Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Raynaud's And Irregular Periods

Arno the Ganges River to River back

Ricevo e volentieri pubblico il comunicato stampa di River to River, il festival che perta l'India sul grande schermo.

Newsletter

River to River. Florence Indian Film Festival

4-10 December 2009

Odeon Cinema

Piazza Strozzi, 1 - Florence

Arno the Ganges: a December 9th edition of the Florence River to River. Florence Indian Film Festival, which this year offers a retrospective on the melancholy genius of Guru Dutt, the Indian Orson Welles.

Despite the substantial budget cuts, this year's Festival offers a rich program of films, new partnerships and interesting side events.

From 4 to 10 December 2009 will be held in Florence the ninth edition of River to River. Florence Indian Film Festival , founded and directed by Savage Velo.

The Festival, under the patronage of the Indian Embassy in Rome, will be held Odeon, the style theater in the old town, under the auspices of the Media Regionale Toscana-Film Commission to 'internal Fifty Days of Cinema Internazionale in Florence .

Among the films in competition for the River to River DigiChannel Audience Award will screen the latest films, short films, documentaries and the Indian film industry, telling stories and life experiences that are the mirror of a diverse society, colorful and evolving with an increasingly facing the Western world from the protagonist.

Accompanying the film will be present directors, actors and producers.

The retrospective this year will be dedicated to the melancholic genius of Guru Dutt (1925-1964), one of the greatest directors of AGA d'Or of Indian cinema, who died prematurely (alcoholic and suicidal) to 39, whose work is often imbued with a sense of solitude but at the same time a great charm.

have selected three of his masterpieces, which will be visible on the original films in collaboration with the Directorate of Film Festivals in New Delhi: The French police Aar Paar - This or that (1954), the troubled history love of Mr. and Mrs. 55 (1955) and autobiographical and poignant Kaagaz ke Phool - Paper Flowers (1959).

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