<p>Cannes: Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) student Chidananda S Naik’s 16-minute short fiction film, <em>Sunflowers Were the First Ones to Know...,</em> premiered at the 77th Cannes Film Festival on Tuesday afternoon.</p>.<p>The Kannada-language film, based on a folk tale about an old woman whose theft of a rooster plunges her village into perpetual darkness, is in the La Cinef competition for film schools.</p>.<p>The awards for the section are scheduled to be announced on Thursday.</p>.<p>'Sunflowers Were the Last Ones to Know...' is one of 18 titles that will be judged by a five-member jury chaired by Belgian actress Lubna Azabal.</p>.Cannes 2024: Diipa Khosla's tribute to Indian culture makes waves.<p>Shivamogga-born, Mysore-based Naik is in Cannes with three principal crew members – director of photography Suraj Thakur, sound designer Abhishek Kadam and production designer Pranav Khot.</p>.<p>The film’s editor, Manoj V, has not been able to make it to the festival.</p>.<p>The team has travelled to the festival at their own expense.</p>.<p>Naik has an MBBS degree. He gravitated towards filmmaking after practising medicine for a while. “My parents were extremely upset with me when I made the move. But now, five years on, I am here with their support,” he says.</p>.<p>The film was shot on location in Pune. Because it is about a village where the sun stops rising, 'Sunflowers Were the First Ones to Know...' had to be shot in darkness.</p>.<p>“Night is a character in the film,” says Naik. “It was a challenge considering the limited resources we had at our disposal.” </p>.<p>The story that Naik’s film tells is rooted in Karnataka. “It is very known within the state, so I am surprised that nobody outside Karnataka has ever heard the folk tale,” he says.</p>.<p>It was a conversation with the late writer UR Ananthamurthy that sparked Naik’s search for stories and songs of the Banjara community to which he belongs. “He told me that it isn’t a language that is recognised, it is the literature in that language.” </p>.<p>Based on his research into Banjara literature, Naik made a 12-minute documentary, 'Bhule Chuke Tules' (To the Forgotten). The film premiered at the International Documentary and Short Film Festival of Kerala last year.</p>.Cannes 2024: Indian celebs who shone brightly at the French Riviera.<p>“Banjaras have a rich oral culture but the lines separating the community from the Kannada-speaking population have blurred,” he says.</p>.<p>Naik grew up on a staple of commercial Kannada cinema. “I discovered Girish Kasaravalli and other non-mainstream filmmakers quite late,” he says. He enrolled for a one-year course in the television wing of FTII.</p>.<p>Naik now runs a club of writers with several other aspiring filmmakers.</p>.<p>“We call it Ashtray,” he says. “We develop projects. We write ideas and analyse them. We watch films, get their scripts and discuss them.” </p>
<p>Cannes: Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) student Chidananda S Naik’s 16-minute short fiction film, <em>Sunflowers Were the First Ones to Know...,</em> premiered at the 77th Cannes Film Festival on Tuesday afternoon.</p>.<p>The Kannada-language film, based on a folk tale about an old woman whose theft of a rooster plunges her village into perpetual darkness, is in the La Cinef competition for film schools.</p>.<p>The awards for the section are scheduled to be announced on Thursday.</p>.<p>'Sunflowers Were the Last Ones to Know...' is one of 18 titles that will be judged by a five-member jury chaired by Belgian actress Lubna Azabal.</p>.Cannes 2024: Diipa Khosla's tribute to Indian culture makes waves.<p>Shivamogga-born, Mysore-based Naik is in Cannes with three principal crew members – director of photography Suraj Thakur, sound designer Abhishek Kadam and production designer Pranav Khot.</p>.<p>The film’s editor, Manoj V, has not been able to make it to the festival.</p>.<p>The team has travelled to the festival at their own expense.</p>.<p>Naik has an MBBS degree. He gravitated towards filmmaking after practising medicine for a while. “My parents were extremely upset with me when I made the move. But now, five years on, I am here with their support,” he says.</p>.<p>The film was shot on location in Pune. Because it is about a village where the sun stops rising, 'Sunflowers Were the First Ones to Know...' had to be shot in darkness.</p>.<p>“Night is a character in the film,” says Naik. “It was a challenge considering the limited resources we had at our disposal.” </p>.<p>The story that Naik’s film tells is rooted in Karnataka. “It is very known within the state, so I am surprised that nobody outside Karnataka has ever heard the folk tale,” he says.</p>.<p>It was a conversation with the late writer UR Ananthamurthy that sparked Naik’s search for stories and songs of the Banjara community to which he belongs. “He told me that it isn’t a language that is recognised, it is the literature in that language.” </p>.<p>Based on his research into Banjara literature, Naik made a 12-minute documentary, 'Bhule Chuke Tules' (To the Forgotten). The film premiered at the International Documentary and Short Film Festival of Kerala last year.</p>.Cannes 2024: Indian celebs who shone brightly at the French Riviera.<p>“Banjaras have a rich oral culture but the lines separating the community from the Kannada-speaking population have blurred,” he says.</p>.<p>Naik grew up on a staple of commercial Kannada cinema. “I discovered Girish Kasaravalli and other non-mainstream filmmakers quite late,” he says. He enrolled for a one-year course in the television wing of FTII.</p>.<p>Naik now runs a club of writers with several other aspiring filmmakers.</p>.<p>“We call it Ashtray,” he says. “We develop projects. We write ideas and analyse them. We watch films, get their scripts and discuss them.” </p>