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The hauntings of the Sri Lankan Civil War are explored with quiet, incisive force in this Rotterdam Special Jury Prize winner.
In the aftermath of the conflict between the Sinhalese majority and the Sri Lankan Tamil minority, Rudran returns to his village in the Northern Province. A former Tamil liberation militant, he faces trial for terrorism but is released on bail. After five years apart, he is reunited with his ageing, spiritualist mother, who communes with mystical forces to find the fellow villagers who went missing during the upheaval. Rudran is on a somewhat similar quest: he is searching for his long-lost love, who has not been seen since fleeing to a refugee camp.
Shot amid the recent economic and political crisis that brought Sri Lanka to a standstill, Sand is a meditative, otherworldly portrait of lives irreparably wounded by war, and of a nation yet to reconcile with its violent history. Under the direction of human rights lawyer, academic and artist Visakesa Chandrasekaram, a cast of local Tamil speakers deliver grounded performances, which are captured in patient, beguiling widescreen cinematography. The film demonstrates how an unspeakable past never lies dormant; rather, it overwhelms the present and forges the future.
“Its strength comes not only from the important subject but also from the director’s ability to find a proper form … An attempt to capture a post-war consciousness, a pain that keeps throbbing.” – Asian Movie Pulse
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Director Visakesa Chandrasekaram will be in attendance for the screenings on Saturday 12 and Monday 14 August.