January was the last time I wrote. Since then, I turned twenty-five, injured my wrist, stopped writing, started working harder, and began sprinting toward the finish line to complete post-production on our movie Divided We Fall. Now the movie is almost ready (as you can tell by our smiles) and my wrist has healed enough to write this big update…
(Photo by Ejen Chuang appears in this month’s Hyphen Magazine).
Divided We Fall will officially premiere this September during the fifth remembrance of 9/11 and tour around the country in the upcoming year. Join our mailing list for more info. In the mean time, we invite you to these special upcoming screenings of the Director’s Cut:SUNDAY MAY 7, 2006 at the HARVARD FILM ARCHIVE
7pm, Carpenter Center, Harvard University
Director’s Cut followed by Q&A with the filmmakers
For details contact: info@dwf-film.com
SATURDAY JUNE 3, 2006 at the SPINNING WHEEL FILM FESTIVAL
10:45am, Cubberly Auditorium, Stanford University
Director’s Cut followed by Q&A with the filmmakers
For details visit: http://bayareawheel.com
Check out DWF in the news:
Before directing/producing Divided We Fall, Sharat Raju wrote and directed the acclaimed short film American Made — scheduled to make its broadcast premiere on PBS’ Independent Lens this May! With 529 air dates on 200+ station affiliates, American Made (pictured) will likely be the first fictional film about Sikh Americans post-9/11 to screen on national television.
Since October, I’ve spent many weeks in our tiny editing room in Los Angeles, working with our extraordinary editors Scott Rosenblatt and Sharat Raju on shaping 130 hours of raw footage taped over four years into a final movie about a journey into the heart of post-9/11 America. After a dozen drafts and a handful of screenings for my classmates and professors at Harvard Divinity and our filmmaker friends in Los Angeles, we will lock picture in onemonth to premiere this fall. With American Made premiering on television next month, we are very excited about the possibility of sharing these stories with large audiences. I am deeply grateful for the feedback of our friends (you know who you are): many patient hands have brought DWF this far. To support the film, click here.