Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
Bollywood

First Look: Rajinikanth, Big B light up 45th IFFI inaugural

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 20 Nov, 2014 01:32 PM
  • First Look: Rajinikanth, Big B light up 45th IFFI inaugural
The 45th edition of the IFFI got off to a glittering start at a ceremony here amid the towering presence of legendary actors Rajinikanth and Amitabh Bachchan, Information and Broadcasting Minister Arun Jaitley, Goa Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar and ewly-installed union Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar.
 
The 11-day International Film Festival of India held in the state capital will screen 179 films from 75 countries across different categories which include World Cinema (61 films), Masterstrokes (11 films), Festival Kaleidoscope (20 films), Soul of Asia (7 films), Documentaries (6 films), and Animated Films (6 films).
 
Fifteen films, from across the globe, including two from India are competing for the coveted Golden Peacock awards at the festival.
 
Speaking on the occasion, the chief guest Amitabh Bachchan said that a darkened cinema hall was one of the greatest examples of human integration in a world that was fast disintegrating.
 
"When we sit inside a darkened hall, we never ask the caste, creed, religion of the person sitting next to us... In this fast disintegrating world of ours, where will you find such a better example of human integration, than a cinema hall?" Bachchan said at the end of an emotive, but informative presentation on the evolution of Indian cinema.
 
To thundering applause, Bollywood's living legend also recited a stanza from his father Harivansh Rai Bachchan poem "Himmat karne walon ki haar nahin hoti". He also made a strong case for Indian popular cinema, which he said, despite ridicule and criticism was finally making its way to the global arena.
 
Jaitley, who along with Bachchan awarded the Centenary award for Film personality of the Year to Rajinikanth, said that while cricket is religion in India, cinema has been the country's "alternative religion".
 
"It entertains us, it educates us, it gives us various social perspectives. Young growing minds learn more from it, than even from formal methods of education. It throws up men and women of great talent," said Jaitley.
 
The cabinet minister also said that the relatively newer phenomenon of corporatisation of the Indian film industry would hold it in good stead in the future.
 
"Our cinema industry has matured immensely. Commercially it has grown. The last decade has seen the corporatisation of industry...this will make it professional," Jaitley said.
 
Defence minister Manohar Parrikar, who hails from Goa and was serving as chief minister until a few weeks back, said that a new venue had been identified for the next year's IFFI and expressed satisfaction at a recent decision of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government at the Centre to make Goa the permanent venue for the grand event.
 
Goa chief minister Laxmikant Parsekar also said that his government would look at encouraging local business to set up film assistance units, which could look after the production needs of several dozen film crew who use Goa as a shooting location every year.
 
The occasion's last speaker Rajinikanth was brief and after thanking his 'elder brother' Amitabh for handing him the award, dedicated it to his producers, directors, technicians and his fans.
 
"The President" directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf will be the opening film of the fest, and "The Grandmaster" by Wong Kar-wai, who will incidentally receive the lifetime achievement award, will be the closing film of the festival.

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

Can't direct horror film: Bejoy Nambiar

Can't direct horror film: Bejoy Nambiar
He has produced forthcoming horror drama "Pizza", but Bejoy Nambiar says he can't think of directing a film in the same genre.

Can't direct horror film: Bejoy Nambiar

Why is kissing such a big deal, wonders Shraddha Kapoor

Why is kissing such a big deal, wonders Shraddha Kapoor
Actress Shradhha Kapoor can't make head or tail of the hue and cry over her kissing scene with actor Sidharth Malhotra in "Ek Villain" even though she is "conservative at heart".

Why is kissing such a big deal, wonders Shraddha Kapoor

After flop films, I could've disappeared: Shraddha Kapoor

After flop films, I could've disappeared: Shraddha Kapoor
The actress, who is loving all the attention she's getting with her latest release "Ek Villain", says she has no regrets about her past choices.

After flop films, I could've disappeared: Shraddha Kapoor

Waiting for 'Yudh': SRK tells Big B

Waiting for 'Yudh': SRK tells Big B
"@SrBachchan waiting for Yudh. Am sure it will be path breaking as all your other endeavours have been," Shah Rukh posted to Big B on Twitter Saturday.

Waiting for 'Yudh': SRK tells Big B

Year since 'Lootera', appreciation hasn't stopped: Sonakshi Sinha

Year since 'Lootera', appreciation hasn't stopped: Sonakshi Sinha
For "Dabangg" actress Sonakshi Sinha, "Lootera" came as a golden chance to prove her range as an actor. Now a year since the movie's release, she says the appreciation is still "pouring in".

Year since 'Lootera', appreciation hasn't stopped: Sonakshi Sinha

Why was Shilpa Shukla 'frustrated' after 'B.A. Pass'?

Why was Shilpa Shukla 'frustrated' after 'B.A. Pass'?
After essaying a seductress in "B.A. Pass", Shilpa Shukla was inundated with roles in "horror and sex films", leaving her "frustrated". However, she says the scenario changed soon.

Why was Shilpa Shukla 'frustrated' after 'B.A. Pass'?