Little Terrorist

Little Terrorist is a 2004 Indian short film directed, written and produced by Ashvin Kumar. It was nominated for the 2005 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film. Ashvin Kumar is the son of fashion designer Ritu Kumar, and made his debut with Road to Ladakh (2002), starring Irrfan Khan and Koel Purie.[1][2]

Little Terrorist
Directed byAshvin Kumar
Produced byAshvin Kumar,
Dilip Singh Rathore,
Sarah Tierney
Written byAshvin Kumar
StarringZulfuqar Ali (Salim),
Sushil Sharma,
Megnaa Mehtta
Music byNainita Desai
CinematographyMarkus Hürsch
Release date
2004
Running time
15 min
LanguageHindi
Urdu
Bangla

Production

The leading cast of the movie consisted of Zulfuqar Ali (Jamal), Sushil Sharma and Megnaa Mehtta. None of them had ever acted in a movie before this[3] and while Zulfuqar is a street child, Sushil Sharma is a clerk in the government service in Delhi and Megnaa was a 12th standard student at the time of shooting the movie.[4]

The production of the film commenced in November 2003 and was completed in March 2004. The crew were selected by Alipur Films via Shooting People, the online filmmakers community and worked free of cost for the movie and even travelled to India at their own expense.[5]

The movie was shot in the deserts of Rajasthan on a very tight budget. The crew faced various difficulties due to the multilingual production team, remote locations and the shoestring budget. These were further complicated when a tent with the reel burnt down. The crew were however able to salvage the reel from the tent. At another time, a herd of cows stampeded through the shooting location.

Synopsis

The movie revolves around Jamal (played by Salim), a 10-year-old Pakistani Muslim boy. While playing cricket near the Indo Pakistani border, the cricket ball is tossed over to the Indian side of the border separated by a fence.

Jamal crosses the fence to fetch the ball. He is however spotted by the Indian security forces. He hides in an Indian village where he is provided shelter by Bhola (Sushil Sharma), a devout Hindu Brahmin. Both Bhola and his niece, Rani (Megnaa Mehtta), are sceptical about allowing a Muslim boy in their home.

However, when the security forces come looking for Jamal in the village, he is protected by Bhola and Rani.

Jamal does manage to return to Pakistan in the end.

Cast

  • Julfuqar Ali – Jamal
  • Sushil Sharma – Bhola
  • Megnaa Mehtta – Rani

Crew

  • Costume Design: Ritu Kumar
  • Sound recordist: Roland Heap

Awards

Since its world premiere in September 2004, the film has been invited to 103 film festivals and has won awards in fourteen of them. Chief among them was the nomination for Academy Awards, USA in the Best Live action short films category. It was also nominated for the best short film award in the European Film Awards.[6]

It went on to win the audience award in the Almería International Short Film Festival, the UIP Ghent Award for European Short Films in the Flanders International Film Festival, the grand prize in the Manhattan Short Films festival and the first prize in the Short Films category in the Montréal World Film Festival.

The movie was officially mentioned and selected in various other competitions.[6] It also won an honourable mention by BAFTA LA. It is the first Indian short film to get a theatrical release in India.

The film features on the list of "10 Shorts You Must See" at | url = http://www.making-short-films.com/ |

Won

References

  1. "Ashwin Kumar's 'Little Terrorist' loses out". The Times of India. India. 28 February 2005.
  2. "Call of the wild". The Indian Express. India. 12 May 2009. Archived from the original on 4 October 2012. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  3. "Little Terrorist". Upperstall.com. Archived from the original on 10 September 2006. Retrieved 16 September 2006.
  4. "Cast from the official website". Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 16 September 2006.
  5. "The making of the movie". Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 16 September 2006.
  6. "Official website of the movie". Retrieved 16 September 2006.
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