How a Rough Cut Reached Venice: Anuparna Roy's Festival Triumph Revealed

Anuparna Roy shared the surprising journey of her film "Songs of Forgotten Trees" at the Dharamshala International Film Festival. She revealed that a last-minute decision led her to submit a rough cut to the Venice International Film Festival. Despite seven other Indian films already under consideration, her submission caught the festival's attention. The film went on to win the prestigious Orizzonti Award for Best Director, marking a remarkable achievement for her debut feature.

Key Points: Anuparna Roy Venice Win with Songs of Forgotten Trees Rough Cut

  • Anuparna Roy won Venice's Orizzonti Award with unexpected rough cut submission
  • Rohan Kanawade rejected pressure to make "easy sell" films for Sundance winner
  • Dechen Wangmo Roder embraces low-budget filmmaking with Rs 10 lakh grant
  • Nidhi Saxena discusses financial risks of experimental cinema without producers
4 min read

Anuparna Roy shares how 'Songs of Forgotten Trees' rough cut reached Venice

Filmmaker Anuparna Roy reveals how her rough cut submission won Venice's Orizzonti Award, sharing indie filmmaking insights at Dharamshala festival.

"I ended up sending a very rough cut to the festival! - Anuparna Roy"

Dharamshala, Nov 1

Filmmaker Anuparna Roy, whose ‘Songs of Forgotten Trees’ will be the closing film at this year’s Dharamshala International Film Festival (DIFF) talked about how the rough cut of ‘Songs of Forgotten Trees’ reached Venice.

DIFF hosted two major sessions, including a special masterclass on legendary filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky, attended by his son Andrey Tarkovsky.

The day began with a panel discussion titled “From Vision to Reality: The Making of Indie Cinema”, featuring Anuparna Roy, ‘Sabar Bonda’ director Rohan Parashuram Kanawade, Bhutanese filmmaker Dechen Wangmo Roder and Nidhi Saxena, director of ‘Secret of a Mountain Serpent’. The session was moderated by Prathyush Parasuraman.

“I don’t think anyone makes films, designing them for festivals. You make it because you are emotional, you want to say something,” said Roy, who won the Orizzonti Award for Best Director at the 2025 Venice International Film Festival. The filmmaker shared how a stroke of urgency landed her debut feature in Venice. “I ended up sending a very rough cut to the festival! They already had seven Indian films under consideration, and we were late. They ended up replying on 18th July, that we are considering your film. It was a great experience there, the film won, people loved it and the concept of two women."

Joining her on the panel, 'Sabar Bonda' director Rohan Kanawade revealed how his Sundance-winning film was deemed “a difficult sell” by several European and American sales agents. “They said, ‘So sorry we are passing the film.’ I thought, should I make the film that can be easy for you to sell? I can't make a film that everyone else wants to watch; I will make a film the way I want to make a film. You have to make an honest film and have patience for things to work out,” said Kanawade.

He also talked about how September marked a breakthrough month for independent cinema, with acclaimed titles like Sabar Bonda, Jugnuma, and Humans in the Loop finding theatrical releases. “In the next few years, there shouldn't be any terms like independent or non-independent... There should just be cinema. Last month, we saw so many films releasing theatrically and people went to watch them. This is what I was saying - give that chance to the film. If you make the film available to them, they will go to watch.”

Dechen Wangmo Roder spoke about the practical challenges of sustaining creativity within tight budgets and said, “Of course, it’s very hard to shoot low-budget, but I feel that’s the only way to go for me now— to sort of sacrifice the budget. The next film I’m producing for a friend right now, we got a grant for Rs 10 lakhs, and we’re thinking, let’s try it. We don’t need to depend on anything else.”

Meanwhile, Nidhi Saxena, who has helmed two acclaimed indie titles, ‘Secret of a Mountain Serpent’ and ‘Sad Letters of an Imaginary Woman’, reflected on the risks of working without institutional backing. “I know that no Indian or foreign producer is going to give money to make an experimental film. My films were only possible because of chance. To make my first film, I sold something and I didn't have anything to sell for the second film, so I kept applying for grants.”

Later in the day, the special session “Spiritual Cinema” saw Andrey Tarkovsky in conversation with Tenzing Sonam, where he reflected on his father’s legacy. “Living with him as a father was like living through his work because he was a very communicative person. So we would have discussions about art, cinema, about spiritual search and it was very exciting for me as a kid,” the filmmaker said at the festival, which also screened his film ‘Andrey Tarkovsky: A Cinema Prayer’ and ‘Nostalghia’.

DIFF 2025 opened with houseful screenings of Neeraj Ghaywan’s ‘Homebound’ on Thursday. This year’s edition will be held from 30 October to 2 November.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohan X
Rohan Kanawade's point about not making films that are "easy to sell" really resonates. We need more authentic storytelling rather than formulaic commercial cinema. The success of films like Sabar Bonda proves audiences are ready for diverse content.
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Sarah B
While I appreciate the indie spirit, I wish there was more discussion about sustainable funding models. Selling personal belongings to make films (as Nidhi mentioned) shouldn't be the norm. We need better institutional support.
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Arjun K
DIFF is becoming such an important platform for meaningful cinema! The Tarkovsky session must have been incredible. Hope more Indian cities develop such quality film festivals that bridge global and local cinematic traditions.
D
Divya L
The Rs 10 lakh grant discussion by Dechen Wangmo Roder shows how much can be achieved with limited resources. In India, where budgets are often constraints, such examples give hope to aspiring filmmakers. Jugaad in creativity! 💪
M
Michael C
Interesting to see the international perspective with Bhutanese filmmaker Dechen participating. South Asian cinema is really evolving together. The cross-cultural exchanges at DIFF must be enriching for everyone involved.

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