India’s first virtual reality (VR) film, the short documentary “Right
To Pray”, will premiere as part of a batch being showcased at the
Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), North America’s principal
platform for movies.
While the film itself is brief, clocking in at just over eight minutes, its director, Mumbai-based Khushboo Ranka, described its arrival at TIFF as “a big deal”.
The film,“Right To Pray” will be part of POP VR, a special event at TIFF. “We couldn’t have had a better platform. There’s the excitement of having the film seen by people from all over the world at TIFF, but also to meet others who are experimenting in this medium to brainstorm with them because everything is groundbreaking in VR,” Ranka told
The film deals with a phenomenon that appears to be “spontaneous” and “sudden” - that of women seeking entry into the sanctum sanctorum of religious places that have so far been barred to them, as in the case of the Haji Ali dargah in Mumbai.
In this instance, these are women looking to break a 450-year-old tradition (and their success in that effort) at the Trimbakeshwar temple in Maharashtra.
The film makes for an immersive environment, allowing the viewer to virtually enter the same space as the activists and devotees. The episode itself is “not just a religious thing, but a very political, seminal kind of act”, Ranka said in an interview in Toronto.
The film was produced by Memesys Culture Lab helmed by Anand Gandhi, the director of the feature “Ship Of Theseus”, which gained great acclaim when it premiered at TIFF in 2012.
Anand Gandhi said VR was “the natural next step as a medium”, as part of the trajectory of storytellers upgrading their ability to “replicate our environment and record it in accurate ways of complete fidelity”.
While the film itself is brief, clocking in at just over eight minutes, its director, Mumbai-based Khushboo Ranka, described its arrival at TIFF as “a big deal”.
The film,“Right To Pray” will be part of POP VR, a special event at TIFF. “We couldn’t have had a better platform. There’s the excitement of having the film seen by people from all over the world at TIFF, but also to meet others who are experimenting in this medium to brainstorm with them because everything is groundbreaking in VR,” Ranka told
The film deals with a phenomenon that appears to be “spontaneous” and “sudden” - that of women seeking entry into the sanctum sanctorum of religious places that have so far been barred to them, as in the case of the Haji Ali dargah in Mumbai.
In this instance, these are women looking to break a 450-year-old tradition (and their success in that effort) at the Trimbakeshwar temple in Maharashtra.
The film makes for an immersive environment, allowing the viewer to virtually enter the same space as the activists and devotees. The episode itself is “not just a religious thing, but a very political, seminal kind of act”, Ranka said in an interview in Toronto.
The film was produced by Memesys Culture Lab helmed by Anand Gandhi, the director of the feature “Ship Of Theseus”, which gained great acclaim when it premiered at TIFF in 2012.
Anand Gandhi said VR was “the natural next step as a medium”, as part of the trajectory of storytellers upgrading their ability to “replicate our environment and record it in accurate ways of complete fidelity”.
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