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IAAC NY Indian Film
Festival 2011
Wednesday, May 4 - Sunday, May 8, 2011
The
Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC) proudly
kicks off its second decade of film excellence
with a new name and a new set of dates for
its signature event of the year. The New York
Indian Film Festival: 11th Annual IAAC Film
Festival will take place from Wednesday, May
4 to Sunday, May 8. Formerly held every November,
the oldest and most prestigious film festival
for Indian cinema in North America now moves
to its new spring home on the first weekend
of May. Aseem Chhabra, noted film writer and
long-time IAAC Film Festival selection committee
member, ushers in this new era as Film Festival
Director. |
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The New York Indian Film
Festival continues its tradition of launching
at the world-famous Paris Theatre in Manhattan
with its star-studded Opening Night red carpet
premiere which will take place on May 4 followed
by a gala benefit dinner at the opulent Jumeirah
Essex House. Film festival screenings will take
place from May 5 through May 8 at Tribeca Cinemas
with the Closing Night selection to screen at
Asia Society followed by the annual awards ceremony
and afterparty. Opening and Closing Night film
selections will be announced soon. In addition,
the festival will also host an exclusive celebrity-filled
celebration honoring the 150th anniversary of
the birth of India's legendary Nobel Prize-winning
artist and poet Rabinranath Tagore at Asia Society
on May 8.
"We start 2011 with
a whole new energy for our annual IAAC Film Festival
- a new name, a new Film Festival Director and
a move to Spring," says Indo-American Arts
Council Executive Director Aroon Shivdasani. "I
am really excited about these changes and look
forward to presenting New York with a fresh and
exciting selection of films this year." Film
Festival Director Aseem Chhabra adds "I am
thrilled to have been appointed as the director
of the festival - now re-named as the New York
Indian Film Festival. I have been a part of the
IAAC family for several years and its events have
been my one-stop shop as an entertainment writer
and a New York-based consumer of Indian arts."
Created in 2001 in the wake
of the September 11 attacks on New York City,
the film festival was started to create a better
understanding of the people and stories from the
Indian subcontinent by bringing the most acclaimed
feature films, shorts, and documentaries from
that region and its Diaspora to America's biggest
and most remarkable city. Mira Nair's 'Monsoon
Wedding' closed that year's festival ahead of
its worldwide theatrical release and was joined
over the years by numerous films such as Deepa
Mehta's Oscar-nominated 'Water', Nair's 'The Namesake',
the Academy Award-winning 'Born Into Brothels'
as well as the New York Premiere of Danny Boyle's
'Slumdog Millionaire' which won eight Oscars.
With the help of loyal supporters such as Nair,
Mehta, Salman Rushdie, Madhur Jaffrey, Shabana
Azmi, Padma Lakshmi, Shashi Tharoor, the Indian
Consulate, and the late Ismail Merchant, the IAAC
Film Festival has been able to bring cinema from
one of the world's most vibrant film industries
to audiences across New York City.
A call for submissions has
been announced by the Indo-American Arts Council
with a deadline date of February 20, 2011. For
further information, visit www.iaac.us
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