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Bombay Our City

Festival Filmer À Tout Prix / Anand Patwardhan

Patwardhan's acclaimed documentary, made on 16mm, tells of Bombay's millions of pavement dwellers. Throughout the early 80s there were brutal efforts to evict families who lived in illegal tenements and on pavements although they literally built the city and provided it with labour crucial to its economy. The film looks at the culture of Bombay's elite, often contrasting what they say with the physical conditions in which they say it?: the former Municipal Commissioner bemoans the lack of space in the city while his pet dog trots around his spacious garden?; the Police Commissioner Julio Ribeiro, in a speech at the Advertising Club, talks about the poor as ‘low quality, low intelligence' people. The pavement dwellers work in the construction industry in the city's expensive Nariman Point area on land reclaimed from the sea, while massing clouds on the horizon evoke the possibility of violent storms which may cause tidal waves to wash away their seaside huts. The film achieves epic dimensions in three remarkable sequences. Street urchins sell the Indian flag on a rainy Independence Day, keeping their precious commodities dry while the Gothic façade of the Victoria Terminus dominates a police march-past?; in the height of the monsoon, a child of one of the homeless families dies?; a woman pavement dweller's angry outburst at the film-makers all highlight the issues involved in the making of this type of documentary.

Flagey, Filmer A Tout Prix, Gsara