Documentary >> The Guardian


A Night of Knowing Nothing review – kaleidoscopic doc is cinephilia at its best


Link [2022-03-28 20:14:26]



Payal Kapadia’s award-winning film sees artistic creativity go hand in hand with the fight for political freedom in Modi’s India

Cinephilia is, not surprisingly, a favourite subject of film directors, and it has a tendency to manifest itself on screen in nostalgic contexts that teeter on uncritical wistfulness. Here, however, Payal Kapadia’s kaleidoscopic, Cannes prize-winning documentary unlatches cinephilia from its fetishistic shackles as it chronicles the wave of student protests that exploded under the nationalist rule of India’s prime minister Narendra Modi. Love for the moving image – and love for artistic creativity – marches hand in hand with the fight for political freedom.

Threaded together by fictitious letters between two film students who have ended their intercaste relationship, A Night of Knowing Nothing lends a melancholic intimacy to the 2015 student strike at Kapadia’s alma mater, the Film and Television Institute of India, after Modi’s appointment of a right wing former actor as the university’s new chairman. The dissent is captured in passionate bursts; the juxtaposition of tranquil, domestic dormitory life and cacophonous political shouts accentuate the fervent conviction of the latter. When Muslim and lower-caste students suffer maltreatment, the meaning of a state-funded artistic education is called into question.

Continue reading...

Most Read

2024-09-16 13:40:18