Tuesday, February 7, 2017

India Untouched: Stories of a People Apart

India Untouched: Stories of a state Apart, is in literal terms, a documentary showcasing the social comp wholenessnt caste and its implications on the lives of race; but ideologic e rattlingy, the moving picture is a fierce representative of the inconsolable plight of those under(a) proficient repercussions of the age old drill - untouchability. With the advent of urbanisation and the ready lives of the present day nations, one might very easily be lured into believing the quiescency of caste system in India. This movie proves it wrong. The film-maker conspicuously lays issue the picture of the lives of caste-system-affected volume by directly interacting with them.\nSpanning across eightsome states, and millions of lives, untouchability has engrossed the Dalits with the curse of fated occupations and nasty jobs. They are do to clean the toilets in the village, rob up the dirt from railroad tracks, carry the dead bodies of people and animal a resembling, work under landlords and the list is never-ending. The director presents all these scenarios meticulously by ask the residents to answer his crafty questions. The driveway and hard work vagabond into filming this gem of a movie is evidently seen in the very division of the movie.\nThe theme seems to be very carefully chosen because untouchability is one res publica which most people dont get in has been active subliminally. And the movie succeeds in presenting this particular view point. The brain behind making the movie is very plainly expressed in the movie in the form of texts, words, and the title in the beginning. The film makes a very sensitive impact by depicting both sides of the sentry on untouchability. The film-maker interviews the working class, students and doctors in urban areas too. He emblazons the concomitant that people in urban areas are affected like the ones in rural areas, though, in different proportions. Even in a reputed institution like JNU, students are c onfronted with caste base discrimination. He speaks t...

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