Travelling Film South
Asia 2006 Film South Asia
’05
The fifth edition of the festival of South Asian
documentaries, Film South Asia ’05, was
held in Kathmandu from 29 September to 4 October,
2005. Forty-four films were screened, selected
from 190 films submitted. The last two days of
the festival had a special section of 15 films
with the theme “Barrel of the Gun”
to highlight the futility of violence for political
ends in the context of the insurgency in Nepal.
In addition to the
special section the festival was held at a commercial
duplex because of the ever-growing popularity
of the festival and the response of the Kathmandu
audience met our expectations with most of the
screenings running to almost full houses in spite
of the bigger venue. The popularity of the South
Asian documentary is registering a continuous
upward swing.
"Revolution
in Digital – Go Documentary” was the
slogan of FSA ’05 to highlight the possibilities
of the new technology and its democratic potential.
In line with this idea a new category of award
for Best Debut Film was also instituted at this
festival. It is the hope of the organisers that
more and more young people take up documentary
filmmaking as a medium to highlight the issues
that concern South Asia – be it political,
economic, cultural, lifestyle or anything under
the sun.
Travelling Film
South Asia ’06
One reason is the existence of Traveling Film
South Asia, which has over the last eight years
been showcasing the best of the Subcontinent’s
non-fiction output in the region and overseas.
Because of the high quality of the entries shown
at FSA ’05, we are confident that the current
TFSA ’06 will help further consolidate the
audience as well as market for the South Asian
non-fiction film.
The 15 films that
are part of this travelling collection were chosen
from those screened at FSA ’05 with the
help of the festival’s three-member jury,
chaired by the Bangladeshi filmmaker Tareque Masud.
They include four of the award winners at FSA
’05. These fifteen outstanding films will
be travelling all over South Asia and the world,
giving audiences far removed from each other an
opportunity to sample an exciting range of topics
and themes, presentation styles and techniques.
TFSA is a tradition
begun with the first Film South Asia festival,
held in September 1997, after which 15 outstanding
films travelled to 40 venues. The second TFSA,
subsequent to FSA '99, traveled to more than 45
venues. Following on FSA 2001, the third TFSA,
went to 48 venues and TFSA ’04 with a selection
from the fourth edition of the festival went to
51 venues.
We expect
TFSA ’06 to travel to many more cities and
venues within the countries of South Asia, helping
generate understanding and empathy among ourselves.
At the same time, the traveling festival’s
excursion overseas will provide the critical context
required for others to understand us.
The FSA Secretariat encourages organisers and
film enthusiasts in towns and cities large and
small – all over – to consider hosting
TFSA and bringing a taste of this at-once diverse
and unifying package of documentaries to audience
in South Asia and in the world. |