
Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Irrfan Khan in a still from The Lunchbox
London:
Director Ritesh Batra's debut filmThe Lunchbox, starring Irrfan Khan and NawazuddinSiddiqui, will compete in the official competition section ofthis year's London Film Festival.
The Lunchbox, which earlier won the critics week viewerschoice award at the 66th Cannes film festival, is the onlyIndian film to make it to the 13-film shortlist at the festhere.
The film has been jointly produced by Guneet Monga andAnurag Kashyap among others.Described as India's hottest indie film of the year,The Lunchbox is based on the Mumbai's dabbawalla delivery service -known all over the world for its precision.
The film will face tough international competition fromJonathan Glazer's Under The Skin starring Scarlett Johanssonas a man-eating alien; Parkland, Peter Landesman's filmabout events in Dallas, Texas on the day former US PresidentJohn F Kennedy was assassinated; and "Starred Up" from Britishdirector David Mackenzie.
Some of the other Indian entries in this year's line-upof 234 feature films from across 74 countries include JeevanSmriti, Bengali filmmaker Rituparno Ghosh's last completefeature before his sudden death in May. It is structured as apersonal docu-drama around Ghosh's admiration for legendarypoet and writer Rabindranath Tagore.
Indo-Canadian production Siddharth by director RichieMehta and Buddhadeb Dasgupta's Anwar Ka Ajab Kissa (Sniffer)have been selected in the Journey category this year.An Indian village also forms the backdrop of Bhutanesedirector Khyentse Norbu's Vara: A Blessing, starring actressShahana Goswami in the lead. It is based on Indian poet andnovelist Sunil Gangppadhyaya's short story and dedicated toSatyajit Ray's classic Charulata.
From Gulf to Gulf to Gulf, by directors Shaina Anandand Ashok Sukumaran, is a film based on real events and madeup of videos of real events. It draws from years of dialogueand friendship between sailors travelling across the ArabianSea from the Gulf of Kutch between India and Pakistan to thePersian Gulf.
The British Film Institute's London Film Festival 2013,which will run from October 9 till 20, will be opened byHollywood actor Tom Hanks with a gala screening of his filmCaptain Phillips.
The biopic, directed by Paul Greengrass, tells the storyof Captain Richard Phillips who was taken hostage by SomaliPirates during the Maersk Alabama hijacking in 2009.Hanks will also close the annual festival with Saving MrBanks, the untold story of how the Disney classic MaryPoppins made it to the screen.
Other big films to be screened across London cinemas nextmonth include the sci-fi thriller Gravity, starring GeorgeClooney and Sandra Bullock, the Coen Brothers' Inside LlewynDavis and the critically acclaimed lesbian drama, Blue isthe Warmest Colour.
The festival will host 16 international premieres and 29European premieres. There will also be screenings of 134 liveaction and animated shorts.
The Lunchbox, which earlier won the critics week viewerschoice award at the 66th Cannes film festival, is the onlyIndian film to make it to the 13-film shortlist at the festhere.
The film has been jointly produced by Guneet Monga andAnurag Kashyap among others.Described as India's hottest indie film of the year,The Lunchbox is based on the Mumbai's dabbawalla delivery service -known all over the world for its precision.
The film will face tough international competition fromJonathan Glazer's Under The Skin starring Scarlett Johanssonas a man-eating alien; Parkland, Peter Landesman's filmabout events in Dallas, Texas on the day former US PresidentJohn F Kennedy was assassinated; and "Starred Up" from Britishdirector David Mackenzie.
Some of the other Indian entries in this year's line-upof 234 feature films from across 74 countries include JeevanSmriti, Bengali filmmaker Rituparno Ghosh's last completefeature before his sudden death in May. It is structured as apersonal docu-drama around Ghosh's admiration for legendarypoet and writer Rabindranath Tagore.
Indo-Canadian production Siddharth by director RichieMehta and Buddhadeb Dasgupta's Anwar Ka Ajab Kissa (Sniffer)have been selected in the Journey category this year.An Indian village also forms the backdrop of Bhutanesedirector Khyentse Norbu's Vara: A Blessing, starring actressShahana Goswami in the lead. It is based on Indian poet andnovelist Sunil Gangppadhyaya's short story and dedicated toSatyajit Ray's classic Charulata.
From Gulf to Gulf to Gulf, by directors Shaina Anandand Ashok Sukumaran, is a film based on real events and madeup of videos of real events. It draws from years of dialogueand friendship between sailors travelling across the ArabianSea from the Gulf of Kutch between India and Pakistan to thePersian Gulf.
The British Film Institute's London Film Festival 2013,which will run from October 9 till 20, will be opened byHollywood actor Tom Hanks with a gala screening of his filmCaptain Phillips.
The biopic, directed by Paul Greengrass, tells the storyof Captain Richard Phillips who was taken hostage by SomaliPirates during the Maersk Alabama hijacking in 2009.Hanks will also close the annual festival with Saving MrBanks, the untold story of how the Disney classic MaryPoppins made it to the screen.
Other big films to be screened across London cinemas nextmonth include the sci-fi thriller Gravity, starring GeorgeClooney and Sandra Bullock, the Coen Brothers' Inside LlewynDavis and the critically acclaimed lesbian drama, Blue isthe Warmest Colour.
The festival will host 16 international premieres and 29European premieres. There will also be screenings of 134 liveaction and animated shorts.