KOLKATA: She grew up with rice rations instead of books in rural Bengal. Lost her childhood friend to marriage at 13. Debutant filmmaker Anuparna Roy drew from life to stun the 82nd Venice Film Festival by winning the Best Director award Saturday – and used the moment to plead for war-torn Gaza’s children, reports Priyanka Dasgupta.Roy, 35, became the first Indian filmmaker to win in the Orizzonti section with her debut ‘Songs of Forgotten Trees’, outpacing 18 rivals. On stage, she let her victory speech take a political detour. “Every child deserves peace, freedom and liberation, and Palestine is no exception,” she said in her acceptance speech. “I might upset my country, but it doesn’t matter anymore.”On phone from Venice, Roy said she didn’t realise she was making history when she spoke. “It is a global crisis when a powerful nation like Israel destroys justice, peace and lives. As a global citizen, I had a microphone and couldn’t restrain myself,” she said.They once asked if their daughter could ever measure up to Satyajit Ray. On Sunday, Brahmananda and Manisha Roy were celebrating Anuparna Roy’s Best Director award at the 82nd Venice Film Festival’s Orizzonti section for her debut feature Songs of Forgotten Trees. Roy’s win came decades after Ray’s Aparajito won the Golden Lion at Venice in 1957. Orizzonti runs parallel to the festival’s main competition.A year ago, the middle-class couple from Kulti in Paschim Bardhaman district, 230km northwest off Kolkata, worried when their daughter quit her job to make her first feature. “We sent her to a modest village school, had no knowledge of films. We only enjoyed Uttam Kumar, Suchitra Sen, hit songs like Ei poth jodi na sesh hoy,” Brahmananda said.Brahmananda, a retired Eastern Coalfield Limited employee, lives in a flat in Kulti with Manisha. Word of their daughter’s Venice triumph has already reached their ancestral village in Narayanpur. “We are waiting for her to come home so we can visit together,” he said.The father had challenged her obsession with cinema and feared for her marriage prospects. “She insisted marriage could wait. Now, after her victory and all the accolades, we feel proud,” Manisha said.She remembered her husband once asked their daughter if she thought she could hold a lamp to Ray. Anuparna had one request: give her a chance. Today, her mother has only one wish – to cook her daughter’s favourite dishes when she returns.Crew members echoed the pride. Sakyadeb Chowdhury, SRFTI alumnus and second-unit DOP with her in Venice, credited her “courage to show things as they are”. He said she insisted on long takes, no cut-ins, and turned limitations into new aesthetics. “I hope her win inspires other filmmakers,” he said.
A 1st: Indian bags top directing award at Venice fest
