Mumbai, July 30 : After a delay of 25 days, the
restored digital print of " Kalpana" - noted dancer Uday Shankar's 1948
film on experimental dance - was finally handed over to its Indian
restorer who will give it to the National Film Archives of India ( NFAI).
The
film was digitally enhanced after Indian restorer Shivendra Singh
Dungarpur collaborated with Hollywood filmmaker Martin Scorsese's World
Cinema Foundation, that undertook the restoration process.
The restored digital print arrived in India July 5, but was stuck at customs. It was finally delivered to Dungarpur Monday.
"Lack
of proper documentation by the courier agency caused all the delay. I
tried to sort it out from my side and these were a bad 25 days,"
Dungarpur told IANS.
According to Dungarpur, he provided all
necessary paperwork including letters and documents from the NFAI but
still there was a delay.
"Apparently, the customs department
could not determine the section under which they could grant exemption
of duty to the restored print," he said.
"Finally, the customs
claimed a huge duty on July 17, which was paid by World Cinema
Foundation. I also paid the separate octroi duty. All this for the print
which will finally be in a government film archive," he added.
Dungarpur
lamented that in spite of the restored print officially being the
property of the Indian government, it was Scorsese who ended up paying
the customs duty.
"It is frustrating to see the kind of treatment given to an object of national heritage," he said.
A
customs officer told IANS: "There were some unresolved issues owing to
which the department could not clear the release of the print. Hence, it
was lying in the warehouse of the international courier agency UPS
Solutions."
An official from UPS Solution Monday told IANS that
it has obtained necessary clearances and that the shipment has been
delivered.
" Kalpana" is considered to be a masterpiece by film
antiquarians and dance historians alike who consider it to be an ode to
experimental choreography.
The film was shown at Cannes this May after a painstaking six-month restoration in Bologna in northern Italy by Scorsese.
IANS
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