Kalo Pothi: The Black Hen | |
Director: | Min Bahadur Bham |
Screenplay: | Min Bahadur Bham & Abinash Bikram Shah |
Story: | Min Bahadur Bham Abinash Bikram Shah Santosh Bhattarai Kushang Rai |
Producer: | Anna Katchko Tsering Rhitar Sherpa Min Bahadur Bham Debaki Rai Catherine Dussart Anup Thapa |
Starring: | Khadka Raj Nepali Sukraj Rokaya Jit Bahadur Malla Benisha Hamal Hansa Khadka Nanda Prashad Khatri Bipin Karki Praween Khatiwada |
Music: | Jason Kunwar |
Studio: | Shooney Films (Nepal) Mila Productions (Nepal) Kaldhungi Films (Nepal) Tandem Production (Germany) CDP (France) |
Distributor: | WIDE Management (FRANCE) |
Runtime: | 90 minutes |
Country: | Nepal |
Language: | Nepali |
Budget: | रु 30 Million |
Gross: | रु 100,690,340 |
Kalo Pothi: The Black Hen (Nepali: '''Kalo Pothi''') is a 2015 drama film directed by Min Bahadur Bham and produced by Anna Katchko, Tsering Rhitar Sherpa, Min Bahadur Bham, Debaki Rai, Catherine Dussart and Anup Thapa.
The story takes place in Mugu, a district in north-west Nepal in 2001 during the Nepalese civil war (1996–2006). It is the first Nepali film to be screened at the Venice Film Festival.[1] [2] It was selected as the Nepalese entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 89th Academy Awards but it was not nominated.[3] It is also the highest grossing Nepali film in overseas and one of the highest-grossing films in Nepal.
The film is based on a journey embarked by two friends, Prakash and Kiran, belonging to different castes in search of a missing hen, unaware of the tyranny brought by the fragile ceasefire during the Nepalese civil war.
The film opened to generally positive reviews. Sophia Pande of Nepali Times wrote that the film is "an example of the transformation of Nepali cinema, the kind that chooses to portray stories with truth and heart, over melodrama and action".[4] The Himalayan Times wrote in its review: "A mixture of tragedy and comedy, while portraying the brother-sister bond, friendship, caste-based discrimination and the then time of Maoist insurgency in the country, Kalo Pothi has been made with finesse".[5] Clarence Tsui of The Hollywood Reporter wrote "Bolstered by stirring performances from his cast, Bham and his crew have produced an evocative piece about harsh lives unraveling in a war-torn, rustic land. Mixing moments of humor and tragedy, along with realism and the ethereal — the latter embodied in fantastic dream sequences illustrating Prakash’s suppressed feelings of grief and loss — Black Hen is an effective showcase of a promising filmmaker in flight".[6]