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Wild Swans (2023 film)

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Wild Swans
Official Poster
Directed byRajni Basumatary
Written byRajni Basumatary
Produced byJani Viswanath
Rajni Basumatary
StarringHelina Daimary
Sangeena Brahma
Mithinga Narzary
Anjali Daimari
CinematographyChida Bora
Edited byTinni Mitra
Music byAvinash Baghel
Release dates
  • 29 September 2023 (2023-09-29) (VIFF)
  • 10 December 2023 (2023-12-10) (KIFF)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageBoro
Rajni Basumatary on the shoot of Wild Swans
Rajni Basumatary during the shoot of Wild Swans in Assam, India in 2022.

Gorai Phakhri, also known as Wild Swans, is a 2023 Indian Boro-language drama film written and directed by Rajni Basumatary and produced by Jani Viswanath. The film has an all-female cast.[1] It stars Helina Daimary, Sangeena Brahma, Mithinga Narzary and Anjali Daimari. The film premiered at the Vancouver International Film Festival 2023 on 29 September 2023.[2]

The film won the Best Film award at the 29th Kolkata International Film Festival under the Indian Language Films category.[3] The film was awarded the Director's Vision Award at the 21st Indian Film Festival Stuttgart 2024. [4]

Plot

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Set in the foothills of Bodoland in Northeast India, the story explores the lives of women in a patriarchal society recovering from decades of armed conflict between the State and separatist groups. Their experiences of repression and fighting back are interwoven.

Preeti (Helina Daimary), a doctoral student from the city comes to the village for her fieldwork. Her romantic ideas of rural life are crushed after witnessing the effects that militarization and patriarchy have on the everyday lives of these women.

Mainao (Mithinga Narzary) and Gaodaang (Sangeena Brahma) raise their teenage children as single mothers. Mainao's husband, a rebel, was killed by security personnel. Gaodaang's husband is a soldier in the Indian army posted along the country's border. Once inseparable friends, they are now struggling with the bitter legacies left behind by their husbands. Middle-aged Malothi (Anjali Daimari) is gang raped by an armed patrol one night. Her husband abandons her labeling her "unclean".

But winds of change are about to blow.

Cast

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  • Helina Daimary as Preeti
  • Sangeena Brahma as Gaodaang
  • Mithinga Narzary as Mainao
  • Dr. Anjali Daimari as Malothi
  • Dwijiri B. Basumatary as Sonathi
  • Milina Daimari as Daisy
  • Queen Hazarika as Anondi
  • Ramileswari Brahma Boro as Sikhiri
  • Prof. Dolly Kikon as Herself
  • Mwnabili Brahma as Prof. Renu Boro
  • Rajni Basumatary as Bimuli

Production

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The film is set in the foothills of Bodoland in Northeast India. The film has an all-female cast and most crew members are women.[5] The film was shot in February 2022 in Guwahati and Udalguri in the Northeast Indian state of Assam. The post-production was completed in August 2023. The film is produced by Jani Viswanath and co-produced by Rajni Basumatary.[citation needed]

This is Rajni Basumatary's third directorial film. The film tells interwoven stories about village women ganging up against patriarchy in the milieu of armed conflict prevalent in India's Northeast region.[6] The film hopes to take forward the dialogue on the subject. The film is inspired by stories part of Basumatary's own upbringing.[7]

Release

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The film premiered at the Vancouver International Film Festival on 29 September 2023. It was the first Boro-language film that was selected for this section of the festival. It was the only Indian Indian feature film at the festival.[8]

The film had its Indian premiere at the 29th Kolkata International Film Festival in December 2023.

Awards

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The film won the Best Film award at the 29th Kolkata International Film Festival under the Indian Language Films category. It won the Best Director at the 6th Sailadhar Baruah Awards. It won the Best Art Director at the 6th Sailadhar Baruah Awards. It won the Gautama Buddha Award for Best Narrative Feaure Film at the Nepal International Film Festival. It won the Director's Vision Award at the 21st Indian Film Festival Stuttgart.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Khan, Murtaza Ali (24 September 2023). "An all-female cast makes 'Gorai Phakri' unique: Basumatary". The Sunday Guardian.
  2. ^ Gani, Abdul (15 September 2023). "Bodo language film 'Gorai Phakhri' to be premiered at Vancouver festival". assamtribune.com. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  3. ^ SNS (13 December 2023). "KIFF ends with a bang, Israeli film wins best film title". The Statesman. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  4. ^ "Home". Indisches Filmfestival. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
  5. ^ Das, Pooja (4 March 2024). "'Gorai Phakhri' at BIFFes: A lens on subtle patriarchy through an all-female cast". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  6. ^ "Today, more films are employing the female gaze: Filmmaker Rajni Basumatary". The Times of India. 5 March 2024. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  7. ^ "Today, more films are employing the female gaze: Filmmaker Rajni Basumatary". The Times of India. 5 March 2024. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  8. ^ Gani, Abdul (15 September 2023). "Bodo language film 'Gorai Phakhri' to be premiered at Vancouver festival". assamtribune.com. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
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