68 Pages
68 Pages | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sridhar Rangayan |
Produced by | Humsafar Trust |
Written by | Sridhar Rangayan, Vivek Anand |
Starring |
Moulli Ganguly Joy Sengupta Jayati Bhatia Zafar Karachiwala Uday Sonawane |
Distributed by | Solaris Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 92 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
68 Pages is a 2007 Indian film about an HIV/AIDS counselor and five of her clients who are from marginalized communities. The film is directed by Sridhar Rangayan and produced by Humsafar Trust in association with Solaris Pictures. It had its world premiere at the International Film Festival of Kerala and screened at several international film festivals. It won the Silver Remi award at WorldFest Houston International Film Festival 2008, USA.[1] The film was also screened in the Pink Ribbon Express, a National AIDS Control Organisation initiative.
The film weaves together five Mumbai-based short stories about people living with AIDS from some of the marginalised sections of society.
Overview
A transsexual bar dancer, a sex worker, a gay couple tell their stories of pain, trauma, happiness and hope. 68 Pages reveals how society stigmatizes and shuns those who have HIV/AIDS, or even those who are merely different.
The film was produced with support from Department for International Development (DFID), UK. It was made as an advocacy effort to support the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) in National AIDS Control Programme, Phase III. This initiative decided that the female sex workers, intravenous drug users, homosexuals and transgender people will be considered core groups, and HIV projects will start at a rapid pace in the next five years to serve them. During that period the film is scheduled to screen throughout the country in an attempt to change people's attitudes about those living with HIV. The film has also been mandatory resource material for all counselor training programmes in India by NACO.
Plot
Professional ethics demand that Mansi, a young counselor, maintain confidentiality, remain objective and avoid emotional attachment with her clients. As a sensitive person, she finds it difficult to remain unaffected. Her true feelings are reflected in 68 pages of her personal diary.
Her writing tells the stories of Paayal, a commercial sex worker; Nishit, an intravenous drug user; Kiran, a gay man; and Umrao, a transsexual bar dancer, who are marginalized and suffer discrimination both before and after becoming infected with HIV.
Cast
- Mauli Ganguly as Mansi
- Joy Sengupta as Kiran
- Jayati Bhatia as Paayal
- Zafar Karachiwala as Nishit
- Uday Sonawane as Umesh / Umra
- Darpan Patel as Random Guy
- Dilnaz Irani as Neha
Festivals
- International Film Festival of Kerala, India (December 2007)[2]
- Pune International Film Festival, India (January 2008)[3]
- Montage International, Kerala, India (February 2008)[4]
- Worldfest, Houston, USA (April 2008)–Winner: Silver Remi Award [1]
- Bollywood & Beyond, Germany (July 2008)[5][6]
- Nigah Queerfest, New Delhi, India [7]
- Q! Film Festival, Indonesia [8]
- Tasveer–Seattle Independent Film Festival (September 2008) [9]
- A Million Different Loves, Poland (October 2008)
- Siddharth Gautam Film Festival, Bhubaneshwar, India (December 2008)
- Translations - Seattle Transgender Film Festival, USA (May 2009)[10]
Team
- Sridhar Rangayan is a Bombay-based director/writer. In 2006, he was awarded the South Asian & Foreign Achievers Award which honours 50 achievers from around the world who have made an outstanding contribution in the global mainstream media. Sridhar is a member of several LGBT and HIV/AIDS community organizations in India.
- The Humsafar Trust, producer. It has recently produced "Bridges of Hope," a 28-minute educational film on issues of homosexuality and transgender for health care providers and State AIDS Control Societies in India.
- Solaris Pictures, associate producer/distributor: Solaris Pictures is an Indian film production company that typically makes films on issues such as homosexuality and gay rights. Previous productions include The Pink Mirror, which won two Best Film awards and was screened at over 72 festivals; and 68 Pages, which won the Silver Remi award at the 2008 WorldFest Houston.
References
- 1 2 "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 February 2009. Retrieved 2013-12-03., Page 10, Line 5
- ↑ "::IFFK 2009::". Iffk.keralafilm.com. 2010-12-17. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "16.07.2008 - 20.07.2008 Bollywood and beyond ► Stuttgart ◄ - INDIEN - Chancen in D-A-CH". XING. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Translations". Three Dollar Bill Cinema. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
External links
- Official website
- Official site
- 68 Pages on IMDb
- "Not Just another AIDS movie - Maker of Gulabi Aaina ready with 68 Pages", Indian Express
- " '68 Pages' portraying life, love & hope", The Times of India
- "Queer Crash", Telegraph
- "Breaking Free", Telegraph
- "Documentary on AIDS counselor", The Times of India