Skip to main content

The Sound of Silence in Yamagata Documentary Film festival

The Sound of Silence in the Yamagata Documentary Film festival

Popular posts from this blog

Supportive Men: the documentary

In Nepal, men and women are involved in various ways to shift norms and relationships toward gender equality. This documentary focuses on one community in Kapilvastu, Southern Nepal, to show how men and couples are changing the way they interact with one another to bring about social change, and also how men are supporting women’s movement for empowerment and gender equality.   _____________________________________________________________________________________________ Mr. Dube is a young man in his late twenties who lives in Kapilvastu, Nepal. He has taken part in a gender equality training given by a local NGO, in partnership with an INGO. He is married and has two sons. In his small community, Mr. Dube has become an inspirational figure who has managed to change the behavior of not just the younger men, but also the older men of his community, who now cook, help with housework and childcare, and support  their spouses in a way that was unthinkable...

Planet in Focus: 3rd World Water Forum - March 16 - 23, 2003

(Logo of the 2015 festival) 2004 Planet in Focus: 3rd World Water Forum - March 16 - 23, 2003 http://planetinfocus.org/ Martin Robertson reported on "Waterworks", the film festival held during the UN World Water Forum in Kyoto, Shiga and Osaka, Japan. He says: "...But by Saturday, some of the shorter docs received considerable feedback, especially “Pani” (directed by Sushma Joshi) with its clear reporting about local community good will projects floundering because of lack of preparedness in communicating to everyone involved about the reasons for decisions, gender and caste bias in the construction of committees, and secrecy about costs and funding." “Water Works” - A report by Martin Robertson Planet in Focus was represented twice in Kyoto at the World Water Forum this March with screenings and cultural programming. “Water Works” a mini event featured on three days with short video docs (schedule) accompanied by story telling and musical performanc...

INTERVIEW: Nabin Subba

This interview was published in the Nation Weekly magazine in 2004. KHULA MANCH Nabin Subba (35), the director of the acclaimed film Numafung, talked with Sushma Joshi of The Nation Weekly about his films, the Nepali independent film movement and his visions of nation-building. The Nation: How did Numafung come about? NS: During the pre-democracy days, I worked in journalism for almost a decade, first in Nepali Awaj for 3 years, and then in Deshantar for 5 years. I was doing mainstream reporting. Then I started to focus on art and culture, and later exclusively on film. I was dissatisfied with Nepali films, and would write critiques about them. I had long discussions with my filmmaker friends about making a film that would have a Nepali identity, but they all said it was not possible. They said it would not be commercially viable. So I said, okay, I will have to do it myself. The Nation: So you took it as a challenge? NS: Yes. I wanted to experiment with a Nepali form, one ...