Mira Nair invoked a favourite mantra once again last week at I View Film, which is emerging as a significant film festival in New York. She asked, if we don't tell our own stories, who will?
She was complimenting filmmakers, including Zoya Akhtar whose Luck by Chance was one of the entries at the event. The film was chosen because it showed an aspiring actress (Konkona Sen Sharma) trying to hold her own ground in a male dominated film industry and who decides to empower herself in the face of the infidelity of her lover (Farhan Akhtar), who has suddenly become a movie star. It deals with gender inequity, the organisers of the festival said.
Nair's TV film My Own Country -- based on a bestseller by Abraham Verghese and dealing with an Indian doctor's interactions with AIDS-stricken patients in a Tennessee town in 1985 -- was also featured at the three-day event which ended on Sunday.
She does not set out to make political films, Nair said, but she has always been drawn to the subjects about marginalised people, be it the street children in Salaam Bombay! or immigrant parents (The Namesake). Whatever the subject be, she asserted, she made sure the film came from her heart. Some people have called her films 'populist,' and it was alright with her, as she wanted her work to reach people of various temperaments.
Nair will readily confess that she has little time on her hands these days as she is preparing her much awaited biopic Amelia for a late October release.
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