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CREATED:20171101T201600Z
DESCRIPTION:3rd i’s San Francisco International South Asian Film Festival 
 2017\n\nNovember 9-12, New People Cinema and Castro Theatre, San 
 Francisco\nNovember 18, CineArts Theater, Palo Alto\n\nCome celebrate 3rd 
 i's fifteenth anniversary this year, as the annual SF International South 
 Asian Film Festival presents some of the best cinema from India, Pakistan, 
 Bangladesh, Canada, Australia, and the USA. This year’s festival captures 
 the political zeitgeist of our times, offering reflections on the 
 democratic process, the power of the vote, and on the legacy of political 
 revolutions. Home movies become rich fodder for filmmakers, their celluloid 
 memories resurfacing stories about family, immigration, and cross-cultural 
 dialogue. Voices from the margins circulate through the program, centering 
 women’s unsung labor, queer voices, and disappearing landscapes. As 
 always the shorts program gathers an impressive range of local and 
 international offerings, while Bollywood is served up two ways - neo-noir 
 and classic camp. For expanded program and ticketing information, please 
 visit: www.thirdi.org\n\nThursday, November 9 @ New People 
 Cinema\n7:15pm\nAbu (Father)\nArshad Khan (Canada, 2017, 80mins)\nFilmmaker 
 in Person! Deeply moving and smart, Arshad Khan’s outstanding documentary 
 Abu is a quintessential immigrant story that captures the tumultuous 
 journey of his family's move to Canada, from Pakistan, in the early 90s. 
 Peppered with animations, snippets from Bollywood, and a treasure trove of 
 home movie footage, Abu offers a complex and nuanced portrait of a family 
 trying to hold on to one another in spite of all the challenges.\n\nFriday, 
 November 10 @ New People Cinema\n7:15pm\nRandom Acts of Legacy\nAli Kazimi 
 (Canada, 2016, 77mins)\nFilmmaker via Skype! In this gorgeous, 
 multi-layered documentary about immigration and integration, Ali Kazimi (A 
 Continuous Journey) brilliantly weaves a rich tapestry of history and 
 memory. Set in Chicago between the Great Depression and the post-war era, 
 this award-winning film peeks into the everyday life of a commercial artist 
 and his trailblazing wife, to reveal the experiences of a first-generation 
 Chinese family in America.\n\n9:30pm\nGurgaon\nShanker Raman (India, 2017, 
 107mins)\nStylish and smart, with a deep, dark twist, GURGAON is a neo-noir 
 based on the true life story of a kidnapping gone awry, in the shiny outer 
 reaches of the fast growing Delhi metropolis. Raman delves deep into the 
 psychology of his characters, fleshing out an extremely compelling story 
 that keeps the twists and turns coming - each one completely believable and 
 integral to the plot. \n \nSaturday, November 11 @ Castro 
 Theatre\n3:00pm\nNari (Woman)\nGingger Shankar (USA, 2016, 60mins)\nIn this 
 unique live multimedia performance, accomplished musician and composer for 
 film Gingger Shankar celebrates the life and work of her mother (Viji 
 Shankar) and grandmother (Lakshmi Shankar). Hailing from India’s first 
 family of music, and renowned artists in their own right, they helped bring 
 Indian music to the West in the 1970s through their close collaborations 
 with Ravi Shankar and George Harrison (The Beatles). Official selection at 
 both the Toronto and Sundance Film Festivals, the performance features 
 Shankar on the double violin, accompanied by bandmates Vivek Maddala and 
 Rob Amjarv.\n\n5:30pm\nAn Insignificant Man\nKhushboo Ranka and Vinay 
 Shukla (India / Netherlands, 2016, 95mins)\nFollowed by panel discussion. 
 Dubbed the “Bernie Sanders of India”, Arvind Kejriwal shook up  the 
 status quo of the Indian political system in the last national election. 
 This revolutionary shift in India’s mainstream political establishment is 
 exposed in this gripping documentary. Training its unwavering lens on 
 inequality, corruption, and the power of elites, this important doc 
 highlights the democratic principles at stake in India and around the 
 world.\n\n8:15pm\nOm Shanti Om\nFarah Khan (India, 2007, 
 162mins)\nBollywood at the Castro!! Serving up a dazzling array of musical 
 showstoppers and cameos by nearly every Bollywood star, Om Shanti Om is a 
 blockbuster extravaganza for the ages. Director Farah Khan pulls out all 
 the stops to squeeze in comedy, melodrama, action, and suspense in a masala 
 mix of epic proportions. Shah Rukh Khan breaks out his disco moves in this 
 star-studded tribute to the swinging 70's. Bring out those Bell-bottom 
 pants for retro fun, romance and dance! A must-see on the big 
 screen.\n\nSunday, November 12 @ New People Cinema\n1:00pm\nShepherdess of 
 the Glaciers\nStanzin Dorjai and Christine Mordelet (India/France, 2015, 
 74mins)\nA mesmerizing tribute to the unbreakable bond between humans and 
 animals, this meditative doc captures a disappearing way of life that is 
 deeply intertwined with nature. Amidst the stunning landscape of Ladakh, 
 shepherdess Tsering sets out to the high plateaus of the Himalayas, braving 
 countless physical travails, so that her flock of sheep can graze through 
 the winter. \n \n2:45pm\nNewton\nAmit Masurkar (India, 2017, 106mins)\nAmit 
 Masurkar's smart and engaging black comedy finds humor in the tenuous 
 nature of democracy, a hard task on the global stage at the present. When 
 conscientious clerk, Newton, is placed on election duty in the 
 conflict-ridden “tribal” area of Chhattisgarh - a democratic 
 stress-center - he must keep devious military personnel and oddball 
 bureaucrats in check, even as the voters remain strangely absent. 
 \n\n5:00pm\nLast Man in Dhaka Central (The Young Man Was, Part 3)\nNaeem 
 Mohaiemen (Bangladesh/Netherlands/USA, 2015, 82mins)\nFilmmaker in Person! 
 Filmmaker Naeem Mohaiemen brings his razor-sharp critique and keen 
 awareness of global politics to the conversation, as he probes Peter 
 Custers, a Dutch journalist, about the dreams and inspirations (a la Che 
 Guevara) that fueled his decision to travel half-way across the world to 
 participate in a left-wing uprising in Bangladesh. The final installment in 
 Mohaiemen's trilogy on the legacy of the radical left, this illuminating 
 doc has screened at numerous prestigious film festivals including 
 Rotterdam, Berlin, and IDFA. Preceded by the short Abu Ammar is Coming 
 (2016, Bangladesh/USA, 6mins).\n\n7:30pm\nCoast to Coast: Mumbai to the 
 Mission\nVarious (India/Sri Lanka/USA/Australia, 2016/2017, 84mins)\nBay 
 Area Filmmakers in Person! From light comedy to dark wit, this year's 
 kaleidoscope of cinematic offerings engage the intimate, personal and the 
 intellectual: Bollywood and Bolsheviks revels in the pleasures of classic 
 cinema, while the Spice Sisters sizzle down under; Brown Girls assert their 
 sexuality and independence in Chicago, while artists in San Francisco 
 struggle to claim their home in No Vacancy; and Disco Obu takes a humorous 
 and poignant look on the ephemeral nature of fame.\n\nSunday, November 18 @ 
 CineArts Theater, Palo Alto\n\n1:00pm\nThe Cinema Travellers\nShirley 
 Abraham and Amit Madheshiya (India, 2016, 96mins)\nThis intimate and poetic 
 gem captures the miracle of cinema in its purest sense, and the 
 timelessness of a tradition that has existed in India for decades - the 
 traveling tent cinema. The film debuted at the Cannes Film Festival to 
 critical acclaim, and should entice cinephiles with its effusive love of 
 the bygone era of celluloid.\n\n3:00pm\nThe World of Goopi and Bagha (Goopi 
 Gawaiya, Bagha Bajaiya)\nShilpa Ranade (India, 2013, 79mins)\nSet in a 
 world full of vibrant music and color, Shilpa Ranade’s magical film is an 
 animated adaptation of one of Indian master Satyajit Ray's most beloved 
 works, and premiered to great acclaim at the Toronto Film Festival. This 
 timeless fable follows the hilarious misadventures of Goopi and Bagha, two 
 tuneless musicians banished from their villages for their cacophonous 
 music.\n\n5:00pm\nBad, Brown, Bride: 3 Desi Series\nVarious (USA, 2017, 
 72mins)\nBay Area Filmmakers in Person! Snappy, sexy, and seriously modern, 
 these three shorts series turn stereotypes about desis on their heads, and 
 offer modern portraits of young South Asians in America. Featuring episodes 
 from Shawn Parikh and Devanshi Patel’s Bad Indians, the hit series Brown 
 Girls by Fatima Ashgar and Sam Bailey (recently picked up by HBO) and Ik 
 Jagait and Palvinder Jagait’s locally produced Bullet 
 Bride.\n\n7:30pm\nDance Like a Man\nRitesh Menon and Lilette Dubey (India, 
 2014, 100mins)\nIndia’s most successful English-language play (by Mahesh 
 Dattani) is adapted for the screen in this stellar cineplay, a tragi-comedy 
 that captures the tension and jealousy between a rising Bharatanatyam 
 dancer and her parents, both dancers themselves.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/11/01/18804109.php
SUMMARY:3rd i’s San Francisco International South Asian Film Festival 2017
LOCATION:The Castro Thearter, New People Cinema, San Francisco\nCineArts, Palo Alto
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/11/01/18804109.php
DTSTART:20171111T231500Z
DTEND:20171112T061500Z
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