HomeNewsTrendsEntertainment11 controversies that gripped IFFI, India’s top film festival, at this edition and in the past

11 controversies that gripped IFFI, India’s top film festival, at this edition and in the past

Nearly two decades after Panaji became the permanent venue of International Film Festival of India, the high-profile event continues to be plagued by controversies.

December 02, 2023 / 22:52 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Founded in 1952, IFFI, which moved to Goa in 2004, has been a much-loved destination for filmmakers around the world.
Founded in 1952, IFFI, which moved to Goa in 2004, has been a much-loved destination for filmmakers around the world.

Turkish director Nuri Bilge Ceylan was feted early this week at the closing ceremony of the 54th International Film Festival of India (IFFI), which presented the Satyajit Ray Lifetime Achievement Award to veteran Hollywood actor Michael Douglas. Ceylan was in Panaji, the venue of the country's top film festival, for the screening of his new film, About Dry Grasses, the story of student unrest in a remote school in the Kurdish militancy-hit Anatolia.

Founded in 1952, IFFI has been a much-loved destination for filmmakers around the world. Masters like the Italian director Michelangelo Antonioni came to the annual festival, which had a travelling edition in alternate years while in other times it remained in Delhi. "Bengali film buffs called the Italian master Antony Dada," recalls Malti Sahai, a long-time festival director of IFFI in the '80s and early '90s.

Story continues below Advertisement

Promising a Cannes-like film festival, the government moved IFFI, which used to light up cities like Kolkata, Mumbai, Hyderabad and Thiruvananthapuram to Panaji, the capital of Goa, in 2004. While the panoramic promenade along the Mandovi river and the Goan beaches have more than matched the atmosphere of the French Riviera, the festival is still labouring against expectations of a Cannes-like status.

The festival's continuing quest for a truly global status is hampered by a series of missteps year after year. While an occasional squabbling by an errant delegate marked the editions pre-Panaji, the festival dabbles today in headline-making controversies like the one involving The Kashmir Files last year and The Kerala Story this year.