68 Pages
|
| Price: | $28.00 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #107399 in DVD
- Released on: 2008-12-05
- Format: NTSC
- Dimensions: .50" h x 5.50" w x 7.50" l, .22 pounds
- Running time: 92 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
From the director of award winning queer films 'The Pink Mirror (Gulabi Aaina)' and 'Yours Emotionally!' comes another hard hitting drama about marginalized people.
Subverting the Bollywood film genre of song-dance and high drama, the film places characters ignored by Bollywood centerstage - a transsexual bar dancer, a prostitute, a gay couple - to tell their stories of pain and trauma, of happiness and hope, about being HIV+ and alienated.
The film lays bare the ground realities in India, the society's apathy and cruelty towards HIV and AIDS in a honest and sensitive manner.
DIRECTOR'S NOTE
We are all so caught up in our careers, relationships and life in general that we have forgotten to pause and look at the person next to us. Everyone is so distant nowadays, one's own shadow seems a stranger. This film is made with a purpose of bringing some of the stories that we have not cared to stop by and look, into focus. It is not a bugle call for action, but a gentle reminder to pause, reflect and make an effort to understand. Maybe we can all wipe a tear, hold a hand... or maybe write the next 68 Pages.
~ Sridhar Rangayan, 2007
---------------------
BONUS FEATURES -
4 QUEER SHORTS from India
'I am That' - a frank portrayal of dilemmas and desires of a group of transsexuals; 'Mansa' - day in the life of a Indian transgender; 'Eternal' - can two gay men find a happy life together in a small village?; 'Pegasus' - a music video about gay rights and desires in India
---------------------
NOTE: UNIVERSITIES / LIBRARIES / FESTIVALS - Please write to us at 68pages@gmail.com for INSTITUTIONAL COPY of the film and RIGHTS TO SCREEN.
----------------------
This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.
Customer Reviews
HIV in India
"68 Pages"
HIV in India
Amos Lassen
Mansi is an Indian counselor for HIV. Ethically she has to maintain confidentiality and she has to be objective when she tries to understand the problems and give advice to those that she counsels. Emotionality is not an open for her. She sees a lot of suffering and it is hard on her. Since she cannot talk about what she knows, she shares her thoughts with her diary.
Mansi's diary is the basis for this film and what she has written brings to light the stories of four men--Paayal, a sex worker, Nishit a user of intravenous drugs, Kiran, a gay men, and Umrao, a transsexual dancer. These men have been marginalized by society, stigmatized and lost within the mainstream. Through their lives we get a view of HIV positive people and their treatment by others.
India is in a state of denial and most Indians feel that to have HIV is to be cursed. Our four men tell us their stories and we feel their pain and their humiliation. They are rejected, not just by society, but by family and friends. We see that India's view of HIV is shallow but we also get a sense of hope that the stories that we see here can help to bring about a better understanding of the disease and perhaps that those with HIV may be able to achieve a dignified life. The four men come across as heroic and are indeed represent optimism and the triumph of the human spirit.
The movie is very, very touching as well as a slap to India. The film also recognizes the amount of work that HIV counselors do. "68 Pages" is painful to watch but the fact that it engenders hope makes it worthwhile.





