The Nagari Bioscope prompts cinematic explorations on ‘Mobility in Urban India’

by Bansari Paghdar I STIR World I Published on: Mar 5, 2025

Image credits: Nagari

Set on the convergence of architecture and filmmaking, the competition spotlighted India’s urban mobility issues, awarding the Mumbai-centric film Sundari as the winner.

The Nagari Short Film Competition, an annual initiative by the Charles Correa Foundation, invites architecture enthusiasts, filmmakers and other creatives working on these intersections to cinematically respond to issues related to a dynamic and amorphous urban India. A “bioscope for the city”, Nagari directs focus on the frail realities of urban living in the country that surround us, often neglected, forgotten or simply ignored. Since its inception in 2020, the competition has coined themes for filmmakers to explore and respond to, including housing adequacy, people and their livelihoods, interactions with water and reclaiming urban commons. For its fifth edition, Nagari spotlighted Mobility in Urban India, emphasising topics such as connectivity and growth, choices in commotion and commute (or the lack thereof), gender and social roles, environmental impact, the people behind mobility, smart mobility and associated infrastructure, among others. While the festival saw several entries from all over the country, Sundari, directed by Sudarshan Sawant—a film capturing the social and environmental impact of Mumbai’s infrastructure development through an eponymous ferry as a fantastical vessel for storytelling—was announced as the winner, receiving the Golden Bioscope Award at the award ceremony held on December 14, 2024, in Mumbai.

Read the full article here The Nagari Bioscope prompts cinematic explorations on ‘Mobility in Urban India’

Final Films 2025

Pakdam Pakdai

Click the poster to watch the film or follow the link here.

In the bustling Sadar Market of Agra, a group of children who sell balloons in the market take us along as they navigate between work and play, hostility and joy, commerce and friendship in the urban space that is designed to exclude them. In this vehicle-choked public realm, we observe their routine of overcoming various barriers and intuitively carving spaces for themselves. With their games and tender resilience, Pakdam Pakdai celebrates children’s agency in employing the act of play to claim space amid the relentlessness of the city.

Manaveeyam

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Street cultures across the world can shape socially conscious societies. This documentary asks whether public space development is merely an infrastructure upgrade or a catalyst for cultural evolution. Manaveeyam Veedhi, once informally reclaimed by street collectives, was renovated in 2023 as a cultural corridor under Kerala’s Smart City Project, ensuring 24/7 public access. The film explores its spirit through stories of inclusion and accessibility, following a young man who works as a juice maker at Manaveeyam and later becomes a singer through music collectives, a non-binary lesbian who shares their story of how the space gave them the confidence to acknowledge their identity. We also see artists as well as families mingling together to make it a vibrant space. The film also reflects on civic responsibility, asking how people engage with the freedom such spaces offer and concludes with an
introspection on whether the Manaveeyam model can be sustained and replicated in future.

ফুল গাড়ি (Scent of Nocturnal Flowers)

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Phool Gari (Scent of Nocturnal Flowers) explores a small patch of land beside Barasat station that transforms each night from a bustling auto stand into a flower market. As the last autos leave, flower vendors arrive, setting up makeshift shelters, dozing under the open sky, and waiting for the first Bongaon Local, the train they call Phool Gari, to begin their trade. As metro construction slowly encroaches, swallowing the space they call their own, the film observes their quiet rhythms, the delicate balance between labour and survival, and the fleeting moments of community that emerge in the margins. Phool Gari reflects on belonging, resilience, and the struggle to hold onto life in a suburban landscape that constantly redraws its edges, where the same ground quietly serves different livelihoods across the day and night.

Pascal Premier League

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Pascal Premier League is a film about the transformation of a street with a deep history of violence, displacement, and change into a space of joy and community. Set on Shahid Road in Jogeshwari East, a neighbourhood once marked by the 1992–93 Bombay riots, the film observes how a group of young boys reclaim this narrow lane by establishing their own cricket league. What was once a site of fear and memory now becomes a field of play and laughter. The act of reclaiming this space is both resistance and celebration, reflecting how everyday life, imagination, and play can redefine the meaning of public space in a city constantly reshaped by ever-consuming change and evolution

Deewar Nāma (Chronicles of the Walls)

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Deewar Nāma (Chronicles of the Walls) is a reflective documentary that journeys through Mumbai’s walls — from the bustling lanes of Charni Road to the fading murals of Bandra — uncovering how they speak, remember, and sometimes disappear. What begins as a filmmaker’s casual curiosity about street art unfolds into a meditation on expression, erasure, and ownership. Through encounters with muralists, commuters, and anonymous street artists like Tyler, the film captures the fragile dance between creation and censorship, memory and renewal. Each story — of a woman seeing her past on a painted wall or an artist risking arrest for his message — reveals how the city’s surfaces mirror its soul. As the colours fade and the walls are repainted, Deewar Nama asks: when everyone can speak, what truly deserves to be said?

How much space does a firefly take?

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‘How much space does one take’ is a question Kabir asks as he performs his solo play about his trans-ness and belonging in a city. Interwoven with phone calls from different trans people recounting their experiences of navigating urban public space, his play takes shape to become a testament of trans memories, struggle, and reclamation. The film questions the idea of identity driving one’s experiences with public space. Who are the cities made for? Who are they accessible to? Why do queer people need to be invisible while traversing through the city?

Hissa

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Hissa tells the story of two migrant barber brothers who have spent their lives cutting hair on the streets of Mumbai’s Dhobi Talao. Their small setup survives on the edge of legality as their chairs and mirrors spill onto the road. Though they come from the same family of barbers, their dreams divide them. The younger wants to return home once his son begins earning, while the elder believes the city has become his home. The story is narrated by a young girl, the elder brother’s daughter, who recalls a fable told by her grandfather about frogs seeking shelter in a pond full of fish during a drought. Through her voice, the film reflects on what it means to belong, to survive, and to choose one’s place in a restless city. Hissa is about inheritance, and a claim to space in the contested public realm.

Mauj Ni Khoj (Seeking Fun)

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In the small city of Bhuj, two young Muslim women navigate societal and familial restrictions, carving out fleeting moments of joy in the city. The film follows their friendship, revealing how the public realm is both constraining and resilient, where small defiant acts create space for “mauj” (fun). Through their eyes, we explore: What does “mauj” mean for young Muslim women in the small city of Bhuj? Where do the boundaries of safety and freedom lie-and who draws them?. Their story is not just about restriction, but also of finding laughter in the margins, about friendship as sanctuary, and about the quiet, everyday acts of rebellion that make fun possible-even if only for five minutes at a time.

In Search of Humans

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Set in a restless Kolkata, ‘In Search of Humans’ observes a city where digital and real worlds merge, dissolving the boundaries of public space and human emotion. Through fragments of protests, daily life, and screens projecting chaos, it reflects a time shaped by fear, surveillance, and disillusionment. A poem flows through these moments, weaving collective anxiety, loss, and fragile hope into the city’s pulse. Blending documentary, AI-generated imagery, Gaming graphics, and personal archives, the film reveals how people move within self-made boxes. Amid this fractured landscape, ‘In Search of Humans’ searches not for answers but for traces of empathy, tenderness, and resistance that still survive in silence.

महाद्वार (Mahadwar – The Great Corridor)

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Mahadwar journeys through the fading rhythms of Mahadwar Road — a historic street in Kolhapur that once pulsed with trade, devotion, and daily life. As large-scale redevelopment plans surround the Mahalaxmi Temple, the film reflects on what is lost when progress erases memory. Through nostalgic visuals, intimate sounds, and a deeply personal voiceover, the director revisits the street of her childhood to understand its transformation. Between the noise of politics and the quiet resilience of people, Mahadwar stands, asking: Are development and expansion truly the same? What happens to the life of a street when its physical body disappears, but its pulse still lingers in memory?r

Through The Dappled Light

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Through the play of dappled light, the film reflects on the lives of Chandigarh’s informal workers: visible yet overlooked, ever-present yet structurally invisible. These lives exist in the shadows, not in hiding, but not entirely in the light of urban recognition. Through the stories of a barber, a chaiwala, a kelewala and labourers, we explore how their presence, among the trees of Chandigarh, offers affordable services and helps generate a social public realm for the lower-income classes. Chandigarh’s planned 74,000-tree cover offers much-needed relief from the elite and programmed, hard, paved and monotonous edges of the roads and sectoral grids. These workers occupy this shade without tenancy or title, instead operating under intermittent licenses issued post the 2014 Street Vendor Survey. As they anchor themselves with these trees, they momentarily step outside their ‘worker’ identities to rest, to play cards, to share tea or gossip, and to simply be.

Valai Pinnal

The film is yet to be completed and will be added later on our YouTube channel. Keep an eye out for the film.

The fisherfolk of Nochikuppam navigate the shifting landscape of their homes in the wake of government interventions. Through myriad acts of preservation of materials, documents and oral knowledge, the film explores the people’s resistance and their relationship to space.

Nagari 2025 Resource Experts

Kiran Keswani

Kiran Keswani is Co-founder, Everyday City Lab. She is an architect and urban designer based in Bangalore. She has completed her PhD in Urban Design from CEPT University, Ahmedabad. She has had an architectural & urban design practice for more than 20 years. She has taught courses at CEPT University in Ahmedabad and the Azim Premji University in Bangalore.

Parul Kumtha

Parul Kumtha is an architect, trustee of NAGAR and founder of Nature Nurture Architects and Planners. A graduate of Sir J.J. College of Architecture (1988), she has also studied Biodiversity Conservation and Built Heritage Conservation, and is trained in Mental Health and Narrative Practices. Her work focuses on resolving the often-conflicting relationships between architecture, heritage, and the environment. Her firm is empanelled as an Access Auditor under the Government of India’s Sugamya Bharat Abhiyan. She has previously served as visiting faculty at Sir J.J. College of Architecture, guiding dissertations and teaching courses on Urban Studies, Natural Heritage Conservation, and Universal Design. With NAGAR, she has worked extensively on public open spaces and accessibility issues in Mumbai.

Ashwini Deshpande

Ashwini Deshpande is an architect and urban researcher specialising in Architectural History and Theory from CEPT University. Her work bridges contemporary urban issues with historical inquiry, focusing on how planning, policy, and heritage intersect in shaping cities. She has previously worked as a Junior Archivist and teaching associate at CEPT University.

As Associate Director at NAGAR in Mumbai, Ashwini addresses civic issues related to public open spaces, heritage, slum rehabilitation, street vending, and land reclamation. She is also part of the Preserving Legacies cohort, a global initiative led by the National Geographic Society, ICOMOS, and the Climate Heritage Network, where she is representing Mumbai’s World Heritage Site of urban ensembles in efforts toward climate resilience and heritage preservation on behalf of NAGAR. Her research aims to critically examine how fragmented regulatory systems in cities across India produce environmental injustices and deepen social inequalities.

Avijit Mukul Kishore

Avijit Mukul Kishore is a filmmaker and cinematographer, working in documentary and interdisciplinary moving image practices. He’s involved in cinema pedagogy as a lecturer and curates film programmes for prominent national cultural institutions.

Shab-Parak: Night fliers of Delhi bus that’s a community

Question of cities I Published on: May 30, 2025

Image credits : Shab-Parak, Nagari Short Films 2024

As India’s national capital sleeps, night buses keep the city connected and their commuters find the true meaning of accessible and affordable public transport. Shab-Parak, a short film which won the silver at the Nagari 2024 awards, captures the story of Delhi Transport Corporation’s Bus 0543A from Anand Vihar Inter State Bus Terminal to Kapashera border, its tired but pleasant driver who commands his bus like a community, and its commuters many of whom are at their workplaces as the city awakens.

View the short film here and read the full article here : Shab-Parak: Night fliers of Delhi bus that’s a community

Water buses in Goa vs air taxis & self-driving cars: Charles Correa Foundation wants you to think about the future of public transport in India

by Chanpreet Khurana I Money Control I Published on: Jan 01, 2025

Ferry at the Gateway of India in Mumbai. I Photo credit: David Brossard via Wikimedia Commons 2.0

Navi Mumbai architect Charles Correa thought a lot about ways to build efficient cities around the three key ingredients of jobs-housing-transportation, with adequate attention to social, cultural and educational institutions. The Charles Correa Foundation’s Nagari Film Festival 2024 was all about urban mobility.

Few people realize that Goa, too, is a land of five rivers: the Mandovi, Zuari, Sal, Terekhol and Chapora. This, in addition to Goa’s access to the sea routes via Mormugao and Panjim Minor ports, makes Goa one of the premier destinations for developing water-transport infrastructure in India.

Currently, ferries and bridges like the Atal Setu over the Mandovi take people across, on their way to school, work and other day-to-day activities. But there are chokepoints and limitations. For one, the bridges typically only connect the two banks where the river is the narrowest, rather than taking people as close as possible to their final destination over water. Two, as the population (domestic and tourist) grows, the pressures on infrastructure rise too.

An obvious fix, says Harvard University Graduate School of Design-trained architect Nondita Correa Mehrotra, is running water buses that can hit the sweet spot between affordability, accessibility, efficiency and lower climate impact.

Read the full article here Water buses in Goa vs air taxis & self-driving cars: Charles Correa Foundation wants you to think about the future of public transport in India

Nagari 2024 | Winning Entries

Nagari Golden Bioscope

Sundari

Film by Sudarshan Sawant & Dhanesh Gopal
Mentored by Pankaj Rishi Kumar

Jury Citation:

Sundari is poetic, moving, and touching. It beautifully intertwines everyday life with local mythologies. Through its evocative visuals and compelling soundscapes, it addresses larger questions about what happens to the natural beauty of a place that becomes the detritus of urbanization. The film looks at an important issue for the communities living in close tandem with such environmental systems.
Through the use of creative narrative devices, the film evokes a sense of longing and lament while asking pertinent questions about the city’s exploding infrastructure, its relationship with nature and how we think about climate change.

Nagari Silver Bioscope

Shab-Parak I The Night Fliers

Film by Sabika Syed & Nikhil Mehrotra
Mentored by Pankaj Rishi Kumar 

Jury Citation:

Shab-Parak’s power lies in its cinema verite form. It constructs a compelling narrative using real people’s voices and beautiful images shot live on location; instead of relying on an external storyteller’s voice.
The film draws attention to a major issue, accessing the city at night, that relates not only to Delhi where this story is set, but to all urban centres. It gives us a glimpse into one of the many unnoticed worlds that exist within a city, and shows how strangers form a community through the simple act of travelling together on a late night bus.

Jury Commendation Award

Level Up!

Film by Bhargav Prasad, Archanaa Seker & Pavithra Sriram
Mentored by Bina Paul

Jury Citation:

Level Up highlights a very crucial and pertinent issue that cities today need to address, that of inclusivity and accessibility. It raises important questions about urban accessibility for people with disabilities, focusing on both the physical and social discomfort faced by individuals trying to navigate the city. 

The film presents its differently abled protagonists as heroes, but it does not shy away from showing their raw struggles with simple, everyday acts. The viewer is led to an understanding of the gravity of the issues they face, and the urgent need to bring about change.

People’s Choice Award

दिल्ली की आखिरी लोकल (The Last Local of Delhi)

Film by Arundhathi & Sarah Zia
Mentored by Bina Paul

In the bustling metropolis of Delhi, lies an unused suburban rail transit network. As the city continues to deal with problems such as traffic congestion, deteriorating air quality and the lack of an integrated, multi-modal public transit system, the film talks explores the potential of the Delhi Ring Railway system as a viable public transit system. The film tells the tale of an erstwhile rail network that offered an effective and affordable alternative to travel across the city but has now gone into oblivion due to the lack of planning and support by the government.

Level Up!, a film on the wait for low floor buses for persons with disabilities in Tamil Nadu

by Sanjana Ganesh I The Hindu I Published on: Dec 03, 2024

Fathima as she waits to climb the bus | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

It has taken 20 years to implement the law seeking the introduction of low-floor buses in Tamil Nadu. On International Day of Persons with Disabilities, these Chennai filmmakers speak about capturing this wait for the Nagari Short Film Competition.

Level Up! begins with a cacophony of horns from buses in Chennai’s traffic-ridden roads. The screen announces that about three million people board this form of public transport every day. In quick succession though, the camera takes Fathima’s perspective. This person with disability can be seen hoisting herself with crutches and making the arduous climb up nearly four feet of steps on the bus to finally get to her seat. It is the only way for her to access this now free means of transportation for women in Tamil Nadu.

Read the full article here Level Up!, a film on the wait for low floor buses for persons with disabilities in Tamil Nadu

Final Films 2024

ਮੈਂ ਤਾਂ ਨਹੀਂ ਖ੍ਲੌਂਦਾ (मैं तां नहीं खलौन्दा) I don’t run down

Click the poster to watch the film or follow the link here.

Bhoond is a Punjabi word, which means wasp. This wasp-coloured vehicle is still an important option of shared transportation for low-income Punjabis. But it is on the verge of extinction. This film tries to unfurl the answer. The film portrays the story of one day of a vehicle named Bhoond @ Hanseat. This vehicle from Germany became the vehicle of villages of Punjab. It is still used by children, domestic workers, and farmers for their daily life. But why is this public-loved vehicle on extinction? Will it make any difference to the common man if it vanishes? Are there other options available in this category? Is Bhoond economical for the earth and the pocket of the common man? This film talks about these questions.

दिल्ली की आखिरी लोकल (The Last Local of Delhi)

Click the poster to watch the film or follow the link here.

In the bustling metropolis of Delhi, lies an unused suburban rail transit network. As the city continues to deal with problems such as traffic congestion, deteriorating air quality and the lack of an integrated, multi-modal public transit system, the film talks explores the potential of the Delhi Ring Railway system as a viable public transit system. The film tells the tale of an erstwhile rail network that offered an effective and affordable alternative to travel across the city but has now gone into oblivion due to the lack of planning and support by the government.

LEVEL UP!

Click the poster to watch the film or follow the link here.

It has taken 20 years for Tamil Nadu to include 58 low-floor buses in its fleet – the time it takes for a country to make all public transport accessible. ‘Level Up!’ is about the lives lost to these years and the long legal battle for one demand: Implement the Law.

CYCLE OF LIFE

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Cycle, which is often dismissed as a relic of the past; has been an important means of mobility and livelihood for over a century. Cycle of Life is an intimate exploration of change witnessed through the life of Umesh Sarate, an age-old cycle customer of Shinde Cycle Store, in Nagpur. He travels to the city to buy wholesale goods from the local market, as he rents a cycle from the store. The film traverses through rural-urban-industrial landscape, as it traces Umesh’s journey from the city markets to the village, where he re-sells the goods. We see him sell the goods to the women customers, while engaging in mundane conversations. As he journey’s back; he talks about buying a motorcycle, to make his travel more convenient. City lights, traffic and multi layered infrastructure of the city. Yogesh Shinde closing the cycle store at night, reflects on how the once flourishing business is now seeing a decline with time.

TOWN ON WATER

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Set against the striking backdrop of Kashmir’s Dal Lake, Town on Water dives into the pulse of movement on the water. Shikaras—more than just boats—are timeless lifelines, powering daily life and symbolizing resilience. The documentary showcases men piloting larger shikaras to support their families, while women and children steer smaller boats for chores and school trips. It explores the emerging bridges that link the lake’s mohallas, creating new paths and hinting at the shift toward modern roads initiated by the younger generation. This story highlights the tension between tradition and change, the push and pull of progress. Yet, through all the upheaval, the shikara remains, proving itself as a sustainable and unyielding force. The film invites viewers to witness a community adapting to modern twists while holding tight to a legacy that flows through the heart of Dal Lake.

Shab-Parak | The Night-Flyers

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Shab Parak explores the often unseen world of Delhi’s night travel, told through the journey of the DTC bus 0543A. The bus runs from Anand Vihar to Kapashera Border, connecting the city’s farthest corners as the rest of Delhi sleeps. The film engages with the quiet solitude of the night commute, capturing the passengers’ experiences—from the anticipation of the bus to the long, soothing journey that lulls them to sleep, and the final arrival that brings them closer to home. Amidst the quiet of the city, passengers express their unease about other nighttime transport, and Shabbir, the bus driver, speaks of his sense of responsibility and care toward the travellers. Shab Parak offers a glimpse into the night bus service as an essential lifeline for a city that never truly sleeps—sustaining both its people and its heartbeat through the darkest hours.

SUNDARI

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In Mumbai, once an island city connected by the sea, modern bridges and land reclamation have reshaped its landscape, disrupting the lives of its original communities. Sundari follows the myth of a legendary ferryboat, once the heart of connectivity, who guided people across creeks long before bridges existed. Now, Sundari lives on only in songs and stories, her memory overshadowed by urbanisation. Through the perspectives of a woman recounting Sundari’s tale, an ageing ferry operator who runs the Versova-Madh ferry, and a young child witnessing the changes, the film explores how progress, while practical, has disconnected a community bound by tradition and the sea.

साखळ्या आणि चाकं- Sakhlya Ani Chaaka (Chains & Wheels)

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The bicycles of Pune City talk.

They talk about their existence and their purpose.

The city, its chaotic traffic and its lackluster infrastructure looms over them. In the motor-centric city plans; the working-class people of Pune and their bicycles look to reclaim their place on the roads. The people who seem to be a part of the urban transportation plans- but only on paper.

The bicycles of Pune City talk.

They talk of the labour class and revolutions.

Cowboys of the West (UP)

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The film ‘cowboys of the west (UP)’ explores the everydayness of travel for informal milk suppliers (locally called Doodhiyas) from small towns and villages that surround Delhi. As Delhi’s urban spaces continue to saturate with people and things, the demand for essential commodities such as milk keep on increasing. Doodhiyas play a crucial role in forming a link between immediate rural and the urban through the supply of milk. Moreover the film primarily focuses on the train journeys undertaken by a group of Doodhiyas, and sheds light on how travelling together everyday produces a sense of mobility which is intertwined with the sense of home, affective relationships with co-passengers and the work that demands bodily labour. As the sense of everyday envelopes these lives in shuttling migration, this film is intended as a pause to observe how Doodhiyas from peripheries of Delhi make meaning of their travel.

Iss shahar mein chalte hue (While walking through the city)

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Through the dug up streets of suburban Mumbai, a migrant salesman, Taufique walks everyday with a bicycle filled with bread, eggs and snacks. This film journeys with him and his colleagues as they walk through chawls and gated societies, beneath metro constructions and through unyielding traffic, revealing a glimpse of a Mumbai where walking is not a choice but a necessity.

The film expands into a quiet reflection on urban design and social division, questioning who our cities are truly built for. We see others like Taufique walking on Mumbai’s streets, on journeys marked by labour, resilience and quiet strength.

The film tries to notice the presence of those forced to move on foot as they reclaim agency, in a city that often makes them invisible.

Homes on the Line

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Rohtak, a busy city, now has a new 4.5-kilometer elevated railway track. It’s an impressive structure that promises faster travel and economic growth. But beneath the joy, there’s a sad truth: this track was built on land where homes once stood, forcing families, who have lived here for generations, to leave. While life moves on above the bridge, the pain and struggles of those who lost their homes are often ignored. Through personal stories and images, this story reveals the hidden cost of progress, asking if true development is possible when so many people are left behind.

Shortlisted Entries

Cut the Cord

The film ‘Cut the Cord’ explores the fate of Bhoond/tempo, the option of shared transport. A crucial transportation mode for many low-income Punjabis, the tempo faces a potential decline due to lack of supportive policies

थानै कठै जाणो?

Where do you want to go?

The film ‘थानै कठै जाणो?’ explores the challenges and resilience of female bus conductors in Rajasthan roadways, navigating between demanding duties, societal constraints and future hopes.

The Delhi Local

The film ‘The Delhi Local’ is an oral history of the now defunct ring railway system presented through the eyes of its erstwhile users and operators. Infrastructural neglect and decay being the key themes.

Level Up!

Rajiv Rajan’s dream to commute independently on his wheelchair and the long legal battle for low-floor buses is the core of the film ‘Level up’. The film features Rajiv and his loved ones and explores themes of universal design and barrier-free public transport.

The Cycle of Life

The film ‘The Cycle of Life’ traverses rural-urban landscape with Umesh, who travels to Nagpur in ST bus, as he rents a cycle to buy goods from the local market. And his journey, back to his village to sell the goods.

Town on Water

Beyond the tourist gaze, “Town on Water” unveils the hidden stories of Kashmir’s Hanji community, water dwellers whose lives are intertwined with the lake’s changing tides, battling rapid urbanisation and its impact.

A City Waiting

How do people move at night? The film ‘A City Waiting’ explores how essential the night bus system is to the national capital, a city that never sleeps through the lens of the passenger, the bus driver, and those who wait only to leave.

Sundari

The film Sundari follows the story of a ferry riding family in Madh Koliwada facing disruption from a new bridge construction. The legend of Sundari, a fabled boatwoman, echoes their struggle for survival.

साखळ्या आणि चाके

Sakhlya Ani Chaake (Chains & Wheels)

The roads of Pune don’t support the working-class people, for whom a bicycle is the only mode of commute. The film ‘साखळ्या आणि चाके’ looks at the lives of these people who are not a part of the urban transportation plans.

Cowboys of the West (UP)

The film ‘Cowboys of the West (Up)’ aims to document the everyday lives of informal milk suppliers to Delhi. Through their journey the film hopes to explore notions of mobility, networks and space.  

Walking with Abdul

Through Abdul, a migrant salesman walking across the suburbs of Western Mumbai selling eggs, bread and snacks stacked upon a bicycle, the film ‘Walking with Abdul’ explores walking as a forced mobility inside a city.

Homes on the Line

In the film ‘Homes on the Line’ an elevated railway track celebrates progress above, while beneath it unfolds a moving tale of displacement and emotional loss.

Why do we not value our informal economies?

With the rise in transport infrastructure projects, in the name of nation-building, the informal economies continue to bear the brunt of ‘public purpose’ projects.

“Internal displacement is the great tragedy of our time. The internally displaced people are among the most vulnerable of the human family”Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary General

For decades, India has been experiencing immense pressure on its transport infrastructure to meet the growing demand of its population. The aggressive approach to transport infrastructure development coupled with a lack of sustainable urbanisation policies has resulted in issues such as congestion pollution, overcrowding and accidents while also excluding accessibility for the economically weaker sections, women and disabled people. One of the major consequences of the rather disorderly and haphazard construction of such transport infrastructures, and which is the subject of discussion here, is the displacement of communities, particularly of the informal economies.

Continue reading “Why do we not value our informal economies?”

Who can move? 

The flight and plight of Gender and Mobility in Urban India

Why are footpaths, a mandatory infrastructure, designed as an afterthought to vehicles and commercial establishments? Photo by The Hindu

The intersection of gender and movement in urban India reveals a complex and often overlooked aspect of city life, shaping experiences and opportunities for individuals across the spectrum. Transportation forms the backbone of daily life, enabling access to work, education, healthcare and social activities. However, the reality is that transportation systems often fail to address the diverse needs of women, men, and gender minorities equally. In this exploration of gender and movement in Urban India, we delve into the significance of transportation as not just a means of getting from point A to point B, but as a reflection of societal norms and a crucial factor in ensuring the freedom of movement and well being of all individuals.

Continue reading “Who can move? “

What happens in the underbelly of flyovers?

A commentary on the approach to designing/building mobility infrastructure in urban India with a focus on the neglected spaces below the flyovers.

The solution to traffic congestion woes — Flyovers!
Photo: Suyashi Paliwal

In Indian cities, flyovers define ‘modernity’. Over the past four decades, our cities have evolved to revolve around automobiles with their prime focus on how to cater to the demands of vehicular movement and decrease congestion on roads. Planning and development agencies have fetishised the construction of flyovers for years — in reality however, they are only a temporary respite from traffic woes. Constructed at great speed, flyovers are still looked at as engineering projects, rather than holistic urban interventions that effectively alter not just the movement of vehicles, but the urban fabric permanently. The ‘negative’ space created underneath these structures is something that is seldom thought about or at best put an afterthought to. 

Continue reading “What happens in the underbelly of flyovers?”

The Landscape of Mobility in Indian Cities

Photo by Satej Shinde

Mobility in urban India can be defined as the capability to move from one location to another influenced by the push ( i.e. outflux of people) and the pull ( i.e. influx of people) factor. The need for a better livelihood and an elevated socio-economic environment often supervises these factors of pull whereas the scarcity of basic domestic services and employment viability provide the push for the city’s inhabitants. The public transportation system often serves as the performative nerve connecting people from their houses to the areas of employment in the city and also formulates a kinetic perception of its morphology.

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Nagari 2024 Mentors

Sanjiv Shah

Sanjiv Shah is a film editor, producer, and filmmaker engaged largely with documentaries dealing with social issues, and exploring forms of film. As a part of the exhibition The State of Housing (2018) in Mumbai, he directed a video looking at the housing crisis in India over the last 70 years.

Arjun Gourisaria

Arjun is a producer, director, editor and instructor. He has won many awards including two National Awards for Editing – for the documentaries ‘Gulabi Gang’ (2014) and ‘Shut Up Sona’ (2020). His maiden co-directorial feature, ‘Sthaniya Sambaad’ (2011) won the Best Film Award at the New York Indian Film Festival.

Pankaj Rishi Kumar

After graduating from FTII Pune, India, in 1992, with a specialisation in Film Editing, Pankaj was assistant editor on Sekhar Kapur’s ‘Bandit Queen’. He made his first film ‘Kumar Talkies’ in 1998. Pankaj has become a one-man crew- producing, directing, shooting and editing his own films under the banner of Kumar Talkies. His films have been screened at film festivals all over the world. Pankaj also curates and teaches.

Bina Paul

Bina works mainly in Malayalam-language films. She has over fifty editing credits. Bina won her first National Film Award for Revathi’s ‘Mitr, My Friend’, which had an all-woman crew. She has been the artistic director of the International Film Festival of Kerala and in 2017 she was appointed as one of the heads of “Women Collective in Cinema”.

Sourav Sarangi

Sourav Sarangi is an award-winning film maker from India.
He put down his geologist’s hammer to pick up a camera and tell stories. Stories that entertained and informed us, stories that transformed our views.
His journey began from Kanthi, a small town in South Bengal, to become a fellow of the Film Independent, LA, in collaboration with The U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.
National and international film festivals in Berlin, Sydney, Dubai, Locarno, Nyon, Yamagata, Guangzhou, Moscow, Goa, Thessaloniki, Busan, Toronto and many more have premiered and awarded his films. Broadcasters and academic institutions found him a large global audience.
“I don’t follow stories, they live in me,” says Sourav.

Rajula Shah

Rajula completed her diploma in Film Direction from FTII, Pune. She holds a masters degree in English Literature. She has been producing/ directing short films since 2000; has worked extensively in film and video, exploring the boundaries of fiction/ non-fiction, photography, video essay, & New Media Practice.

Nagari 2024

Mobility is the capability to move from one location to another influenced by the push (i.e., outflux of people) and the pull (i.e., influx of people) factor. This movement is governed by three key interrelated choices that citizens make, namely, housing, transport and livelihoods.

Past editions of Nagari have looked at the themes of housing adequacy and livelihoods in urban India. Keeping transport as the central performative nerve in an urban environment, this year’s Nagari bioscope aims to create an anthology documenting the elements governing mobility and its dynamics in shaping Indian cities.

Mobility in Urban India

Click on the image above to learn more about the Final Films
Click on the image above to know about the winning entries
Click on the image above to view the Nagari 2024 Award Ceremony proceedings
Click on the image above to learn more about the shortlisted entries
Click on the image above to view the full brief

Mentors

Jury

Community Partner

The Landscape of Mobility in Indian Cities

An overview on this year’s Nagari theme — this blog discusses how urban mobility in India is shaped by socio-economic factors and the crucial role of public transportation in connecting people to jobs.

Who can move? The flight and plight of Gender and Mobility in Urban India

This blog explores how gender impacts urban mobility, revealing the challenges women and gender minorities face with public transportation.

What Happens in the Underbelly of Flyovers?

This photoblog is a commentary on the approach to designing/building mobility infrastructure in urban India with a focus on the neglected spaces below the flyovers.

Why do we not Value our Informal Economies?

This blog talks about displacement of informal economies as a result of transport infrastructure projects in the urban areas of India and the lack of sustainable urban development policies.