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August 1, 2000
5 QUESTIONS
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![]() Art for heart's sakeKanchana SugguDeath. It is like the end of a road, a conclusion, an inescapable reality, a dark reality, a full stop... over... finished... dead...
Nidaan challenges this very belief of a middle-aged couple, when they learn that the apple of their eyes -- their bubbly teenage daughter -- is diagnosed HIV positive. R V Pandit's movie (christened by none other than Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee himself) Nidaan -- the title means 'diagnosis' -- is thus a hard-hitting story about the deadly virus that consumes the human body, and its impact on those near and dear to the afflicted.
The diagnosis: HIV positive, contracted due to a blood transfusion during an appendicitis operation done some years back. Life comes to a standstill for the devastated Nadkarnis. And they decide to make the most of whatever little time they have with their daughter. Soumya too, on learning of her condition a couple of months later, helps her parents come to terms with the stark reality. The film, to say the least, is touching. Time and again, it shakes you; every so often, you find your eyes misting over with tears. Produced by R V Pandit, Nidaan is Mahesh Manjrekar's directorial debut. For Pandit, it is his third production after Gulzar's Maachis and Kalpana Lajmee's Darmiyaan.
Producer Pandit has been involved in social work for the past 28 years, the last ten of which have been dedicated to the cause of AIDS victims. Today, as per Government of India figures (the actual figures are said to be far higher), there are around four million AIDS victims in the country. And the only way to eradicate this evil is to educate the masses through whatever medium possible. Pandit, thus, has promised to give his film free, and even personally underwrite the theatre rentals and other costs of screening, to any person or organisation that wants to hold a charity show for AIDS or Blood Donation-related cause. While the film, in the main, attempts to educate people about AIDS and its impact, there is an equally powerful subtext, wherein the film-makers appeal for a more sympathetic approach towards victims of the disease. The film, thus, seeks to enlist public sympathy for the victims, while telling us that they do not deserve to be ostracised. Pandit has chosen to convey these two essential messages through the medium of film, and it must be said sans doubt that he has succeeded.
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