MOUNTATIN film festival starts from TODAY
The Kathmandu International Mountain Film Festival (Kimff) 2006 begins in the capital from today. Nazir Sabir, Pakistani mountaineer and conservationist, will inaugurate the festival at 3 P.M. Some 73 films – documentaries, features, animation, shorts – would be screened in Russian Cultural Center, Kamal Pokhari; Gurukul, Purano Baneshwor and the Tourist Service Center, Exhibition Road from December 7 to 11.
Kimff 2006 would feature the best films on mountains, mountain people and mountain sports from around the globe. The films cover a wide array of subjects – including conflict, culture, climbing, wildlife, environment, globalization, gender, and lifestyles.
Kimff has over the years been part of the campaign to make the audio-visual medium come to aid of social and economic transformation of the Nepali human landscape. At a time when Nepal is just coming out of an era marked by extreme violence in public life overloaded with a period of autocracy, Kimff '06 is being organized with a specific focus on reviving hope and generating momentum for a post-conflict, democratic Nepal.
Kimff 2006 would feature four Nepali films. Dancing Kathmandu (premiere) a US/Nepal venture exploring the classical dance scene in Kathmandu while Chulo, Choli ra Banduk (premiere) looks at women in the Maoist movement. Hami Kunako Maanche is about a remote Tamang village that gets a bridge. The Last Race is a tale of friendship of two boys in the picturesque mountain valley of Manang.
Kimff 2006 would also present a retrospective of films by the late Narain Singh Thapa, an Indian filmmaker of Nepali origin who specialized in films on Himalayan Valleys and mountains.
The main purpose of Kimff is to showcase films that attract peer review and critiques that lead to a better documentation of mountain issues, particularly of highland regions of the developing world, the organisers said.
Kimff 2006 would feature the best films on mountains, mountain people and mountain sports from around the globe. The films cover a wide array of subjects – including conflict, culture, climbing, wildlife, environment, globalization, gender, and lifestyles.
Kimff has over the years been part of the campaign to make the audio-visual medium come to aid of social and economic transformation of the Nepali human landscape. At a time when Nepal is just coming out of an era marked by extreme violence in public life overloaded with a period of autocracy, Kimff '06 is being organized with a specific focus on reviving hope and generating momentum for a post-conflict, democratic Nepal.
Kimff 2006 would feature four Nepali films. Dancing Kathmandu (premiere) a US/Nepal venture exploring the classical dance scene in Kathmandu while Chulo, Choli ra Banduk (premiere) looks at women in the Maoist movement. Hami Kunako Maanche is about a remote Tamang village that gets a bridge. The Last Race is a tale of friendship of two boys in the picturesque mountain valley of Manang.
Kimff 2006 would also present a retrospective of films by the late Narain Singh Thapa, an Indian filmmaker of Nepali origin who specialized in films on Himalayan Valleys and mountains.
The main purpose of Kimff is to showcase films that attract peer review and critiques that lead to a better documentation of mountain issues, particularly of highland regions of the developing world, the organisers said.