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All the Winners of the online London Indian Film Festival

wins at the online London Indian Film Festival 
, & win Outstanding Achievement awards; ICON awards go to Oscar nominee & Indian stalwart Shabana Azmi

The 11th anniversary of the UK and Europe's largest South Asian film festival, supported by the Bagri Foundation and the British Film Institute (BFI) opened online, during the global pandemic, with with Bollywood star Ayushmann Khurrana in conversation on 25th June, and closed with Hollywood star Freida Pinto, in conversation, on 5th July, peppered with an array of free films and talks, at www.loveliffathome.com

The festival included several LGBTQ+ films, women helmed films, films from Sri Lanka and Pakistan, as well as the buzzing Satyajit Ray Short Film competition, with a jury of high profile film pundits, who deliberated over Zoom.

The festival went online with www.loveliffathome.com in May with the Satyajit Ray Competition prize winning shorts, from the last decade, and then phased in geo-blocked film content on the site, including with past festival favourites like Song of Lahore from the double Oscar and 7 time Emmy winner, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and BFI Sutherland prize winner Rat-Trap by the legendary Adoor Gopalakrishnan.

Award winners:

Deepa Mehta (ICON)
“It is such an honour to receive the ICON Achievement Award at the London Indian Film Festival this year. I love LIFF & the amazing work being done by Cary Sawhney and his team. So grateful for this award.”

Shabana Azmi (ICON)
“Acting is a very rewarding profession because you inhabit the world of a character you may never have known and thus enrich your life. I wish to thank the London Indian Film Festival for conferring the prestigious ICON award 2020 on me. I am both delighted and humbled. In these days of the lockdown. Films and the arts have provided great solace to troubled minds and I am proud of being an actor.”

Freida Pinto (Outstanding Achievement)
“I'm delighted to receive this award from the London Indian Film Festival, who have shown my films over the years. The team continues to champion South Asian cinema to the UK, and globally now, via this new online platform, moving with the changing times, with a true passion for diverse storytelling.”

Adil Hussain (Outstanding Achievement)
“Conception, pre production, shooting, post production, showcasing platforms, reviewers , critics and finally the audiences – in these stages, I play but one of the roles as an actor. I joyously accept this kind recognition by the outstanding team of the London Indian Film Festival who, very diligently and carefully curated independent films from Indian Subcontinent for the last 10 years. I also, humbly, share this award with my acting teachers and friends who always believed in me. Thank you.”

Vidya Balan (Outstanding Achievement)
“I'm aware of the work LIFF has been doing to champion Indian subcontinental cinema, across the UK. In this year, where going online has become inevitable, I'm very pleased to be celebrated, alongside many wonderful films, and cinematic legends.”

Audience Favourite:
This year, this is a special mention from the festival line-up – Mississippi Masala (1991) by Mira Nair, starring Denzel Washington and Sarita Choudhury – the most viewed film on the platform.

Short film winners:
Satyajit Ray Prize winner – Darling – This brilliantly crafted film explores the relationship between teenager Shani and Alina Darling, a transgender person on whom he has a crush. Alina dreams of becoming a dancing star in raunchy Punjabi mujras. Marvellously written, directed and acted, the film, that observes shadowy worlds, and the popularity of raunch in a conservative Islamic society, is produced by two Pakistani/origin women, Nadia Afghan and Mahak Jiwani. 
Special Mention from the Satyajit Ray Short Film Jury – Song We Sang, by 24 year old woman director, Aarti Neharsh.

In Conversation Talent:

  • Forbes India's Celebrity 100 listed, Filmfare, IIFA winner winning Bollywood star Ayushmann Khurrana
  • Oscar nominee Deepa Mehta
  • BAFTA, Oscar, Golden Globe nominee Mira Nair
  • Indian National Award winning actor Adil Hussain (Life of Pi, Star Trek: Discovery) with BAFTA, Academy nominated director Peter Webber
  • Acclaimed Indian cinema actor, multiple Indian National Award, Filmfare winner, Padma Bhushan Shabana Azmi in conversation with British director Pratibha Parmar. 
  • BAFTA nominee, SAG winner, Hollywood star Freida Pinto, who is currently working with Gabrielle Union, for the Dressed in Dreams film adaptation of the book

QUOTES FROM THE FESTIVAL DIRECTOR AND TITLE SPONSOR

Cary Rajinder Sawhney MBE, Executive & Programming Director of LIFF
“We are delighted that this year's festival has attracted a record attendance in terms of viewed content and that the festival has creatively met the many challenges of these current times and actually thrived.It is a clear example of how diverse minority communities, used to overcoming adversity, can find quick solutions. In these times of assault on Human rights and the resurgence of state supported prejudice globally, one of our great achievements was to source and showcase Mira Nair's under-sung masterpiece Mississippi Masala, a film that bridges not only the tense discourse between African-American and South Asian communities, but between the final collapse of the hierarchies set up by the British Empire in East Africa and a modernity seeking to escape this past. To encapsulate this epic backdrop in one romantic movie, starring the mighty Denzel Washington, is the talent of few filmmakers. We hope that our rare screening inspires the filmmakers to make this still highly relevant film more widely available”

Ben Luxford, Head of BFI Audiences
“During these extremely challenging times the Festival has not only adapted to new circumstances, they've developed innovative ways to engage with people across the UK. The team at LIFF have done an incredible job delivering their programme and have unearthed some truly astonishing rare gems for audiences to enjoy. The BFI is extremely proud to have supported this activity and we hope to see it continue”

Title Sponsor, Alka Bagri, trustee of the Bagri Foundation
“The Bagri Foundation congratulates LIFF on a wonderful online festival of Indian cinema classics and UK premieres in this unique year. The array of in-conversations with Hollywood and Independent stars and award-winning directors made this year's festival truly memorable. We are thrilled to see the ICON and Outstanding Achievements award winners and I was privileged to be a part of the Satyajit Ray short film jury who selected the much-deserved Darling as 2020's winner. Many congratulations to all involved”

About the author

Adriana Rosati

On paper I am an Italian living in London, in reality I was born and bread in a popcorn bucket. I've loved cinema since I was a little child and I’ve always had a passion and interest for Asian (especially Japanese) pop culture, food and traditions, but on the cinema side, my big, first love is Hong Kong Cinema. Then - by a sort of osmosis - I have expanded my love and appreciation to the cinematography of other Asian countries. I like action, heroic bloodshed, wu-xia, Shaw Bros (even if it’s not my specialty), Anime, and also more auteur-ish movies. Anything that is good, really, but I am allergic to rom-com (unless it’s a HK rom-com, possibly featuring Andy Lau in his 20s)"

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