| To Commemorate the Centenary Year of Indian Cinema,NYIFF Announces Its 2012 Line-up of Award-winning Films
 
 (New York, NY—April 17, 2012) Get your tickets now! NYIFF, the longest-running, most prestigious   Indian film festival in the country, announces its 2012 line-up of   films, including the opening night film, centerpiece film, and sidebar   festival. 
 Opening Night Film – Bedabrata Pain’s CHITTAGONG: Set in the turbulence of the 1930s British India, Chittagong  is a true story of a 14-year-old boy, Jhunku, and of his journey to   find where he belongs. For the first time in Indian history, the British   army is defeated by a ragtag army of schoolboys and their teacher,   Masterda. Called a traitor by his peers, and let down by a man he   trusts, Jhunku impulsively joins the movement. As his world is turned   upside down, Jhunku is forced to confront his self-doubts. As the   leaders of the movement are progressively caught or killed, Jhunku   battles against seemingly insurmountable odds to win a victory of his   own. The film is a brilliant, poignant action-drama, made more so by the   fact that it is true. Cast: Manoj Bajpai , Barry John  and Delzad Hiwale . 
 Centerpiece Film – Tribute to the Late Great Dev Anand through HUM DONO RANGEEN: Hum Dono Rangeen was restored and colorized using Legend Film's proprietary colorization   process. The process has consistently been lauded as the highest   quality color conversion technology in the world and has been used   extensively on Hollywood feature films over the past 10 years. Hum Dono Rangeen was one of the latest colorization projects using the technology and it   is considered light years ahead of Mugal e Azam in the quality of its   color, artistry and overall design. The colorization of Hum Dono Rangeen was executed by Jagan Mohan at Goldstone Technologies, a technology   licensee of Legend Films under the collaborative eye of Legend Films   engineers and technicians. It lives as the finest example of Bollywood   colorization that exists today. Sidebar Festival – Shyam Benegal Retrospective followed by a post-screening discussion with director: Mamoo (1994), Sardari Begum  (1996), and Zubeidaa (2001) - the first such programming of   Benegal's trilogy based on scripts by renowned critic, journalist, and filmmaker Khalid Mohamed .  All three films are Mohamed's personal stories about his mother, grandmother, aunt, and grandaunt. Shyam Benegal  (born 14 December 1934, Hyderabad) is a prolific Indian director and screenwriter. With his first four feature films, Ankur (1973), Nishant (1975), Manthan  (1976) and Bhumika  (1977), he created a new genre, which has now come to be called the "middle cinema " in India. He has expressed dislike of the term, preferring his work to be called New or Alternate cinema. He was awarded the Padma Shri  in 1976 and the Padma Bhushan  in 1991. On 8 August 2007, Benegal was awarded the highest award in Indian cinema  for lifetime achievement, the Dadasaheb Phalke Award  for the year 2005. He has won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Hindi  seven times. |