Mumbai: Filmmaker Chaitanya Tamhane is a happy man lately. His second feature film, The Disciple, has won at two of the biggest film festivals on the planet. The director says the accolades act as an important achievement for the independent film movement in India.
Tamhane's Marathi-language film bagged Best Screenplay award and the International Critics' Prize by FIPRESCI at the 77th Venice Film Festival. The last Indian film to win the FIPRESCI award at Venice was Adoor Gopalakrishnan's Mathilukal in 1990. And now, the film has won the Amplify Voices Award presented by Canada Goose at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival. This is the third award for the film during its back-back film festival journey.
"We didn't make the film with any expectations. We made a film which we believed in and had conviction and hoped for the best. The reception of the film has exceeded our expectations," Chaitanya told IANS.
"We are just so grateful that the film has managed to come out in this year and is getting this kind of acceptance and recognition, and that too from two of the biggest film festivals in the world as Venice and Toronto. The awards mean a lot not just to the entire team of The Disciple, but also, I would say, to the independent film movement in India," added the filmmaker.
READ |Chaitanya Tamhane's The Disciple wins again, this time at TIFF
Chaitanya feels "awards and recognition like this definitely gives the film a better profile and a boost which one cannot plan for".