3500+ Films - 2.5 million words – 1 million viewers! Founder and Curator Carmela selects some of our most entertaining, powerful and inspiring India films at We Are Moving Stories. These include short and feature length documentary and drama about queer voices, women, real-life stories and the Indian diaspora.
Total length of this section: 27 films.
<QUEER VOICES>
Sheer Qorma is a story of belonging and acceptance, identity and family, and how it comes together under one roof, as resilient, queer Muslim women and non-binary characters of colour, choose to embrace love that exists beyond their personal beliefs and social moralities. Length: 30 minutes. Writer/Director Faraz Arif Ansari:
Long Distance - A young Indian woman living in Australia gets a call from her mum back home. Length: 7 minutes. Writer/Director Anoop Lokkur:
“I’d been wanting to make a short film based on my personal experiences, which I could explore through characters that I’d find relatable. Initially, it felt like any ideas I’d come up with was too contrived until my mum called me one night – the conversation I had with her inspired me to make this short film. She asked me how my job was; I said that my 9-to-5 was going well when in reality I’d been sitting in my living room most of the day trying to come up with film ideas. I was struck by how many lies I’d tell her just to satisfy her expectations of me.”
Evening Shadows - When you come out of the closet, you push your mother into the closet. Length: 102 minutes. Director/Producer Sridhar Rangayan:
“We made Evening Shadows to reach out to a larger audience about the need for families to accept their LGBTQ children. The film is more than a coming out film; it is about a woman steeped in traditions and conservative social mores, standing up for her son against all odds. Evening Shadows is a film of hope and courage.
We always felt that there was no mainstream film that youngsters can show their parents as a means of helping them understand their true reality, and also for families to understand more about their children. The film, made with a simple heartfelt narrative with no auteur, flourishes so it can appeal to a large family audience in India and across the world.”
Life After - While packing up her daughter’s apartment, a single mother discovers startling details about her only child, which challenge her ability to process a recent loss. Length: 13 minutes. Writer/Director Ria Tobaccowala:
“In the South Asian community, the term “American-Born Confused Desi” (“ABCD”) refers to children of immigrants who were born and raised in the United States. Being an “ABCD” suggests that as first generation Indian-Americans, we ignore our culture and solely adopt American beliefs. However, for children of immigrants, there are many nuances and challenges to defining our identities. How do we respect our family’s rich heritage and live a life true to who we are as Americans?”
Devi (Goddess) - Set in New Delhi, a closeted lesbian risks family and social boundaries as she pursues her household maid, Devi. Length: 13 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Karishma Dev Dube:
“I love would more people to watch the film. I’m proud of the performances in this film. They should be seen! Unlike the west, India is still a no-sex society where sexuality is repressed and more than often a taboo subject. I would like to play with these uncomfortable and confronting boundaries, hoping to extend this discourse to an Indian audience.”
illuminate - a cinematic poem about being in the closet. Length: 23 minutes. Director Nisha Gupta:
“While directing this film about being in the closet, I never felt so much joy move through me as by the process of transforming political trauma into hopeful art. It’s been one of the most meaningful things I have ever done in my life. I am queer Indian-American woman whose parents migrated to the U.S. from India, which recriminalized homosexuality in 2013. I know the emotional pain of the closet intimately, in a variety of ways. Directing this film, and working with such a diverse cast of queer actors and actors of color, created this beautiful blurring of boundaries between fiction and documentary.”
Naughty Amelia Jane - A clever satire on societal hypocrisy, ignorance and those that go against the grain focusing on the LGBT community. Length: 12 minutes. Writer/Director Risheeta Agrawal:
“I was always tormented by the deep seeded hypocrisy that festered in India when it came to the LGBTQI community. Our country, like many others, does not acknowledge the most basic human right to be able to love whoever we please. I have seen a lot of dear and near people severely negatively affected by this. There are a lot of groups now who are fighting for these rights. I wanted to give this cause another voice, mine.”
Angry Indian Goddesses - A roller-coaster comedy-drama which explores the many facets of women in contemporary Indian society, Angry Indian Goddesses is the story of 7 boisterous women who meet in Goa for a surprise pre-wedding bash where they find their hearts but lose their heads! Length: 104 minutes. Director Pan Nalin:
“There are series of issues already being debated about Angry Indian Goddesses: women’s empowerment, gender inequality, violence, rape…Then there was a massive censorship debate in India on our film. We had to cut out words like “sexy” “orgasm” or “Indian Figure.” I thought that was outrageous. We were asked to blur all the images of Goddesses. This entire episode started a big debate on the role of women in Modern India and is still going on!”
The Timepiece tells the story of an unlikely friendship between two people from different cultures, different generations and different sexual orientations. When Sunny (Karan Choudhary), a young, straight guy from India, meets Larry (Bill Bateman), a middle-aged gay guy in New York, they discover their shared love of film, acting, life and each other’s company. But their friendship is tested when Larry’s prized possession goes missing and he jumps to a biased conclusion accusing Sunny of the theft. Will these newfound friends overcome their differences to forget and forgive? Only time will tell. Length: 14 minutes. Interview with Writer/Director/Producer/Actor Karan Choudhary.
<WOMEN’S VOICES>
Purdah - The inspiring story of a young Indian woman who trades her burka for dreams of playing on the Mumbai Senior Women’s Cricket Team and how the harsh realities for women in her country creates an unexpected outcome for her own family, ultimately shattering and fueling aspirations. Length: 71 minutes. Director/Producer Jeremy Guy:
Brave Girls - In a small town in India, the opportunity to go back to school has opened up the possibility of a different life for Karishma, Apsana and Samira. But even as they prepare for final exams, their families begin preparations for their arranged weddings, threatening to pull them back into the prescribed roles of wives and mothers. Immediately, they are forced to choose between their evolving dreams and their obligations to their community. Length: 68 minutes. Director Ellie Walton:
Maya - Having found someone she likes, Maya is ready to commit to marriage under one non-negotiable condition: that her mother joins the household. The secret reason behind this requirement is awkwardly revealed during a loquacious exchange about love marriage over lunch between the two families. Length: 19 minutes. Writer/Director Vikas Chandra:
My Scary Indian Wedding - A cursed bridesmaid is forced to track down and marry her soulmate to escape the wrath of a malevolent demon called The Manglik. Length: 12:04 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Ramone Menon:
<REAL-LIFE STORIES>
Machines - A kaleidoscopic and censorial meditation on the meaning of labor in an Indian textile sweatshop. Length: 72 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Rahul Jain:
Children of the Soil - A thought-provoking visual comment on events plaguing India's farmer community with its associated evils like starvation, debt trap, homelessness, deprivation, begging, suicides and urban migration to losing the very farmland that defines them. Length: 4 minutes. Writers/Directors/Producers/Editors Ranadeep Bhattacharyya and Judhajit Bagchi:
Holy Cowboys - In small-town India, where cows are considered sacred, a teenage boy and his group of friends set off on a quest to become saviors of the holy cow only to find themselves under the grip of right-wing nationalism. Length: 24 minutes. Director Varun Chopra:
A Rifle and a Bag - A young Indian couple of surrendered communist rebels (Naxalites) is fighting for their children's future. Length: 89 minutes. Interview with NoCut Film Collective (Cristina Hanes - Romania, Isabella Rinaldi - Italy, Arya Rothe - India):
Ask The Sexpert is a feature length documentary about a highly popular 93—year-old sex advice columnist, Dr. Watsa, who writes for a daily newspaper in Mumbai. Despite sex being a taboo topic in that country, the column's brand of non—moralistic advice and humor has emboldened many to write in with their questions, the vast majority of whom seek basic information. The columnist gains popularity even while a ban on comprehensive sex education in schools is adopted by approximately one third of India's states. Length: 80 minutes. Director/Producer Vaishali Sinha.
The Timekeeper - A man desperately seeks to preserve his life long passion for creating analog clocks in an era of digital totality. Length: 5 minutes. Director/Producer/Editor Sohil Vaidya:
Call Me Dancer - Manish is a young and talented street dancer from the City of Dreams, Mumbai. He struggles against his parents’ insistence that he follow a traditional path because they depend on their only son's support. When he accidentally walks into an inner-city dance school and encounters acurmudgeonly 70-year-old Israeli ballet master, a hunger develops within him. Ambitious and passionate, Manish is now determined to make it as a professional dancer, but the odds are stacked against him. A magical journey from the streets of Mumbai to the stages of New York. Length: 84 minutes. Director/Producer Leslie Shampaine:
ആശാൻ(Asan) I āśān I - A film that gets you closer to the extremely complex style of singing of Master Kalamandalam Gangadharan. Length: 69 minutes. Writer/Director Ratheesh:
Yogacharya B. K. S. Iyengar: Uniting Through Yoga - A documentary that explores the legacy of Yogacharya B.K.S. Iyengar, this film will take you on an emotional journey that encompasses the yogic practice and personal life of one of the greatest yoga masters to have ever lived. Length: 1 hour 15 minutes. Writer/Director/Editor Vishaal Desai:
Ocean in a Drop - Entrepreneur Osama Manzar wants to bring a billion rural Indians online by 2020. This documentary belongs to a trilogy of films on our platform by Andrew Garton dealing with resilient communities responding to grief, native customary rights and the right to be informed. The other films include Higher Ground and Forged From Fire. Length: 55 minutes. Director/Producer Andrew Garton:
<DIASPORA>
AMMA - A young Indian woman moves to a new culture, and realises she is stronger then she could have ever imagined. Length: 12 minutes. Writer/Director Anusha Muller:
A Sari for Pallavi - When traditional Thini & promiscuous Pallavi get into a culture clash, Pallavi has to decide between honoring the Indian traditions of her family or to stay true to her modern American identity. Length: 10 minutes. Director Kate Chamuris:
Kanavu - A young woman connects to her ancestry and culture through discovering a garment belonging to her grandmother. Length: 3 minutes. Writer/Cinematographer S. Lakmé Iyengar:
<HORROR>
Hunger - During the Bengal Famine of 1770, in British colonized India a starving man comes across a landlord who invites him for lunch. Soon the hungry man discovers something terrifying. Length: 5:00 minutes. Writer/Director Junayed Alavi: