[Reader-list] The Wager on Cinema, Screening 6: 'Chauthi Koot' | 4pm, 11 February

The Sarai Programme dak at sarai.net
Thu Feb 2 03:10:06 CST 2017


The Sarai Programme invites you to the sixth screening of the film series
titled, *The Wager on Cinema <http://sarai.net/tag/the-wager-on-cinema/>* :
Gurvinder Singh’s *Chauthi Koot
<https://www.facebook.com/events/770776739765532/>.*

The respondents for this film are Uma Chakravarti and Ravi Vasudevan.

Date: 11 February, 2017
Time: 4 PM (Tea will be served at 3:30 PM)
Venue: The Sarai Programme, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies,
29, Rajpur Road, Civil Lines, Delhi – 110054.

About ‘The Wager on Cinema’-
How do we estimate the value, aesthetic force, and meaning of cinema today?
As media experience, technological change has transformed it beyond
recognition, its material forms altered by analog and digital video
formats, and the modes of circulating, viewing, accessing cinema and making
it have expanded exponentially. And yet, the dream and ambition of cinema
as we have known it has not dissipated, the desire to congregate audiences
to participate in a distinct world of experience, whether to excite, amuse,
to move or to solicit reflection and engagement, to bear witness and to
mobilize.

For us at Sarai, the wager on cinema carries high stakes. It means renewing
a pact with a bid to explore experience, to take film technique as a
vehicle of the unexpected, making connections that take us aback, working
out strategies to navigate media’s capacity to deceive – to sting the
audience as much as expose secretive acts – through a forensic analytics,
through ethical calibration, but also playfully, ironically. For us, such a
wager also places emphasis on process, how things are done, how techniques
are used, what evidence is presented, what judgments are made, how publics
are engaged, framing the cinema as an act of research. In this series,
Sarai will screen films to shift focus, to conjure up unusual images and
sounds, novel techniques and subject matter, and will organise discussions
with practitioners, researchers and an interested public to renew our
investment in the cinema, to capture what it means in our times.

*Synopsis of Chauthi Koot (Punjabi/115mins)*

Director: Gurvinder Singh

At the peak of the militant movement for a separatist Sikh state in Punjab,
two Hindu friends desperate to reach Amritsar, along with a Sikh passenger,
force their way into the guard’s cabin of an empty and sealed train. The
train rattles along in the darkness and one of them remembers a stressful
night when he had lost his way while going to his wife’s village and the
events that had befallen the Sikh farmer’s family who helped him get to the
village. The head of the family is threatened by militants to kill his pet
dog because *“Dogs will bark in the night and betray us. And the* *security
forces certainly don’t spare people like you…”  *Chauthi Koot evokes the
atmosphere of suspicion, fear and paranoia of the Punjab in the 1980s and
explores the dilemma of the common man trapped between the ruthlessness of
the military on one side and the excesses of the militants on the other.

The film has been screened at several national and international film
festivals including *Un Certain Regard*, Cannes 2015. It has won several
awards including the Grand Prix, Belgrade Auteur Film Festival, and the
National Award for Best Punjabi Film. Trailer is available on this LINK
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFS-ETnMSw4>.

*Gurvinder Singh* studied filmmaking at the Film & Television Institute of
India (FTII), Pune, graduating in 2001. He travelled extensively through
Punjab between 2002 and 2006, living and wandering with folk itinerants,
documenting folk ballads and oral narratives. He continued to make short
experimental works and documenting arts/artists for the next few years. He
translated and published a book of conversations with film-maker Mani Kaul,
titled Uncloven Space. In 2011, he directed his first fiction feature in
Punjabi, Anhey Ghorhey Da Daan (Alms for the Blind Horse), which won
several awards including three National Awards.

*Uma Chakravarti* is a feminist historian. She taught at Miranda House,
University of Delhi. Her numerous publications include: Rewriting history:
The Life and Times of Pandita Ramabai (1998), and Delhi Riots: Three Days
in the Life of a Nation (1987, co-authored), among others.

*Ravi Vasudevan* is Professor at CSDS and co-founder of The Sarai Programme.
URL: http://sarai.net/the-wager-on-cinema-screening-6-chauthi-koot/
Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/770776739765532/

*The Sarai Programme*
Centre for the Study of Developing Societies
sarai.net | facebook.com/sarai.net


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