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Cannes tunes into Manto's world and anguished voice
PTI
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Nandita Das' period biopic Manto, India's flag-bearer in the official selection of the 71st Cannes Film Festival, premiered here today in a packed Salle Debussy. PTI file photo
Nandita Das' period biopic Manto, India's flag-bearer in the official selection of the 71st Cannes Film Festival, premiered here today in a packed Salle Debussy. PTI file photo

Nandita Das' period biopic "Manto", India's flag-bearer in the official selection of the 71st Cannes Film Festival, premiered here today in a packed Salle Debussy.

Twenty-three members of the cast and production team took the stage after the festival's general delegate Thierry Fremaux introduced the director and noted the size of the "Manto" contingent.

"It's India," Das quipped.

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"Yes, it's India," Thierry said in response.

"'Manto' is set in the 1940s and 1950s, but it is about what is happening (on the subcontinent) today," the director said.

"Cannes is like home, and it is great to have my second film premiere here," she said.

In the audience was the director's father and celebrated painter Jatin Das.

Speaking to PTI after the screening, Das noted: "My films are rooted in a milieu but I do not seek to explain everything. If you are true to the emotions you are dealing with, a film connects instantly with the audience."

That "Manto" did was pretty obvious as a stunned audience stayed on for long to congratulate the team behind the biopic of the long-deceased Saadat Hasan Manto, an uncompromising writer who fought all his working life to protect creative freedom.

"People across the world are fearful of all the unsettling developments around them. That is why Manto's writings are as relevant today as they were back in his time," Das said.

"Initially, the script spanned a ten-year period from 1942 to 1952. In the film, that has eventually been whittled down to four years," she said, throwing light on the six-year process from conception to completion.

Das said she has used Manto's writings extensively in developing the film but also used some fictional elements.

"I do films as a means to an end. It is better to get your point across through the means of a film rather than engage with trolls on social media and in the real world," she said.

"Manto", an Indo-French co-production got off the ground a couple of years ago in Cannes, where Das and lead actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui announced their collaboration. The actor is one of the co-producers of the film.

In 2017, the duo was back in Cannes to reveal the first look of "Manto".

That the film is now in the festival's competitive Un certain regard section only brings its journey to a logical launch pad from where it can kick on towards other conquests.

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(Published 13 May 2018, 21:14 IST)