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Bad
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Good
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Indu Krishnan
Phone: +91 96869 88441 (India)
+ 1 (415) 305-3059 (VoIP)
Email: indukrishnan@gmail.com
Website: indukrishnan.wixsite.com/goodguybadguy
Date: 11 April, 2018
Renowned filmmaker Indu Krishnan premieres her latest film following Zakhir, a rag picker on the streets of Bengaluru over the course of several years. A gripping and moving story, it reveals the underbelly of this city most of us don’t know exists.
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Krishnan keeps up with Zakhir patiently and relentlessly, through all his trials and tribulations, to uncover a disturbing and complex reality that is the lot of the many invisible denizens of the city.
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Movie trailer here.
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Press Photos here.
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PREVIEW SCREENING / PRESS SCREENING
Date: Friday, April 13, 2018
Where: 1ShanthiRoad Studio / Gallery
When: 6:00 pm
Address: 1 Shanthi Road, Shanthinagar, Bengaluru 560027
SCREENING FOR GENERAL PUBLIC
I Date: Saturday, April 21, 2018
Where: National Gallery of Modern Art
When: 4:00 pm
Address: #9 Palace Road, Manikyavelu Mansion, Bengaluru, Karnataka 560052
Phone: +91 (80) 2234 2338
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REVIEWS
Good Guy Bad Guy is a documentation of a young man’s negotiation with the teeming metropolis of modern day Bengaluru. Rendered with extraordinary humanity and integrity, the film’s strong, vivid energy layers the story of the untameable yet somehow sweet and fragile Zakhir, a runaway who makes his living as a rag picker.
The film opens directly with a search for the missing Zakhir.
Zakhir has caught the imagination of Indu Krishnan, a film-maker scouring the city in quest of a film. She is determined that she will use frequent visits to her family home and city to create a cinematic document. Walking in Cubbon Park, a green space that retains a flavour of the place she grew up in, Indu encounters Zakhir feeding the feral monkeys of the park with a touching tenderness. It is not right to cage animals, he says at one point. When the young man disappears, she searches for him. The search is driven not just by concern, but also by a self-stated desire to finish the film. This honesty of approach is evident throughout the document, both in the visual and in the narrative, lifting it from Herzogian voyeurism to a vibrant engagement with humanity.
In the course of their many conversations, Indu discovers that Zakhir wants to make his own blockbuster about a demon-slaying foster mother of orphans. The camera follows Indu and Zakhir through the mad colour and bizarre social schisms of the city as they participate in each other’s film-making dreams. Ultimately, the film explores the wild underground life of the city and the nature of the runaway through the gentle, expressive, and ever-hopeful spirit of Zakhir.
- Indira Chandrasekhar, author, Polymorphism, HarperCollins Publishers India, 2017
Good Guy/Bad Guy is the story of the engaging yet elusive Zakhir, a young recycler the filmmaker befriends in her native Bangalore and follows over several years. At once alone and part of a shifting circle of acquaintances and employers, Zakhir navigates urban precarity with a kind of enigmatic pragmatism, refusing steady employment for the freedom from obligation and reinventing his dreams when they fail to materialize. Good Guy/Bad Guy is a story of street life and celluloid fantasy, family and violence, tenderness and inconstancy.
- Lata Mani, Filmmaker/Feminist Historian
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ABOUT INDU KRISHNAN
Indu Krishnan grew up in India. She earned a Bachelors degree in psychology from Delhi University. She subsequently took courses in fine art at Parsons School of Design and got a Masters in Media Studies at the New School for Social Research in New York. She has worked for corporate and public television in the US and in between independently produced her own documentaries. She currently divides her time between Bengaluru and San Francisco.
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FILMOGRAPHY
2017: Director/Producer. Good Guy Bad Guy reveals with humanity the street life and celluloid fantasy, family and violence, tenderness and inconstancy that enmeshes a young recycler in Bengaluru.
2004: Director of the India story for ‘The New Americans’ the acclaimed mini-series by Kartemquin Films. Following an H1-B programmer from Bengaluru to Silicon Valley through the boom and the bust the story rips aside the curtain on the American Dream as experienced by many Indian Americans.
2004: Broadcast on Independent Lens, At IDFA
1990: Producer/ Director ‘Knowing her Place’ – A moving investigation of the cultural schizophrenia experienced by an Indian woman who grew up in the U.S. uncovers conflicted relationships with her mother and grandmother in India and her husband and teenage sons in New York. Fusing photographs, vérité sequences and experimental techniques the film probes the multilayered experience of immigrant women with rare candor and emotional resonance.
Broadcast in US on Independent Focus, WNET; The Learning Channel; Worldwide: Doordarshan, India, Canada, Australia and Swedish TV. Festivals: Margaret Mead, Hawaii Int’l, The San Francisco Int’l film Festival. Distributed by Women Make Movies.
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DISTINCTIONS
Gold Hugo, Best Television Production
The 40th International TV Competition 2004
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Special Screening
IDFA - International Documentary Festival Amsterdam 2003
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International Documentary Association - Best Limited Series Award 2004
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Official Selection
Council on Foundations Films 2005
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American Film and Video Festival, Official Selection 1990
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GRANTS
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• The Rockefeller Intercultural Fellowship
• Media grants from The National Endowment of the Arts
• Independent Television Services
• New York State Council on the Arts