Village Rockstars

Last updated

Village Rockstars
Poster of Village Rockstars.jpg
Official poster
Directed by Rima Das
Written byRima Das
Produced byRima Das
Jaya Das
StarringBhanita Das
Manabendra Das
CinematographyRima Das
Edited byRima Das
Distributed byFlying River Films
Release dates
  • 9 September 2017 (2017-09-09)(TIFF)
  • 28 September 2018 (2018-09-28)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryIndia
Language Assamese

Village Rockstars is a 2017 Indian Assamese language coming-of-age drama film written, edited, co-produced and directed by Rima Das, who is a self-taught filmmaker. [1] The story follows a 10-year-old girl who befriends a group of boys and dreams of becoming a rock star.

Contents

The film premiered at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). More significantly, it received the Best Feature Film ‘Swarna Kamal’ award at the 65th National Film Awards, which were declared in New Delhi on 13 April 2018. [2] Village Rockstars also won awards in three other categories: Best Child Artist, Best Location Sound Recordist and Best Editing. [3] It was selected as India's official entry to the 91st Academy Awards, but it was not nominated for top nine films from a total of 87. [4]

Plot summary

Dhunu is the protagonist amidst a group of real village rock stars. Growing up in hardship, she cherished aspiration of having her own rock band. Her life although engulfed by hostile natural calamities does not bar her from dreaming of owning a real guitar.

Ten-year-old Dhunu (Bhanita Das) lives in Kalardiya village near Chaygaon in Assam, India with her widowed mother (Basanti Das) and elder brother Manabendra (Manabendra Das). While helping her mother sell snacks at a local event, she becomes mesmerized by a band that performs there. The part that is so delightfully hokey: the boys belt out their hits with musical instruments made of styrofoam. She proceeds to copy them, carving a guitar.

Impressionable and tenacious at the same time, Dhunu reads a comic book and decides she wants to form a band playing real instruments. Rupee by rupee, she begins to save for the guitar. She reads an article in a scrap newspaper and decides that positive thinking can make the possession of the guitar materialize. But as floods destroy the family's crops, Dhunu must choose her priorities.

Cast

Production

The film was entirely shot in Das's home village of Kalardiya in Lower Assam, where her family played much of the cast, including her cousin Bhanita Das as the lead role of Dhunu. The film took nearly four years to make. The initial idea for the film was inspired by an event during the post-production of Rima Das's first film, Antardrishti (Man with the Binoculars), when she came across a group of village children playing imaginary instruments to a song on the radio. [5] Rima Das served as the director, producer, writer, editor and cinematographer for Village Rockstars (with assistance from her cousin, Mallika Das), making the film using a Canon 5D camera and one lens. She bought this camera by selling gold jewelry and raising a loan. [6] Speaking on the no-budget nature of the production of the film, Rima Das said, "I shot this film without any crew and cast of the film wasn't trained in acting, so the process to make this film was hard and challenging, but I think it is possible if you have belief in yourself." [7]

Critical reception

Director Rima Das (third from right) with cast and crew of the film at 48th International Film Festival of India, in Panaji, Goa on 21 November 2017 The Director & Producer, Ms. Rima Das and the Cast & Crew of the film 'Village Rockstars' felicitated, during the 48th International Film Festival of India (IFFI-2017), in Panaji, Goa on November 21, 2017.jpg
Director Rima Das (third from right) with cast and crew of the film at 48th International Film Festival of India, in Panaji, Goa on 21 November 2017

Village Rockstars won the Film Critics Circle of India Award for the Best Indian Film of 2017. [8] Jury member Dalton L declared it "a milestone film of sorts", adding, "Village Rockstars epitomises the trials and tribulations, and heralds the coming of age, of a filmmaker, of her protagonist, and of the indie film movement in India". Jury member Priyanka Dasgupta said, "Rima Das’ film is a lyrical montage of life and times in contemporary rural India. It subtly draws attention to complex gender issues – sometimes even subverting the conventional gender norms – without ever getting preachy. Bhanita Das – the pint-sized fiery ball of lovable energy – is endearingly natural. But just when one fears that the film might become schmaltzy, the film-maker takes control. The lens speaks volumes, sometimes conveying more than the dialogues. Such a work by a first-time director holds a lot of promise for Indian cinema". Jury member Premchand called it "a women’s journey into the heart of the matter." Saibal Chatterjee, a founder member of the Society, gave the film a five-star rating, and says in his review, "A masterwork is usually the result of strict adherence to artistic and functional rules. Village Rockstars respects none: it dons a raw, innocent cloak and exudes a degree of purity that deliberate craft can never bestow on a film... The film stands for something that is always under threat: the courage to ignore the reality that life is exceedingly difficult for cinema that is made on the margins of a giant production machinery and recognize that there always are ways out for those who revel in battling the odds, no matter how daunting, and overcoming them." [9]

Maggie Lee says in her review for Variety , "By focusing on tween characters, the picture evokes that freewheeling stage when gender roles are still blurry in the friendships between boys and girls. Then as suddenly as a monsoon, Dhunu’s first period arrives. The rituals held to initiate her into womanhood — making her wear a sari, segregating her from the boys — are seen as attempts to enforce her otherness." [10] Deborah Young in The Hollywood Reporter says, "Village Rockstars’ storytelling is so offhand it borders on documentary. The action follows natural rhythms, the seasons, biology." [11] Hannah Lynn of Pittsburgh City Paper compared the film to The Florida Project in that it is "aimless without being pointless" [12] while Barry Hertz of The Globe and Mail called it "confident and sincere", giving it 3.5 out of 4 stars. [13] Radheyan Simonpillai of NOW gave the film 4 stars and lamented the fact that the film wasn't nominated at the academy awards, writing that he'd take the "stunning, poetic film [...] over Roma (or Cold War , or Capernaum or Never Look Away ) any day." [14]

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 95% based on 19 reviews, with an average rating of 8.2/10. [15]

Home media

The film was also released to Netflix on 20 January 2020. [16]

Awards

AwardDate of ceremony [lower-alpha 1] CategoryRecipientsResultRef.
Academy Award for Best International Feature Film February 24, 2019 Best Foreign Language Film India's official entryNot nominated [17] [18]
National Film Awards April 13, 2018 Best Feature Film Rima Das Won [19]
Best Child Artist Bhanita DasWon
Best Location Sound Recordist Mallika Das Won
Best Editing Rima DasWon
Jio MAMI Film Festival 2017 October 18, 2018 Golden Gateway award for best film in India Gold categoryVillage RockstarsWon [20]
Oxfam Best Film for Gender Equality awardVillage RockstarsWon
Young Critics Choice awardVillage RockstarsWon
Cork Film Festival November 11, 2017 Gradam Spiorad Na Féile / Spirit of the Festival AwardVillage RockstarsWon [21]
Cairo International Film Festival November 21, 2017 Best Artistic Contribution from the International Critic's Week competitionVillage RockstarsWon [22]
Olympia International Film Festival for Children & Young people26 November 2017Best ActressBhanita DasWon [23]
Best DirectorRima DasWon [23]
Special Jury prizeVillage RockstarsWon [23]
Smile International Film Festival for Children & Youth 17 December 2017Best Children's FilmVillage RockstarsWon [24]
Best ActorBhanita DasWon [24]
Cine Junior Film Festival, France 20181 January 2018Grand Prix (Best Film)Village RockstarsWon [25]
Muestra de Cine Lanzarote 2017, Spain18 May 2017Best Young FilmVillage RockstarsWon [26]
Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles 15 April 2018Grand Jury Prize for Best FeatureVillage RockstarsWon [27]
Buenos Aires Festival Internacional de Cine Independiente, Argentina 201822 April 2018 SIGNIS PrizeVillage RockstarsWon [28]
Prag Cine Awards 201827 May 2018Best FilmVillage RockstarsWon [29]
Best Actor (Female)Bhanita DasWon
Best EditingRima DasWon
Best Sound Designer Amrit Pritam Won
Jury's Special MentionBasanti DasWon
7th Assam state Film Award and Festival29 July 2018Kamal Narayan Choudhry Award for Best DirectorRima DasWon
Best Sound DesignAmrit PritamWon
Best Debut ActressBhanita DasWon
Nalin Dowerah Award for Best CinematographyRima DasWon
3rd BRICS film festival27 July 2018Best ActressBhanita DasWon
Special Jury AwardVillage RockstarsWon

Official selection at festivals

Sequel

A sequel to the film titled as Village Rockstars 2 will premiere at the 29th Busan International Film Festival to be held from 2 to 11 October 2024. It will also compete for Kim Jiseok Award along with seven other films. [47] In a statement Rima Das said, "The sequel stands on its own, delving into Dhunu's relationship with her mother, mother nature, and music. I dedicate this film to all the young people with talent and dreams but limited resources to achieve them." She further added, "I am hopeful that just as audiences embraced Village Rockstars, they will embrace this film as well." [48]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Each date is linked to the article about the awards held that year, wherever possible.

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References

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    • "Assamese Filmmaker's 'Village Rockstars' Steals the Show at MAMI 2017 » Northeast Today". 19 October 2017. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
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