films, feature films and student films. The festival will also host panel discussions, video sessions, lectures, post-film discussions. Film literature, film criticism magazines, posters will also be up for sale during the festival.
Some of the films to be screened are 23 Winters by Rajesh Jala, City of Photos by Nishtha Jain, Chitrasutram by Vipin Vijay, Riyaaz by Gurvinder Singh and Ekti Naadir Naam by Anup Singh.
The pass to the festival will cost Rs 500 for general public and Rs 300 for students. Buy tickets from here. For more details call at 7838340196 or 9910161947 or write to lightcubefilmsociety@gmail.com / anuj.malhotra@lightcube.in
Schedule:
14th November 2013
4:30 Pm – 5 Pm: Opening
6:30 Pm: 23 Winters (2013)
Dir.
- 11/11/2013
- by NewsDesk
- DearCinema.com
The 'Imaging Asia' Festival organized by Netpac – Cii will be held in New Delhi from 18 - 22 August 2010. Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema (Netpac) India and Confederation of Indian Industry (Cii) are organizing this five-day International Conference and a series of cinema-related events in New Delhi to broaden the scope and vision of Asian Cinema.
Symposia, screenings, workshops, cultural events will mark this event during which 30 films will be screened across multiple venues in Delhi. With a Girl of Black Soil directed by Jeon Soo-ii, Korea (90 mins.) will open the festival.
50 plus film personalities from Asian countries will attend the festival. Among them will be luminaries like Charles Musser, head of the film department at Yale University; Michel Reilhac head of Arte Cinema, France; distinguished film makers like Xie Fei from China, Nick Deocampo from Manila, Jocelyn Saab from Lebanon, Garin Nugroho from Indonesia; festival directors, film producers, scholars like Jeannette Paulson Hereniko,...
Symposia, screenings, workshops, cultural events will mark this event during which 30 films will be screened across multiple venues in Delhi. With a Girl of Black Soil directed by Jeon Soo-ii, Korea (90 mins.) will open the festival.
50 plus film personalities from Asian countries will attend the festival. Among them will be luminaries like Charles Musser, head of the film department at Yale University; Michel Reilhac head of Arte Cinema, France; distinguished film makers like Xie Fei from China, Nick Deocampo from Manila, Jocelyn Saab from Lebanon, Garin Nugroho from Indonesia; festival directors, film producers, scholars like Jeannette Paulson Hereniko,...
- 5/31/2010
- by NewsDesk
- DearCinema.com
NEW DELHI -- The sophomore edition of the India International Women's Film Festival opened Monday in New Delhi and will conclude Dec. 18.
IIWFF director Shyamali Banerjee said this year's festival will see 130 films participating from 30 countries "while Israel is the focus country, with 14 films." The IIWFF was launched last year in Delhi by Kolkata-based organization Kolkata Film & Media Studies.
This year's festival opened with acclaimed Iranian film Yek Shab (One Night) by director Niki Karimi, which revolves around a young girl wandering the streets of Tehran. Lebanese director Jocelyn Saab's Kiss Me Not on the Eyes -- about a belly dancer struggling against sexual repression -- will close the festival.
IIWFF is organized in association with the ministry of Information and Broadcasting and the Indian government's Directorate of Film Festivals. The fest will see 20 films compete in the world cinema section while 29 films will screen in the noncompetitive section including Hungary's Just Sex and Nothing Else by Krisztina Goda.
IIWFF director Shyamali Banerjee said this year's festival will see 130 films participating from 30 countries "while Israel is the focus country, with 14 films." The IIWFF was launched last year in Delhi by Kolkata-based organization Kolkata Film & Media Studies.
This year's festival opened with acclaimed Iranian film Yek Shab (One Night) by director Niki Karimi, which revolves around a young girl wandering the streets of Tehran. Lebanese director Jocelyn Saab's Kiss Me Not on the Eyes -- about a belly dancer struggling against sexual repression -- will close the festival.
IIWFF is organized in association with the ministry of Information and Broadcasting and the Indian government's Directorate of Film Festivals. The fest will see 20 films compete in the world cinema section while 29 films will screen in the noncompetitive section including Hungary's Just Sex and Nothing Else by Krisztina Goda.
- 12/12/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
NEW DELHI -- The sophomore edition of the India International Women's Film Festival opened Monday in New Delhi and will conclude Dec. 18.
IIWFF director Shyamali Banerjee said this year's festival will see 130 films participating from 30 countries "while Israel is the focus country, with 14 films." The IIWFF was launched last year in Delhi by Kolkata-based organization Kolkata Film & Media Studies.
This year's festival opened with acclaimed Iranian film Yek Shab (One Night) by director Niki Karimi, which revolves around a young girl wandering the streets of Tehran. Lebanese director Jocelyn Saab's Kiss Me Not on the Eyes -- about a belly dancer struggling against sexual repression -- will close the festival.
IIWFF is organized in association with the ministry of Information and Broadcasting and the Indian government's Directorate of Film Festivals. The fest will see 20 films compete in the world cinema section while 29 films will screen in the noncompetitive section including Hungary's Just Sex and Nothing Else by Krisztina Goda.
IIWFF director Shyamali Banerjee said this year's festival will see 130 films participating from 30 countries "while Israel is the focus country, with 14 films." The IIWFF was launched last year in Delhi by Kolkata-based organization Kolkata Film & Media Studies.
This year's festival opened with acclaimed Iranian film Yek Shab (One Night) by director Niki Karimi, which revolves around a young girl wandering the streets of Tehran. Lebanese director Jocelyn Saab's Kiss Me Not on the Eyes -- about a belly dancer struggling against sexual repression -- will close the festival.
IIWFF is organized in association with the ministry of Information and Broadcasting and the Indian government's Directorate of Film Festivals. The fest will see 20 films compete in the world cinema section while 29 films will screen in the noncompetitive section including Hungary's Just Sex and Nothing Else by Krisztina Goda.
- 12/11/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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