Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 1076 Mon. June 11, 2007  
   
International


'Bollywood Oscars'
'Rang De Basanti' wins best film award


"Rang De Basanti" was named best film Sunday at Bollywood's version of the Oscars, a star-studded, spectacular celebration of song, dance and stagecraft.

The movie scooped a total of 10 awards from 15 nominations at the International Indian Film Academy Awards (IIFAs) in Sheffield, northern England, designed to honour Bollywood talent and promote its films abroad.

Directed by Rakeysh Omprakesh Mehra, "Rang De Basanti" is about a filmmaker who wants to shoot a movie on Indian nationalists who rose up against British colonial rule.

The director, played by Alice Patten -- daughter of Chris Patten, Britain's last governor in Hong Kong -- tries to cast five friends but finds they are more interested in dancing than history.

"Rang De Basanti" -- which means "Paint It Yellow" in English -- beat off challenges from movies including "Dhoom 2", a thriller starring Bollywood golden couple Abhishek Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai, and sci-fi hit "Krrish".

Showing no hard feelings, Bachchan and Rai presented the award at the climax of a marathon five-hour ceremony which finished well past midnight and was watched by a capacity 12,500 arena crowd as well as some 500 million people in 110 countries on television.

Earlier, Hrithik Roshan won best actor in a leading role for "Krrish", while Rani Mukherjee was best actress for her part in "Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna".

The award for best director went to Rajkumar Hirani for "Lage Raho Munnabhai", a comedy about the enduring influence of Indian independence movement leader Mahatma Gandhi and his philosophy of non-violence.

But the event was not only about awards -- a series of high-octane stage performances by stars like Shilpa Shetty, Akshay Kumar and Saif Ali Khan had the mainly British South Asian crowd swaying in their seats and, later, dancing in the aisles.

Abhishek Bachchan and his father Amitabh, voted the biggest star of the millennium in a 1999 BBC poll, danced together on stage to deafening cheers and screams from the crowd.

Cheers were only slightly less loud for heartthrob Salman Khan, who snaked through the audience on a golden pantomime horse, pursued by a brass band and dancers, before leaping on stage for a song-and-dance routine in front of huge Easter Island-inspired masks.

Other highlights included an award for outstanding contribution to Indian cinema for legendary actor and politician Dharmendra, who was joined on stage by his two weeping sons, Sunny and Bobby Deol.

Picture
Indian actress and model Shilpa Shetty holds an award during the International Indian Film Academy Awards (IIFAs) ceremony at the Hallam Arena in Sheffield, northern England, early yesterday. PHOTO: AFP