NAGARI 2021

PEOPLE AND LIVELIHOODS IN URBAN INDIA

The second edition of the Nagari Short Film Competition addresses the subject of People and Livelihoods in Urban India. It attempted to not only use film as a medium to narrate the issues, but really to expand an understanding of the subject and extend its representation and relevance in India.


Click Here to view the detailed brief.

GOLDEN BIOSCOPE AWARD

TAAL BETAL

Film By: Sanchay Bose, Pramathyu Shukla, Shubham Sengupta and Rudraksh Pathak
Mentored By: Arjun Gourisaria

JURY CITATION:
‘Taal Betal’ is laudable as it uses the strength of film’s visual storytelling to reveal the devastating impact of urban development on water bodies and the lives that depend on them. Through an investigation of Jabalpur’s lakes, we experience the impact of pollution on the livelihood of the Singharia community, originally water chestnut farmers, who have now turned to fishing — which is also then affected by the lack of oxygen in the water.

It is a very well-structured and legible film, a documentary that recalls the fact that Jabalpur’s lakes were made for its citizens, a progressive urban planning move. The film calls out to viewers to take more care of our waterways and the layers of life that depend on them – including our own.

SILVER BIOSCOPE AWARD

THE GOLDEN FISH

Film By: Avadhoot Potdar, Akanksha Gupta and Akshata Dalvi
Mentored By: Arjun Gourisaria

JURY CITATION:
‘The Golden Fish’ is commendable as a testament to livelihood as ‘disruption’ in an urbanscape. It illustrates, quite beautifully, how Goa – with its unique geography and society – has been
negatively impacted by the floating casinos and their influence. The insights into the life of the young North-Eastern women who work in the casinos are sensitive and evoke questions of “localness” in a cosmopolitan state like Goa.

The use of opulent visuals of the casinos and their branding, as contrasted with disembodied voices for locals, is representative of the way that the industry has now taken up space that once belonged to the city. The women who work on the casino boats are objectified, the locals are ignored, and a kleptocratic system perpetuates exploitation and alienation. The boats themselves are operated by people that are from a different part of the nation, servicing alien crowds that come in from other states and countries, a disconnect between the two worlds. The film also illustrates issues that can be reversed, through advocacy and policy, exemplifying film’s ability to raise public awareness.

SILVER BIOSCOPE AWARD

दारुडी (Darudi)

Film By: Atish Indrekar and Ruchika Chhara
Mentored By: Sanjiv Shah

JURY CITATION:
‘Darudi’ is commendable as it does the hard work of giving voice to a community stigmatised as a criminal tribe by the colonial administration, a burden they carry until today, and of opposing views around the hidden world of distilling alcohol in Chharanagar, in the city of Ahmedabad. It is an uncomfortable story, in the best tradition of documentary filmmaking, that forces viewers to confront historic injustice, an inheritance from colonial times that still continues to circumscribe and constrain. The narrative, largely through song, is intricately crafted and inter-woven with interviews to convey a sense of anguish and disempowerment.

‘Darudi’ provides an intimate experience of how people born into and living in this state of injustice must grapple with the quandary of doing ‘right or wrong’ while pursuing the right to a livelihood that takes care of one’s family and children.

JURY COMMENDATION AWARD

AN ORDINARY DAY

Film By: Aakash Chhabra, Snigdha Sharma, Vedant, Om Prakash and Koushik Tamilmaran
Mentored By: Rajula Shah

JURY CITATION:
‘An Ordinary Day’ is acknowledged for presenting a deeply personal and moving take on the livelihood crisis brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. The melancholic tone and the stark aesthetic of the yarn recycling facility were incredibly effective. While there was a single voice and a single story, the film spoke for so many more people, across cities in India who faced this crashing devastation in livelihood, migration and economic chaos.

PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARD

PARTNERSHIP BELOW PAR

Film By: Aman Jajoria and Simran Raswant
Mentored By: Bina Paul

TEXT DESCRIPTION:
Partnership Below Par is a documentary that explores the story of four delivery “partners” as they navigate through the millennium city of Gurugram (previously known as Gurgaon), questioning how the city facilitates their ability to earn a living along with their stakes in this “partnership” within the gig economy.

CCF EMERGING TALENT AWARD

यह वक़्त हमारा है (The Present is Ours) Ye Waqt Hamara Hai

Film By: Moin Khan and Bhawna Jaimini
Mentored By: Sanjiv Shah

Shot through the lens of Moin Khan – a young rapper and an aspiring filmmaker, the film explores the challenges, struggles and triumphs of him and his neighbours in Govandi, Mumbai. It looks at how the Muslim youth are negotiating within their homes, where cultural norms and financial limitations dictate their aspirations, as well as outside in the city – where spatial boundaries dictate not just their present but their socio-economic future. It attempts to bring out how opportunity and aspiration intersects with cultural and spatial identity of people of Govandi, dictating their present and future.

The Charles Correa Foundation hosted the Award Ceremony of Nagari Short Film Competitions 2021, addressing the issue of People and Livelihoods in urban India.   

Podampeta looks at an abandoned village of migrant marine fishermen community, situated in the coastal district of Ganjam in Odisha. It is an examination of displacement and a fading association with culture and tradition as nature has taken over.

The film looks at Goa’s emerging Casino industry and the livelihoods that are connected to it. It draws close attention to the lack of planning in considering local communities while introducing new industries within a city and introspects upon the close relationship between livelihood and migration and the many consequences of it. The unique experience of the different stakeholders gives an insight into how they experience the city as a consequence of their livelihood.

The film is a study on moving repair, specifically about tailors and their reaction to the loss of space and loss of skill.

The Covid-19 pandemic brought many industries to a standstill, including the textile factories of Panipat. An Autumn Elegy follows the daily life of the workers who are trying to find their footing again against the backdrop of these industrial estates.

The emergence of the food delivery sector, with players like Swiggy and Zomato at the forefront, have been built on the backbone of delivery ‘partners’. The film looks at this new facet of ‘gig economy’, their social and economic identities and their relationship with their city.

This film is about intersections of spatial and cultural identities and its impact on the livelihood opportunities of Muslim youth living in Govandi, Mumbai.

The film shows the interaction that informal livelihoods have with planned city spaces of Navi Mumbai.

The film looks at the liquor brewing Chhara community, a notified “criminal tribe”, and how they negotiate the prohibition law and the city in Ahmedabad, Gujarat.

The film offers a glimpse at the lives and struggles of the Baura (singhraha) people of Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh as the story navigates the relationship between these communities.

Olami is an exploration of the marginal livelihoods and spaces produced by the wild mushroom foraging communities in Goa, and how they interact with the formal city.

  • LIVELIHOOD AND THE COVID-19 CRISIS

    LIVELIHOOD AND THE COVID-19 CRISIS

    “An equally important facet of the right to life is the right to livelihood because no person can live without the means of livelihood.” — Excerpt from the unanimous judgement of The Supreme Court of India in Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation. The Right to Life written in Article 21 of the Constitution of…

  • BIOSCOPE ON PEOPLE AND LIVELIHOODS IN URBAN INDIA

    BIOSCOPE ON PEOPLE AND LIVELIHOODS IN URBAN INDIA

    Nagari 2021 addresses the subject of people and livelihoods in Indian cities in an attempt not only to use film as a medium to narrate the issues, but really to expand an understanding of the subject and extend its representation and relevance. Film as a medium has played an important role in generating awareness on…

FILMMAKERS

Sanchay Bose, Pramathyu Shukla, Shubham Sengupta and Rudraksh Pathak

Taal Betal

Avadhoot Potdar, Akanksha Gupta and Akshata Dalvi

The Golden Fish

Atish Indrekar and Ruchika Chhara

दारुडी (Darudi)

Aakash Chhabra, Snigdha Sharma, Vedant, Om Prakash and Koushik Tamilmaran

An Ordinary Day

Aman Jajoria and Simran Raswant

Partnership Below Par

Bhawna Jaimini and Moin Khan

यह वक़्त हमारा है (The Present is Ours) Ye Waqt Hamara Hai

Ajinkya Mishra, Alex Mohan, Amol Lalzare, Irfan Sheikh and Mihir Patilhande

खोई खदान (Lost Quarries of Navi Mumbai)

Purna SarkarHimadri Das, Arvind Dev, Montry Thaalavattam, Kartik Muralo and
Ravikumar A.S

Tailor Made City

Paribartana Mohanty and Kush Badhwar

Podampeta is Drowning Anyway

MENTORS

Sanjiv Shah

Filmmaker | Editor | Producer

Bina Paul

Filmmaker | Artistic Director

Avijit Mukul Kishore

Cinematographer

Rajula Shah

Poet | Filmmaker

Arjun Gourisaria

Filmmaker | Editor

JURY

Martha Chen

Activist | Educator

Deepa Dhanraj

Filmmaker | Writer

Ranjit Hoskote

Author | Curator | Art Critic

Gautam Patel

Former Judge | Bombay High Court

Michael Sheridan

Filmmaker | Educator