Waghoba [1] | |
---|---|
Directed by | Malaika Vaz |
Written by | Malaika Vaz |
Produced by | Sandesh Kadur |
Cinematography | Nitya Sood |
Edited by | Nitya Sood |
Production company | |
Country | India |
Languages | English, Marathi |
Waghoba: Provider, Destroyer, Deity is a 2016 documentary short film about Indian tigers and their relationships with human society. It is directed and written by Malaika Vaz and produced by Sandesh Kadur. [3] [4] The film helped win the National Geographic ROAD Talent award for Wildscreen Festival. [5]
Malaika Vaz travels through the contrast between human emotion and tiger based on a series on incidents which took place in a newly developed sanctuary Umred Karhandla Wildlife Sanctuary, Maharastra, India. The film shows the ground reality of Human Animal Conflict from loss of property and life to social disruptions.
The story moves through three faces, where Waghoba or the tiger goddess is considered as the provider, who becomes the destroyer and finally becomes the Deity. The story ends with showing how changes in the environmental relationship in the society can change the mindset of people and reduce Human Animal Conflict. [6] The film gives an idea how people are choose to be the messengers between common man and Waghoba and the respect people has towards tiger in India.
The film also shows how, Rohit Karoo, known as the gift of tomorrows tigers, could bring a positive change in the villages around the sanctuary. He is the founding secretary of the Wildlife Conservation and Development Centre (WLCDC) [7] and Honorary Wildlife Warden of Nagpur district. [8] It also speaks about Rohits work of reclaiming the barren land around the sanctuary and restore it to forest.
The film has been screened at many international film festivals and was instrumental in achieving the National Geographic award at Windscreen Festival 2016, which took place at Bristol, UK.
The film was written and directed by Malaika Vaz, who is one of the youngest wildlife presenters. The cinematography was done by Nitya Sood, who was a part of BBC Planet Earth II crew. The team made the film while they were working together at Felis Creations, a visual arts company by National Geographic Explorer Sandesh Kadur.
The Bengal tiger is a population of the Panthera tigris tigris subspecies and the nominate tiger subspecies. It ranks among the biggest wild cats alive today. It is considered to belong to the world's charismatic megafauna.
The marbled cat is a small wild cat native from the eastern Himalayas to Southeast Asia, where it inhabits forests up to an elevation of 2,500 m (8,200 ft). As it is present in a large range, it has been listed as Near Threatened on the IUCN Red List since 2015.
The Khathiar–Gir dry deciduous forests is a mostly arid ecoregion in northwestern India that stretches over 103,100 sq mi (267,000 km2) across Gujarat, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. The dry deciduous forests in the region are dominated by teak, and thorny trees and scrub in drier areas.
Wildscreen is a wildlife conservation charity based in Bristol, England.
The Indian leopard is a leopard subspecies widely distributed on the Indian subcontinent. The species Panthera pardus is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List because populations have declined following habitat loss and fragmentation, poaching for the illegal trade of skins and body parts, and persecution due to conflict situations. The Indian leopard is one of the big cats occurring on the Indian subcontinent, along with the Asiatic lion, Bengal tiger, snow leopard and clouded leopard. In 2014, a national census of leopards around tiger habitats was carried out in India except the northeast. 7,910 individuals were estimated in surveyed areas and a national total of 12,000–14,000 speculated.
Sanctuary Asia is an Indian nature and wildlife conservation magazine founded in 1981 by Bittu Sahgal, its current editor. The magazine expanded in 2015 to become established as a non-profit foundation.
Sandesh Kadur is an Indian wildlife film producer and conservation photographer known for his contributions to BBC Planet Earth II. Sandesh's films have been shown on various television networks including National Geographic Channel, BBC, Discovery Channel and Animal Planet.
Bahar Dutt is an Indian television journalist and environmental editor and columnist for CNN-IBN.
Vijay Bedi is the third generation of wildlife film maker and photographer in a family that has a long history of expertise in this highly specialized field.
George Thengummoottil is an Indian filmmaker and editor. He has also DIT for the 2022 Academy award winning documentary The Elephant Whisperers. His films have been nominated for several film festivals like International Documentary and short-film festival of Kerala and CMS Vatavaran film festival.
The Gorgas Science Foundation is a nonprofit foundation based in South Texas established to support conservation and education.
Naresh Bedi is an Indian filmmaker, the eldest of the Bedi Brothers and a member of the second generation of three generations of Wildlife photographers and filmmakers. He is the first Asian to receive a Wildscreen Panda Award and the first Indian to receive a wildlife film nomination for the British Academy Film Awards. He was honoured by the Government of India in 2015 with Padma Shri, the fourth highest Indian civilian award.
Malaika Vaz is a National Geographic Explorer, TV presenter and wildlife filmmaker from Goa, India. She is the youngest person to reach the Arctic and the Antarctic with students on ice foundation.
Kalyan Varma is a Bangalore-based wildlife emmy nominated filmmaker, photographer and conservationist. He is one of the founders of Peepli Project, co-director of Nature InFocus nature and wildlife festival, and founding member of India Nature Watch. He currently freelances with BBC Natural History, Netflix, Discovery Channel, National Geographic and Disney+, and also works with grassroots NGOs like Nature Conservation Foundation to highlight environmental issues in India. He is a recipient of the National film awards for his film Wild Karnataka and Carl Zeiss Wildlife Conservation Award.
Nature inFocus is in the space of curation and dissemination of information about India's wild spaces. It aims to do this by using photography as a tool to make these conversations accessible to everyone. This portal carries articles about wildlife, conservation, eco-travel, communities, nature art, field notes, photography tips, research etc.
Felis Creations is a Bangalore, Karnataka-based film production company founded in 2006 by Sandesh Kadur. It produces factual programs for international broadcast. Felis Creations is also involved in wildlife documentation and conservation activities in collaboration with Wildlife Conservation Organizations. Felis creations was the producer for recent TV series Planet Earth II broadcast by the BBC.
Sangeetha Kadur is an Indian artist from Bangalore, India. Her illustrations have been published in several field guides, wildlife books and magazines. The Hummingbird book, for Gorgas Science Foundation for which she has contributed artworks, has been acclaimed worldwide.
Riverbank Studios is an independent film production company based in India and founded by the filmmaker and conservationist, Mike Pandey.
Swati Thiyagarajan is an Indian conservationist, documentary filmmaker and environmental journalist, based in Cape Town, South Africa and New Delhi, India. She is a core team member of the Sea Change Project in South Africa and environmental editor at the Indian television news network of NDTV. Thiyagarajan is the recipient of the Carl Zeiss Award, Earth Heroes Award and two Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards. Her work as the environmental editor at NDTV has been acclaimed internationally and she has been described as the doyenne of environmental journalism in India.