New bangla movies 2013 archive#
We are currently redesigning the Oitij-jo website – if you need to contact us, please email website is the dedicated online archive of the Oitij-jo 2013 festival which took place in London. Oitij-jo’s vision is to present creative excellence and achievement of Bengali traditions in the arts and crafts, by all means to enrich and enhance their present perception and to ensure and prosper their lively practice. Paula Span is the author of “When the Time Comes: Families With Aging Parents Share Their Struggles and Solutions.Oitij-jo is a not for profit organisation, set up to inspire, collaborate engage. His family requested memorial contributions to the Alzheimer’s Society. Survives, but Craig died in February at 93. “Age is just an abstraction, not a straitjacket,” the film’s Irene says with some bravado. This film doesn’t, but it is gentle, more gentle than life can be. “Still Mine” is clear-eyed about this phase, not nearly as brutal as the masterful “Amour,” but more grounded than “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” and “Quartet,”īoth of which featured charming British actors in fluffy screenplays that carefully evaded most realities of advanced age. Screenwriters, and novelists like Walter Mosley and Alice LaPlante, can’t seem to resist its intrinsic here-but-not-here drama. Interesting, isn’t it, how many of the best films about aging zero in on dementia? On my personal favorites list (adding “Still Mine” to “Amour,” “The Iron Lady,” “Iris,” “The Savages,” “Away from Her” and “About Schmidt”),Īll but the last incorporate a central character suffering from this disease. Hold Julie Christie’s beauty in “Away From Her” against her, though reader Marjorie from California dubbed her “the world’s most gorgeous Alzheimer’s patient.”)
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New bangla movies 2013 movie#
Bujold make very attractive elders - and are 15 years younger than the characters they’re playing - but most movie stars are good-looking folks, right? I don’t McGowan, too, for a screenplay recognizing that octogenarians can still feel lust – and act on it. James Cromwell and Geneviève Bujold play the Morrisons with lovely understatement. The house Craig builds is meant to ease the difficulties ofĬaring for a wife who needs a sign to remember where the bathroom is, who starts to resist his attempts to care for her, who panics if he’s not with her during a thunderstorm. Nobody could live a healthier, more active life, but not even this rural couple, surrounded by family and friends, can stave off aging forever. Craig and Irene are fairly clear-eyed about having been fortunate into their late 80s, but as he tells her after she takes a nastyįall and lands in the hospital, “I’m worried that our luck is beginning to run out.”Īnd it is. On this scaffolding, writer and director Michael McGowan builds an aching love story. (Here’s a Toronto Globe and Mail column from 2010, adding some details.) The story it tells actually happened just a few years ago: Craig Morrison, a lumberman and farmer, wanted to build a small house on his land overlooking the Bay of Fundy, and because he built it himself the way hisįather had taught him – without much concern for the niceties of building codes and inspections – provincial officials ordered him to stop and eventually hauled him into court. In New York, Washington, Phoenix and several other cities last month and will arrive in Denver, Atlanta, Seattle, Charlotte and more locations today. The latest entry, a Canadian movie called “Still Mine,” opened Now I’m running short of fingers, which I hope reflects filmmakers’ dawning recognition of the way this global demographic Not long ago, I could name the really excellent recent movies about aging on one hand. After he waves off his son’sĬoncerns, we see Craig removing the matches from the kitchen, so that Irene can’t inadvertently burn down their farmhouse in rural New Brunswick, Canada. They’ll recognize the situation that prompts the son’s well-intended questioning, too: Craig’s wife of 60-plus years, Irene, shows increasing signs of dementia. We-don’t-need-anyone’s-help declaration that will sound familiar to many readers here. It’s an intensely self-sufficient man’s warning to back off, a
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“She has her good days and her bad days, that’s all,” Craig Morrison, who is in his late 80s, testily tells his son. Genevieve Bujold and James Cromwell in "Still Mine." Credit Ken Woroner/Samuel