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`Rabbit Proof Fence` to be closing film at IFFI
New Delhi, Oct 13: Internationally acclaimed Australian film `Rabbit Proof Fence` will be the closing film of the 34rd International Film Festival of India currently underway in the capital.
New Delhi, Oct 13: Internationally acclaimed Australian film 'Rabbit Proof Fence' will be the closing film of the 34rd International Film Festival of India currently underway in the capital.
Directed by Philip Noyce, the high-profile director of
such Hollywood films as 'Patriot Games' (1992), 'Bone
Collector' (1999), Silver (1993) and 'Clear and Present
Danger' (1994), the film is about the time when the Australian
government was following the policy of training aboriginal
children as domestic workers.
The film tells the story of a young girl Molly Craig, who decides to lead her little sister and cousin in a daring escape from their internment camp, which involves eluding the authorities on a dangerous 1,500-mile run along a rabbit-proof fence that bisects the continent and will lead them home.
The reason why 'Rabbit Proof Fence' was chosen to be the closing film at the October 9-19 festival was that the story of human struggle it told was of the same magnum opus quality as the opening film 'Pinjar', said S Santhanam, deputy director, film selection and programming, at the festival.
"The poignancy of human emotions is the common link between the two films," he added.
Bureau Report
The film tells the story of a young girl Molly Craig, who decides to lead her little sister and cousin in a daring escape from their internment camp, which involves eluding the authorities on a dangerous 1,500-mile run along a rabbit-proof fence that bisects the continent and will lead them home.
The reason why 'Rabbit Proof Fence' was chosen to be the closing film at the October 9-19 festival was that the story of human struggle it told was of the same magnum opus quality as the opening film 'Pinjar', said S Santhanam, deputy director, film selection and programming, at the festival.
"The poignancy of human emotions is the common link between the two films," he added.
Bureau Report