BEHIND THE SCENES

Festival Director Sridhar Rangayan gives a sneak-peek into KASHISH 2012

From providing a spring board to budding Indian filmmakers to nurturing talent, in its third year KASHISH Mumbai International Queer Film Festival is back with an entertaining mix not just for queer persons, but also their family and friends. “The films will make everyone giggle, laugh, cry, dance and also ponder,” says Festival Director Sridhar Rangayan.

You are back with the third year of the festival? How is it planning out?
When we started KASHISH in 2010, it was based on a simple fact that there was no queer film festival in Mumbai and there needed to be one. But the shape KASHISH took was beyond our own expectations. I mean we dreamt big, but it was bigger. It became the first queer film festival in India to hold a festival in a mainstream theatre, secure Information and Broadcasting Ministry clearance, have a very eminent and supportive jury, was attended by big Bollywood stars and we had more crowd than we could accommodate.

In 2011, we thought we had it all planned, with a 230-seater cinema hall; but we still couldn’t accommodate everyone. The festival got Bigger, Bolder and Queerer, with more people, more celebrities and more media coverage. We even invited and hosted three filmmakers from US, UK and Indonesia. While the first year was primarily supported by organizations like UNAIDS, UNDP and Movies That Matter, the second year saw the collaboration with a corporate sponsor – DKT India.

This year, 2012, is more challenging because the expectations have sky rocketed, not just from the queer community in Mumbai and across India, but also from the queer and filmmaker circuits all over the world. When you are in the spotlight, it is not very easy, you have to perform to the best. And it is all coming together.

We received about 300 film entries, the highest till date and interestingly we are receiving more qualitative films. Which makes the final selection even more tougher. The preview team and the Festival Programmer finally selected 120 films from 30 countries to screen this year. The films will make everyone giggle, laugh, cry, dance and also ponder.

Can you tell us something about the festival tagline “For Everyone”?
One of the primary objectives of KASHISH is to mainstream queer visibility. The festival is as much a platform for queer celebration as it is for non-queer people to come and watch films on queer subjects.

One of the constant questions that we still get is – who are these gay and lesbian people we hear a lot in the media these days, what do they look like, what do they do? Are they interested only in sex, are they only activists? The films at KASHISH answer many of these questions – that gay & lesbian persons are just like any another human being, as ‘normal’ as anyone living in your own house or working in your own office; they have the same anxiety, happiness, hope, aspirations, dreams as anyone else. They are definitely not from Mars or Venus or an alien planet.

The KASHISH audience feedback survey yielded very interesting data. In 2010, 27% identified themselves as non-queer and this figure rose to 34% in 2011. In 2012 we hope to make it an equally participative event for both queer and non-queer persons with the theme ‘For Everyone’.

With this theme, we are inviting parents, friends, colleagues, classmates of queer persons to come to the festival. We have also made a special effort to program films and have panel discussions that not only deal with gay, lesbian, transgender themes, but also those that relate to families and friends of queer people.

Is any international filmmaker attending the festival?
Last year we invited and hosted Q. Allan Brocka from USA, Rikki Beadle-Blair from UK and John Badalu from Indonesia. This year KASHISH is privileged to host well know American filmmaker Rob Williams whose films, like Make The Yuletide Gay, has already been seen in Mumbai and have proved to be extremely popular.

Rob Williams is regarded as one of the most prolific gay filmmakers. He and his partner Rodney (a screenwriter and co-producer) have made evergreen festival hits dealing with the politics of human relationships, pepped up with an attractive and talented cast and interesting scripts.

KASHISH 2012 showcases his three features, from his debut feature Long Term Relationship to his later productions, Make The Yuletide Gay and Role/ Play. A short film written by him – Regrets, is also screening in the short film package, Crossed Paths.

Also, very interestingly we may have filmmakers from Australia, USA, Thailand and UK joining us on their accord, because they just want to be part of KASHISH! There will also be more than two dozen Indian filmmakers, not just from Mumbai, but also from Bangalore, Chennai, New Delhi and other cities making their way to KASHISH to present their films.

What will be different at this year”s festival?
Debut films! This year we will be showing a record 40 film from first time filmmakers, both from India and all over the world. Two feature films by debutant directors deal with issues of (in)compatibility in a gay relationship in two different ways – while Men To Kiss (Germany) about a earnest banker and his bubbly flamboyant lover is a rom com, The Last Round (Chile/Argentina) about a successful macho boxer and a quiet shy kitchen assistant is an extremely sensitive drama.

A film that pushes the boundaries of queer culture is Jake Yugna’s multiple award winning film Open (USA), a visually striking and emotionally tender tableau of humanity’s progress at the dawn of the new millennium, where a pandrogynous couple are undergoing surgeries to become unified as one being. Two documentary features Austin Unbound (USA) about a deaf mute female-to-male transgender and Rites of Passage (USA/India) about a Indian Muslim woman in USA going through sex reassignment surgery brings about harsh realities for transgenders into sharp focus.

The debut short films are more diverse where the characters, the settings and the unexpected twists in the plot make you sit up and giggle, laugh or cry – from funny fleeting encounters in a laundromat (No Clothes), in a park (Your Warmth) or a tourist spot (Cylicity); to poignant dramatic encounters (Silences and Stay) or even to a terrorist encounter in Manhunt.

First time short filmmakers have been inventive even with form – like an advertisement for electronic gadget that provides pleasure (Ms.Thing), cyber love (Plug & Play), and super-funny musicals (Handyman and Ketheron”s Bucket-Mending & Hymen Emporium). Shorts make KASHISH interesting, exciting and innovative.

What is your aim for Kashish this year?
KASHISH seems to be emerging as a springboard for new talent and the international film community seems to have their eyes riveted on our festival to discover new directors and new films!

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