Bhubaneswarfilmfestival

BHIJA MATIRA SWARGA

Set against the backdrop of a remote village in Odisha, the film gradually unravels the hopes, despair, attitudes and motivations of the character, linking their behavior to the social totality of which they are a part. Sakuntala, a widow, is worried about her son Aru, who is in research of a job. She thinks of getting him married as soon he gets a job. Smita, who lives in the same village, has an affair with Aru, she too hopes as soon as Aru gets on appointment, his mother could send a marriage proposal to her parents. Aru learning about Smita’s marriage finalization elsewhere, sends a moving voice mail, in which among other things mentions that perhaps what happened had to happen, but then life won’t stop………….Life

Chha Mana Atha Guntha

“Chha Mana….” adopts a new narrative, structured around two independent segments that develop towards the same intersecting destiny to offer an absolutely unique venture. It presents Ramachandra Mangaraj, the unscrupulous Zamindar, wielding complete reach and total control overall living in Govindpur, his dominion. Champa, his maid, a compulsive flirt, and Govinda, his barber/servant, also live with him. Mangaraj’s wife, the quintessential suffering woman, stands in contrast to him. She performs the role of Mangaraj’s ever present alter-ego, constantly cautioning him against his self destructive misdeeds. On the other extreme it also presents the household of a weaver couple Bhagia & Saria. Their existence depends on a flourishing plot of land, measuring six acres and eight gunths

MAYA MIRIGA

A traditional middle-class family – a school head master, his wife, their four sons and their children- in a small Orissa town. The obviously quiet joint family has tensions within. The head-master realizes the changing moods and forces responsible for pulling every one apart. Maya Miriga which is, by turns, an unfortunate family story told more in sadness than anger, or an incisive critique of contemporary mores and methods. Starkly told, the film, however, relies on a lyrical poignancy, which is never allowed to turn unduly sentimental.