Drowned Out
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''Drowned Out'' is a 2002 documentary by
Franny Armstrong Franny Armstrong (born 3 February 1972) is a British documentary film director working for her own company, Spanner Films, and a former drummer with indie pop group The Band of Holy Joy. She is best known for three films: '' The Age of Stupid' ...
about the
Sardar Sarovar Project The Sardar Sarovar Dam is a concrete gravity dam built on the Narmada River in Navagam near the town of Kevadiya, Narmada District, in the state of Gujarat, India. The dam was constructed to provide water and electricity to four Indian sta ...
. Shot over three years, ''Drowned Out'' follows one family’s stand against a government dam project which is set to destroy their home and their village.


Synopsis

The documentary follows the villagers of Jalsindhi – a village in Madhya Pradesh on the banks of the Narmada River about 30 miles upstream from the Sardar Sarovar project - through their battle against the dam. The lead character is Luharia Sonkaria, who is the village’s medicine man, a role that was his father’s and grandfather’s before him. The government provides them no viable alternatives - they offer unusable land a hundred miles away or a small sum of money in compensation for their river-side land. The film documents hunger strikes, rallies, and a six-year Supreme Court case, and finally follows the villagers as the dam fills and the river starts to rise. The documentary features
Arundhati Roy Suzanna Arundhati Roy (born 24 November 1961) is an Indian author best known for her novel ''The God of Small Things'' (1997), which won the Booker Prize for Fiction in 1997 and became the best-selling book by a non-expatriate Indian author. S ...
, who has been an outspoken activist bringing international attention to the controversy.


Production

The documentary was shot over three years on three separate trips to India by Franny Armstrong. Assisted by her sister in the first year and by an Australian camera operator in the second, Armstrong shot 80% of the film herself. There was no electricity ‘on location’ so Armstrong used a portable solar charger she purchased in the UK. Armstrong was put in jail for one night after the first day of filming. As she wrote in a feature article for ''
The Guardian ''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'', and changed its name in 1959. Along with its sister papers ''The Observer'' and ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardian'' is part of the Gu ...
'' newspaper, she continued to live and work alongside the villagers and found this almost anthropological way of working helped her capture candid interviews; "Most of the best interviews were done in the last year - when I was on my own - because people really got to know and trust me".


Screening in Jalsindhi village

In August 2003, the Spanner Films crew returned to Jalsindhi village, where ''Drowned Out'' had been shot, to screen the film for the villagers. They made a makeshift cinema on the side of the village school, with a diesel generator for electricity, a bedsheet for a screen and a simple sound system. About 120 people from Jalsindhi and surrounding villages came to the screening, and for almost all of them it was the first time they had seen a moving image.


Reception

''Time Out'' (London) chose ''Drowned Out'' as their Critics Choice, describing the documentary as "compassionate, disturbing and yet empowering". The ''Bermuda Royal Gazette'', reviewing the film for a screening at the Bermuda International Film Festival said "Documentaries rarely, if ever, come better than this." The ''San Francisco Chronicle'' called it "Heartbreaking" and ''Film Journal International'' said it is "A real eye opener." The OneWorld Media Awards Jury called the documentary "a powerful and masterfully crafted study", and New Internationalist described it as "Quiet, fierce, beautiful."


Awards

Nominated for Best Documentary in the BIFAs Runner up in San Francisco Film Festival Best Documentary


Distribution

''Drowned Out'' has been screened in numerous cinemas and on numerous TV channels around the world. Producers estimate millions of people have seen the film, primarily on TV round the world (including PBS in America). It was released on DVD in 2004 and can be downloaded or streamed from the Spanner Films website.


See also

*'' A Narmada Diary'', a 1995 film about opposition to the dam


References


External links

*{{IMDb title, 424055 British documentary films 2002 films 2002 documentary films Documentary films about India Documentary films about hydroelectricity * Films directed by Franny Armstrong 2000s British films