Tag Archives: Rara Avis Entertainment

Sheffield DocFest (June 18 – 23, 2025) Taskovski Films Sales Acquires REDLIGHT TO LIMELIGHT

Taskovski Films Sales picks up “Redlight to Limelight”, directed by Bipuljit Basu.

The film was produced by Nilotpal Majumdar and co-produced by John Webster and Uldis Cekulis, with Emma Hindley and Somnath Gosh acting as executive producers. The film will have its world premiere at Sheffield DocFest in the International First Feature Competition.

Logline: A high-spirited group of Indian sex workers and their families begin making short films to transform their own lives and inspire others.

Synopsis: Redlight to Limelight follows a group of young children who are passionately weaving stories with mothers and sisters through their video production unit called CAM-ON to cultivate a meaningful change in the lives of a special community of sex workers in the brothel of Kalighat, Kolkata.

Keeping aside the ghosts of their grimy reality and who they were, women and children get immersed in an incredible joy of storytelling with a burning desire to turn the brothel into a better place. Woven around the experiences of mothers and sisters, CAM ON embarks on making a new short fiction Nupur, which is often entwined between memories and actuality, takes them through a catharsis when the community premieres the film for a public screening.

With joy and the power of storytelling, artful voices make their grimy universe a liberating space of self-assertion.

Irena Taskovski, CEO & Head of Acquisitions at Taskovski Films:

Redlight to Limelight is a powerful testament to the healing force of cinema and a celebration of friendship and long-term collaboration. Discovering new Indian talent like Bipuljit Basu and working with long-time partners such as Nilotpal Majumder, who has spent decades nurturing Indian documentary voices through Docedge Kolkata, and dear colleagues like Uldis Cekulis and John Webster is a true privilege.

Set in Kolkata’s most stigmatized red-light district, the film follows the CAM-ON collective’s creative journey, revealing stories of resilience and hope. It shows how filmmaking can transform pain into purpose and give marginalised voices dignity and joy.”

Bipuljit Basu, Director:

“With Redlight to Limelight, it was essential to let the mothers and children of Kolkata’s red-light district tell their own stories through their own lens. In this process, we uncover a shared desire for dignity and transformation. We partnered with Taskovski Films because they truly understood our vision—the power of collective creativity to inspire change.”

Nilotpal Majumdar, Producer:

Taskovski Films has long been a supporter of bold Indian cinema, with an award-winning catalogue that has inspired us for years. Their deep commitment goes beyond distribution—they nurture each film with care and vision. We’re proud to join forces with a team that truly elevates the stories they represent and bring Redlight to Limelight to global audiences.”

“Redlight to Limelight” Team at the Sheffield DocFest:

Bipuljit Basu (Director): June 18th – June 23rd

Nilotpal Majumdar (Producer): June 18th – June 23rd

John Webster (Producer): June 18th – June 21st

Uldis Cekulis (Producer): June 18th – June 21st

Somnath Ghosh (Executive Producer): June 18th – June 23rd

Emma Hindley (Executive Producer): June 19th

Screenings:

Thursday, June 19th 21:00 The Light – Screen 6

Saturday, June 21st 17:45 Showroom – Screen 2

BIOGRAPHIES:

BIPULJIT BASU – Director Bipuljit Basu, a Sundance Institute and IDFA grantee, is an emerging filmmaker specializing in Indian factual cinema, reality cinema, and documentaries. His work focuses on bringing lesser-known South Asian marginal stories into mainstream film and media. A postgraduate in Social Development, Bipuljit uncovers unexplored narratives with significant social relevance in popular culture, aiming to create a meaningful impact across broader social spectrums. He firmly believes in showcasing inclusion as a powerful tool for social change.

From 2016 to 2019, Bipuljit also worked as an overseas distributor, bringing carefully curated social-issue-based stories to audiences in North America and Europe. Additionally, Bipuljit served as an Asian jury member at the Science Film Festival, hosted by UNDP and the Goethe Institute, which took place across 94 countries.


NILOTPAL MAJUMDAR – Producer Nilotpal Majumder, a postgraduate from the Film & Television Institute of India, Pune, specializing in Editing, spearheaded the first Asian documentary pitching forum, Docedge-Kolkata, Asian Forum for Documentary. This initiative advances alternative reality storytelling in the region through skill development, incubation, and professional assistance. He has contributed to numerous films as a Director, Cinematographer, and Editor, and has participated in international festivals, forums, and workshops as a jury member, tutor, and mentor.

Formerly, he served as the Dean of the Satyajit Ray Film and Television Institute, Government of India. Currently, he is the Director of the Manipur Film & Television Institute in Imphal. In recognition of his outstanding contribution to the culture of global documentary cinema, he was honored with the European Documentary Network Award in 2017.


Contact

Press & PR Agent: Neja Rakušček,

Taskovski PR Agency | publicity@taskovskifilms.com

INCREDIBLE STREET PERFORMANCE AT SHEFFIELD DOCFEST: FIRE BREATHING, CIRCUS AND STILT PERFORMANCES

Lesli Canela Pérez

COMPARSA receives its World Premiere Saturday 21 June

Lesli Canela Pérez

In celebration of the World Premiere of Comparsa at Sheffield DocFest, Guatemalan artists and documentary subjects Lupe Pérez and Lesli Canales Pérez were outside the Crucible in Tudor Square in the heart of Sheffield for body paint, fire performance, and street circus performance, accompanied by batucada beats from local musicians Stilt Batteristas.

Lupe Pérez and Lesli Canela Pérez
Stilt Batteristas

Comparsa will have its World Premiere at Sheffield DocFest on Saturday 21st June, 8:45pm at the Curzon cinema in Sheffield.

Lupe Pérez

Logline: In a Guatemalan barrio silenced by fear, two teenage sisters lead a luminous rebellion—unleashing giant puppets, fire, and artful performance to protest gender violence in a joyful fight for survival.

Lesli Canela Pérez

Synopsis: Comparsa fully immerses audiences in the intense world of Ciudad Peronia, Guatemala, where sisters Lesli and Lupe use art and performance to rally local youth and heal The Social Dilemma wounds. After 41 girls are killed in a State-run “Safe Home” and the government refuses to act, the sisters respond with a community comparsa—an exuberant street performance featuring towering puppets, fire-breathing stilt walkers, and thundering drums. With brave vulnerability, they expose a power structure that permits and commits violence against women, and they open up about surviving violence in their own home.

Lupe Pérez, Lesli Canela Pérez, and the Stilt Batteristas

Their youth movement takes to the streets, confronting corruption and reclaiming public space for women and girls. Rooting their efforts in joy and community care, they find healing for themselves along the way.

Lupe Pérez, Ana Cantorán Viramontes, Marta Chicoj Garcia,, and the Stilt Batteristas

Comparsa is built on a 15-year relationship between the subjects and the film team to offer a stirring portrait of sisterhood, peacebuilding, and the transformational power of art.

Director, Vickie Curtis’s Statement
Vickie Curtis

My lifelong fascination with characters and story structure was honed in the theatre and landed me in the world of documentary film writing. After a decade of writing films such as The Social Dilemma and Searching For Amani, I developed a craving for human-centered stories that could offer clues for addressing the pressing crises we face.

In Comparsa, I see young people finding a fundamentally different way to organize the community, prioritize wellbeing, heal, and rebuild together. To embody these values, I’m taking a deliberate, collaborative approach to making this film.

Comparsa is born from personal connection and a shared theory of change. My co-director Doug Anderson and I met decades ago, as kids in a youth theatre program that pushed us to question the status quo and embrace self-expression as resistance. During that program, we became fast friends with Comparsa’s producer, Anna Hadingham. Anna moved to Guatemala in 2007 and began working alongside our film’s subjects, learning to produce raucous public performances as a method for grassroots organizing.

Doug Anderson

After nearly a decade of hearing about Anna’s exceptional artist collaborators in Guatemala, Doug and I decided to go to Peronia and see for ourselves.

Meeting Lesli and Lupe on our first day in Peronia led to a shared desire to illuminate the daily dangers so many young women face and the joyful, creative ways they’re driving change.

The film is being co-created by all of us, and in that spirit, we’ll share a translated note from one of the film’s writers and subjects, Lupe Pérez:

“Comparsa is a project by people who care deeply about one another and who believe that the work we are doing to empower youth in Ciudad Peronia should be shared. Telling my story has given me strength….It means a lot for us to be seen, to feel we have something to teach the world despite our circumstances.”


As a mostly women-led team of fellow theatre artists, with a groundwork of trust laid by Anna over the course of a decade, we developed intimate access with our teenage subjects as they grappled with personal trauma on one hand, and an unjust system on the
other.

Our intention is to draw audience members into the private worlds and the public demonstrations that make up daily life for Lesli, Lupe, and the other women in this story. Their candid presence on screen paints a picture of a place and of a time in life when belonging and purpose are everything. Finding that belonging and purpose with each other, they work to transcend the traumas of a racist, sexist, extractive system.

We mix vérité and interview moments with more ethereal sequences that highlight the magical, mythical nature of Lesli and Lupe’s art. Layered with passages of our characters’ original poetry, these sections underscore the surreal way life fluctuates between joy and sorrow,
and the way art braids meaning into experience.


We intend the substance and style of Comparsa to resonate with audiences that are hungry for a joyful model of change making. Unlike films about the developing world that stay mired in harsh problems or posit external solutions from foreign savior figures.


Comparsa highlights young people forging a better future through their own creative action. It serves as a narrative disruption to misleading portrayals of Central Americans and exemplifies strategies for speaking truth to power in a time when fascistic authoritarians are gaining ground around the globe. As the eldest sister in my own family, and as a mother to two daughters, I believe the time is now for women to organize, center their own joy, and fight for the humane systems we’re already beginning to build.

REVERSING A LEGACY OF FEMICIDE

THE FIRE

At the center of Lesli and Lupe’s efforts to empower women and girls is a notorious act of violence that plagues their community. The incident claimed the lives of their childhood friend Siona, along with 40 other girls residing in a government-run Safe Home.

The Safe Home was intended as a refuge for girls with unstable family lives, but it is now clear that the State-run facility was anything but safe.

On March 7th, 2017, dozens of residents broke out of the Safe Home, protesting bad treatment and abuse, including alleged human trafficking and sexual assault. That night,police rounded up many of the escaped girls and locked them in a makeshift dormitory back at the Safe Home. The next morning, the captive girls asked to be let out of the cramped room to use the bathroom. The police and Safe Home guards denied their request.

One girl started a fire. The girls begged for the guards and police to unlock the door as the fire engulfed them, but the police refused.

The guards and police left all 56 girls in the room to burn for nine minutes; 41 of them were killed, and the 15 survivors suffered severe burns and untold trauma. This event has become iconic of the lack of care, respect, and rights given to women and girls in Guatemala and beyond.

For Lesli and Lupe, it includes the personal loss of a close childhood friend. Lesli and Lupe come from the same streets as the girls who died, and they are well aware that it could have been them locked in that burning room, lungs on fire.

In approaching this story, our intention first and foremost has been to honor the girls who died in the fire and fight for the girls who remain in harm’s way. Our subjects transform their pain into purpose; rising as leaders of a youth movement, insisting on the safety,dignity, freedom, and joy of girls everywhere.

THE FIGHT

● In April 2024, the IACHR highlighted the deterioration of Guatemala’s democratic systems. Lesli and Lupe’s joyful, art-driven methods offer a fresh way to engage and build peace.

● Guatemala has one of the highest rates of femicide globally, and a staggering 71%of those cases go unsolved. Lesli, Lupe, and their mentor Marta are working to create more safe spaces for women and girls in Guatemala—spaces where artistic expression, body autonomy, joy, and mutual aid are the norm. We endeavor to support that effort.

Lesli and Lupe realize this fight is not a sprint, but a relay race. They prioritize bringing a new generation of young women into the fold. Their chosen slogan for the comparsa and womens festival featured in the film is: Somos las semillas quetrascienden desde las cenizas – We are the seeds that rise from the ashes.

ABOUT THE TEAM

Vickie Curtis (director, producer, writer)

Emmy-winning writer of Netflix Originals The Social Dilemma and Chasing Coral, Vickie makes her directorial debut with Comparsa. Her work explores the systemic roots of social and ecological crises, and the artists and activists working to rebuild. Vickie’s storytelling spans award-winning documentaries including Searching For Amani (Tribeca), We Are Guardians (HotDocs, Netflix LatAm), Greener Pastures (POV), and Anbessa (Berlinale, Arte). After years studying theatre and education, she brings a collaborative ethos to each project.


Doug Anderson (director, editor, producer)

Doug is a New York-based filmmaker and founder of Paper Moth Media, where he create politically engaged documentary work, including for the groundbreaking 2018 campaign of US Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Credits include cinematography for To The End (Sundance 2022) and The Providers (Independent Lens), and sound work on Predators (MTV Documentary Films), Knock Down the House (Netflix) and Pride (FX). Comparsa marks his directorial debut.


Anna Hadingham (producer, writer)

A theater artist and youth advocate, Anna spent a decade working alongside Guatemalan youth in Ciudad Peronia on arts-based youth development initiatives. As a Peronia Adolescente collaborator, she co-created performances to organize the community and facilitate healing. She serves as community liaison and impact producer on the Comparsa film team. Anna has also served as director of youth programs at La Colaborativa, a non-profit organization run by and for the immigrant community in Chelsea, Massachusetts. She continues collaborations with Peronia Adolescente, rooting her workin community, justice, and imagination.


Olivia Ahnemann (producer)

An Oscar-nominated producer (Porcelain War, Sundance 2024 Grand Jury Prize), Olivia has over two decades of experience crafting bold, impactful documentaries. Her credits include Youth v Gov (Netflix), Under the Gun (Sundance), Racing Extinction (Discovery), and The Cove, which won the Academy Award for Best Documentary. She is known for championing character-driven films that illuminate global crises.


Edgar Tuy (cinematographer)

Tuy is a Kaqchikel Mayan filmmaker born in Sololá, Guatemala, who migrated at an early age to Ciudad Peronia, where he began a career in the visual arts. Tuy has studied cinematography in El Salvador and at Casa Comal in Guatemala. He has worked on feature and short films, national and international documentaries, music videos, and Kaqchikel translation of Netflix films. He is currently presenting his short documentary, Regalito de Dios and is in production on his next documentary, Mónica, a film about an indigenous trans woman fighting for human rights in her rural community.


Sebastián Lasaosa Rogers (cinematographer)

Sebastián was a Spanish-American documentary filmmaker based in Brooklyn, New York.A gifted and prolific cinematographer, he brought heart and visual poetry to numerous feature-length documentaries, including The Art of Making It, which won the Audience Award at SXSW 2022. In 2024, he made his directorial debut with Freeing Juanita, a powerful and personal film that premiered at DocsMX and continues to travel the international festival circuit. Sebastián’s work was marked by a deep commitment to justice, beauty, and human connection. He is profoundly missed.


Press Contact:

Elizabeth Taylor | etaylor@christelleandcopr.com

UKRAINIAN DIRECTOR CONFIRMED TO ATTEND WORLD PREMIERE AT SHEFFIELD DOC FEST

CUBA & ALASKA Director Yegor Troyanovsky, currently serving in Special Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, will be present for the film’s Q/A

Ukrainian Army frontline medics ‘Cuba’ and ‘Alaska’, the two stars of the feature documentary, are already in-person at the festival

See-Through Films has confirmed Filmmaker Yegor Troyanovsky, whose feature documentary CUBA & ALASKA is world premiering at Sheffield Doc Fest, is currently traveling to Sheffield from his active military service in the Ukraine Army’s Special Forces. 

As of late Thursday, June 20, 2025, Troyanovsky had successfully crossed the Ukrainian border and was expected to arrive at the festival in time for the film’s second screening Q/A. The screening is scheduled for Saturday, June 21st at The Light-Screen 9, at 10:15am.

The film profiles best-friends “Cuba” & “Alaska”, two wisecracking medics on Ukraine’s frontline, living the same battlefield story as all soldiers: slowly losing connections with friends, family and their previous lives the longer they stand up for Ukraine. In a place where laughter is armor and friendship is survival, can the two ever go back to the life they used to know?

‘Cuba’ (Yulia Sidorova) and ‘Alaska’ (Olexandra) had already arrived in the UK ahead of the film’s world premiere screening on Thursday, June 19, 2025. Both were welcomed at the Ukrainian Embassy in London by the Ukraine Ambassador.

“”It is a great honor for me to meet the heroines of this deep and sincere film. These women are true symbols of the strength of the Ukrainian people. In the most difficult times, they demonstrate courage, resilience and boundless love for Ukraine. Their stories are about the struggle for freedom, dignity and life. It is thanks to such people that Ukraine holds on, and the world sees that we are fighting not only for our land, but for values ​​common to all civilized humanity. I thank the authors of the film for this extremely important work, which helps Europe and the world better understand Ukraine and its indomitable people,” said General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ambassador of Ukraine.

CUBA & ALASKA is a raw and intimate profile of two Ukrainian medics from the frontlines of the war that captures the funny; the arcane, and the painfully tragic times that make up a soldier’s emotional journey during wartime. Body cams, cell phones, and the director’s camera fill in the story between the constant danger, bouts of survivors’ guilt, and a longing to ‘go back’ – to return to the life they had when dreams were still possible. Fueled by the enormously contagious laughter from Cuba, and the dark black humor of Alaska, the two best friends face down the unknown together with a warrior fierceness befitting Thelma & Louise.  

For More Information

Julieta Esteban

julietaesteban@gmail.com


Kathleen McInnis,

See-Through Films

k.mcinnis@see-throughfilms.com

World Of Wonders Events Schedule at Sheffield DocFest

If you are attending the Sheffield Documentary Festival, one series you shouldn’t miss out on is the World of Wonder events!

It is sure to make you say wow with the incredible lineup of documentaries and conversations that they have curated specially for lovers of documentaries.

Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato invite you to come be inspired and entertained!

In their own words:

Thursday, 19 June
In From the WOW Werq Room, we share some sizzles and pitches and talk about the challenges of getting projects greenlit. It never gets easier – and we’ll discuss finding alternative ways forward.

In the afternoon, Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Ronan Farrow joins us to talk about his projects and our work together turning podcasts into series.

The screening of Strange Journey marks the UK premiere of a fantastic documentary about the phenomenon of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, directed by Linus O’Brien. Without Rocky Horror, would there be Drag Race? This show has had an enormous influence on us, and we are thrilled to be Executive Producers.

Friday, 20 June 
We are excited to present a world first: a sneak peek of Part One of Murder in Glitterball City, a gothic true crime documentary, followed by The World of Wonder Ball – featuring an open bar and queens from RuPaul’s Drag Race UK in the house.

Saturday, 21 June
It’s an extraordinary honor to be in conversation with Dawn Airey, the founder of Five and a blazing, give-no-Fs pioneer of British media.
Strong women have always inspired us, and so in addition to discussing The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Britney Spears, and Drag Race, we’ll talk about how we hope to navigate the future with WOWPresents Plus.
Our own strange journey began with a homemade public access TV show in New York. That led to The Adam and Joe Show, and it’s incredible to reunite with them for An Evening with Adam and Joe.

Sunday, 22 June 
Inside Deep Throat is an account of the seminal adult film that broke all box office records in the 1970s. It’s a rare treat to screen this documentary feature we directed and, we hope, a happy ending to our time together in Sheffield.

A Little Gray Wolf Will Come, Official Selection – First Feature Competition at Sheffield DocFest 2025

LEWA productions, Revolver Amsterdam, and Giorgio Savona productions will debut the world premiere of A Little Gray Wolf Will Come, Official Selection – First Feature Competition at Sheffield DocFest 2025.

A sincere and captivating personal story of a Russian journalist, a familiar face on Russian state television, going through a complex journey of self-discovery and transformation – both as a journalist and as a mother – set against the backdrop of Putin’s Russia.

At its heart, a burning question: How did we allow lies, hatred, and propaganda to become the norm?

“Creative storytelling, masterful editing… It’s compelling exploration of family, identity, and courage”.- Sheffield DocFest

Pre-screening drink, courtesy of the Croatian Audiovisual Centre, at Curzon rooftop, starting at 16:00 on June 21st.

Screenings

Curzon – Screen 1 – 21.6.2025 – 18:15 screening and Q&A

Showroom – Screen 2 – 22.6.2025 – 13:00 screening and Q&A

For inquiries please contact info@lewaproductions.hr