Phulsiri | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ngima Gelu Lama |
Screenplay by | Ngima Gelu Lama |
Produced by | Ngima Gelu Lama, Tenjee Lama, Furba Lama, Sange Sherpa |
Starring | Bimala Gurung, Bhim Bahadur Gurung, Ram Sharan Upreti |
Cinematography | Ali Rasheed & Prajwal Bhattarai |
Edited by | Ngima Gelu Lama |
Music by | Sangam Panta, Pushpa Palanchoke |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Ama Dablam Pictures |
Country | Nepal |
Languages | Gurung Nepali |
Phulsiri is a 2016 Gurung Language Nepali fiction film written, produced and directed by Ngima Gelu Lama. [1] The film tells a deceptively simple account of tramautized schoolgirl's quest to her shoes, since, her school is reopening one and half months after the devastating Gorkha earthquake. [2] The film is the first fiction film to be filmed in Gorkha, the epicentre of Nepal earthquake 2015 after the earthquake. [3] [4] [1] [5] The film won Best Children Film in Nepal Culture international Film Festival. [6]
One and a half months after the devastating earthquake reduced an entire village to rubble, and a ten-year-old girl longs for normality. News reaches her that school will re-open in a day and she is understandably overjoyed, but there is a hitch: she must first locate her shoes --- mandatory under new school rules --- in the debris that was once her home. [5] [7]
In the Gurung village of Ghyachchok, almost all the houses have collapsed. Inside the crumbling walls of a roofless house, a hangman's knot hangs from a beam.
Ram Sir, the village school teacher, has just arrived after several weeks in his own village in Sindupalanchok, leaving his wife and daughter in a makeshift shelter made of zinc sheet.
The government has announced that all educational institutions must re-open, but Ram is worried about the monsoon and the increased threat of landslides in his own village. Moreover, mobile network is poor in Ghyachchowk and the lack of news about his family adds to the teacher's woes.
Ten-year-old Phulsiri is attending the funeral of a Gurkha soldier, who served in the Indian army and appears to have taken his own life after he lost all the members of his family to the earthquake. Along the way, Phulsiri meets her classmate Prabal and learns from him that school is re-opening the very next day. Phulsiri and her father Amber, who broke his leg in an aftershock, have been living in temporary shelter after the earthquake destroyed their home.
Like most people of the village, Phulsiri has been longing for normalcy. The news about her school, understandably, leaves her in high spirits.
But the school has strict rules about the school uniform, including shoes, and hers are still buried under the rubble of her home. Phulsiri remembers her teacher Ram, only a day before the earthquake, expressly warning her not to show up without shoes.
Phulsiri already has her school shirt and frock, and she is impatient to look for her shoes. But her continuous pleading to her father to allow her to leave the funeral is in vain. Moreover, he tells her that even if her shoes survived the earthquake, they would not have survived the subsequent rains.
Even the conclusion of the funeral doesn't mean freedom for Phulsiri to look for her shoes in peace. New obstacles materialize and the process of overcoming them is slow and painful.
Phulsiri learns that the hard way that surviving an earthquake isn't enough as the film painstakingly chronicles her struggles and her coping strategies in the wake of the worst natural disaster in the living memory of her community. [5]
Prashant Tamang is an Indian singer and film actor based in Kathmandu. He was the winner of Indian Idol Season 3 in 2007.
The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) is a registered unrecognized political party, that campaigns for the creation of a separate state Gorkhaland within India, out of districts in the north of West Bengal. The party was launched on 7 October 2007. The faction led by Binay Tamang, which was created out of Gorkha Janmukti Morcha in 2017, merged into Gurung's GJM in 2021 after Tamang's resignation, following which he joined Trinamool Congress.
Shiva Shankar Manandhar was a singer, music composer of Nepali songs and the chief actor in the first Nepali movie, Aama. For nearly a half century beginning from 1950 to late 1990, his name has probably been mentioned more often in books, journals, lectures and conversations about Nepalese music than any other musicians.
Shree Amber Gurung was a Nepalese composer, singer, and lyricist. He composed Nepal's national anthem, "Sayaun Thunga Phulka".
Gunjanagar is a town in Bharatpur, Chitwan in Bagmati Province of southern Nepal. The former Gunjanagar VDC and Saradanagar VDC were merged on 18 May 2014 to form new Chitrawan Municipality, which later was merged with Bharatpur. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 11,076 people living in 2025 individual households.
Gurung Shamanism is arguably one of the oldest religions in Nepal. It describes the traditional shamanistic religion of the Gurung people of Nepal. There are three priests within the Gurungs which are Pachyu, Khlepree and Bonpo Lama. Tamus do not have a written script; nowadays they use the Devanagari script. However, the Tamus have created their own script called 'Khema Script' which is taught in Rupandehi, Nepal, and is widely taught even in overseas countries like Sikkim, India. The pronunciation of the word 'Pachyu' and 'Khlepree' are often different from one village to another. Pachyu are sometimes referred to as 'Poju or Pajyu' and Khlepree is also known as 'Lhori or Ghyabri'. Bonpo Lamais the proper term for a Gurung Lama. The "Pachyu" is understood to be the first priest amongst the three priests followed by Khlepree and lastly the Bonpo Lam. Pachyu, Khlepree and Bonpo Lams' recite chants of ancient legends and myths. These sacred myths and legends within the Pe are historical events and stories which dates back to as early as the creation of Earth to stories that have occurred within the Gurung societies as they are one of the indigenous people of Nepal.
Aruna Lama was an Indian-born Nepali language singer from Darjeeling. She is popularly known as 'Nightingale of the Hills'. She sang hundreds of Nepali songs, including some for Nepali film, and left an indelible mark as one of the best singers in Nepali music.
Indian Gorkhas, also known as Nepali Indians, are an Indian ethno-cultural group who speak Nepali as a common language. They inhabit mainly the states of Sikkim, West Bengal, Northeast India and Uttarakhand, including their diaspora elsewhere in India and abroad. The modern term "Indian Gorkha" is used to differentiate the Nepali language Speaking Indians from Nepalis.
Shanti Thatal is an Indian music composer and singer,, known for her works in Nepali film industry. She has more than 200 songs to her credit, including music for several Nepali films. She is the first female music composer of the Nepali film industry.
The National Film Awards is the most prominent and prestigious award of Nepali cinema. The first National Film Award was held in 2005, in the presence of His Majesty's King Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah. The event is held at the residence of the president of Nepal and the president gives the awards to the winners in various categories. It is yearly organised by Film Development Board, Nepal.
Toya Gurung is a Nepali writer and poet. She served as the first female executive member of the Royal Nepal Academy. She headed the poetry department of Nepal Academy from 1994 to 2004. She has published multiple poetry collections such as Dhopee and Toya Gurungka Lama Kavita and a short story collection called Kusum. He poems have also been translated in Hindi and English.
Dinesh Subba (Limbu) (Nepali: दिनेश सुब्बा) is a composer, singer and lyricist of Nepali music.
The April 2015 Nepal earthquake killed 8,962 people and injured 21,952 across the countries of Nepal, India, China and Bangladesh. It occurred at on Saturday 25 April 2015, with a magnitude of 7.8Mw or 8.1Ms and a maximum Mercalli Intensity of X (Extreme). Its epicenter was east of Gorkha District at Barpak, Gorkha, roughly 85 km (53 mi) northwest of central Kathmandu, and its hypocenter was at a depth of approximately 8.2 km (5.1 mi). It was the worst natural disaster to strike Nepal since the 1934 Nepal–India earthquake. The ground motion recorded in Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, was of low frequency, which, along with its occurrence at an hour when many people in rural areas were working outdoors, decreased the loss of human lives.
Ram Shah was a king of the Gorkha Kingdom. He was the son of Gorkha king Purna Shah and brother of Chatra Shah. He acceded to the throne c. 1606 after his brother's death. He expanded his kingdom as far as the Trishuli River to the east, the Marshyangdi to the west, the Rasuwa to the north, and the Mahabharat Range to the west.
The Nepal humanitarian crisis (2015-2017) developed owing to a lack of action following the April 2015 Nepal earthquake and its aftershocks. It was compounded by political factors as a result of the 2015 Nepal blockade. Victims of the earthquakes were still living in flimsy, temporary shelters more than a year after the initial devastation. The governmental National Reconstruction Authority had not devised relocation plans for these people as recently as July 2016. In Sindhupalchok District, the region that had suffered the worst devastation, the humanitarian situation was a little better towards the end of 2016 than it had been in 2015.
Lhakpa Sherpa is a Nepalese Sherpa mountain climber. She has climbed Mount Everest ten times, the most by any woman in the world. Her record-breaking tenth climb was on May 12, 2022, which she financed via a crowd-funding campaign. In 2000, she became the first Nepali woman to climb and descend Everest successfully. In 2016, she was listed as one of BBC's 100 Women.
Ghyachchok is a Gurung Village of Gorkha District, western region of Nepal. The estimated terrain elevation above sea level is 1630 metres. The whole village was turned into rubble by the Nepal earthquake of 2015. The earthquake had the nearby Daraudi River the epicentre.
The Gorkha Palace, located in the Gorkha district of Nepal, is a historic landmark built in the 16th century by Ram Shah. The palace is built on top of a hill at an altitude of about 1,000 meters (3,300 ft). This palace is an hour walk from the downtown Gorkha bazaar.
Sita cave is located at Sulikot Gaupalika, Swara in Gorkha district of Nepal at the elevation of 1165 m above the sea level. It spreads from Surpani, Auawang, Aruchanaute to Arughat. The cave is about 2 feet wide and 40 feet high. The total length is unknown due to inaccessibility, but is believed to be longest in Nepal.
Kabaddi 4: The Final Match is a 2022 Nepali romantic comedy film, directed by Ram Babu Gurung. The film, which is the fourth and final film in the Kabaddi franchise, is produced by Mani Ram Pokharel, Om Chand Rauniyar and Sushma Gurung under the banner of Baasuri Films. The leading roles are played by Dayahang Rai, Saugat Malla, Miruna Magar, Buddhi Tamang and Bijay Baral.