
Tannishtha Chatterjee in "Bombay Summer"
Joseph Mathew grew up in Trivandrum in the 70s, when Mumbai or Bombay as he likes to refer to the city, was a mythical dream. In his first narrative feature Bombay Summer, Mathew, pays tribute to Bombay of an earlier era through his three protagonists, who capture its energy and youth culture in transition.
This past week, Bombay Summer had two sold out screenings at Indian International Film Festival in Goa. And earlier this month the film swept the Mahindra Indo-American Arts Council film festival awards – winning trophies for best film, best director and best actress (for Tannishtha Chatterjee).
Mathew spoke about the film – the idea of Bombay, working with his actors and the music–before he left New York for the Goa festival.
Video: Bombay Summer’s Intersecting Lives
This entry was posted on Sunday, November 29th, 2009 at 2:03 pm and is filed under Filmmakers and tagged with Abu Dhabi, bollywood, Bombay Summer, Cannes Film Festival, Film Forum, Goa International Film Festival, Grenada, IFFLA, Illustrated Weekly, Joseph Mathew Varghese, Karan Johar, Kerala, Mahindra Indo American Arts Council, Mathias Duplessy, Michael Haneke, Mir Mukhtiyar Ali, mumbai, mumbai chawls, Raj Thackeray, Samrat Chakrabarti, Spain, Sundance Film Festival, Tannishtha Chatterjee, The White Ribbon, Wake Up Sid. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
The Aseem Chhabra Show features penetrating interviews with artists, writers, filmmakers, musicians and other creative minds exploring South Asia or the South Asian Diaspora.
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A rich cinema for the bygone era. Truly remarkable that this film could capture the old Bombay in time, essence, music and lives.
This is really inspirational that such cinemas do exist now.
A wonderful slice of the old Bombay life.
Kudos to the film maker Joseph Mathew for doing a film that is rarely done within the rich filmy Bollywood city and bringing out something totally different.