HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentGhosts of the past win at 69th National Film Awards: Silent Era studio’s time loop Bengali existential horror film & an Uttarakhand ghost village documentary

Ghosts of the past win at 69th National Film Awards: Silent Era studio’s time loop Bengali existential horror film & an Uttarakhand ghost village documentary

Experimental COVID horror film 'Kalkokkho' marks the return of Bengal's Aurora Film Corporation, India’s oldest in-business studio/production house from the silent era, that once distributed Satyajit Ray films and produced Bournvita Quiz Contest; and the melancholy of a lost civilisation in Garhwali-Hindi documentary 'Ek Tha Gaon'.

October 25, 2023 / 12:12 IST
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(Clockwise from top, left) A still from Bengali feature film 'Kalkokkho', which won the Best Feature Film in Bengali; its directors Sarmistha Maiti and Rajdeep Paul; Srishti Lakhera; and her documentary film 'Ek Tha Gaon', set in Uttarakhand, that won the Best Non-Feature Film prize and Best Audiography award the at this week's 69th National Film Awards.
(Clockwise from top, left) A still from Bengali feature film 'Kalkokkho', which won the Best Feature Film in Bengali; its directors Sarmistha Maiti and Rajdeep Paul; Srishti Lakhera; and her documentary film 'Ek Tha Gaon', set in Uttarakhand, that won the Best Non-Feature Film prize and Best Audiography award the at this week's 69th National Film Awards.

Sarmistha Maiti and Rajdeep Paul had one solution to address their fears of a raging coronavirus health emergency — make a movie. Trained filmmakers from the Satyajit Ray Film & Television Institute (SRFTI), Kolkata, Maiti and Paul plunged into the depths of the pandemic with their camera to capture the essence of life and death.

Far away in Uttarakhand, Srishti Lakhera was grappling with a similar threat consuming the peace and quiet of a tiny village in the Himalayan foothills, long before the pandemic. A documentary filmmaker, she was determined to get to the bottom of the endless flight of its residents to cities, emptying its homes and turning it into a ghost village.

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Maiti and Paul's feature film Kalkokkho (House of Time) and Lakhera's documentary Ek Tha Gaon (Once Upon a Village) bagged major prizes at the 69th National Film Awards presented by President Droupadi Murmu on October 17. Kalkokkho won the National Award for Best Feature Film in Bengali and Ek Tha Gaon picked up the Best Non-Feature Film prize and Best Audiography award.

Dealing with the existential crisis in a pandemic-hit city and an urban migration-affected rural village, Kalkokkho and Ek Tha Gaon stood out for their aesthetic exploration of the impact on life, both human and non-human. Space and time diverge with bodies and minds and the environment as both movies pace their artistic endeavours in slow moving frames.