A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Demons in Paradise: Capturing the Conversation

Featured image courtesy the Hollywood Reporter
GROUNDVIEWS-on On October 2, Director of the documentary film “Demons in Paradise” Jude Ratnam issued a press release, noting that his documentary had been pulled from the programme of the Jaffna International Cinema Festival.
Ratnam wrote to the Festival Director requesting an explanation, having
heard that the movie was removed upon request from ‘the community’.
“Demons in Paradise” begins with the director’s personal memory of leaving Colombo by train in July 1983. Ratnam was 5.
“I didn’t know that we were fleeing Colombo as refugees” he says.
Years later, Ratnam takes the same train as an adult, reflecting on that
day and the conflict that followed. Ratnam’s directorial debut was
premiered at the Cannes International Festival, and was subsequently
screened at several locations in Colombo. Rather than focusing on what
was expected – the violence between the military and a terrorist group,
and the resulting fractures created between ethnicities – Ratnam also
attempts to delve into the violence between the different rebel groups.
Perhaps the most interesting part of the film occurs when a group of
former militants sits around a flickering fire, recalling violence
wrought between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and militant group
Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO).
In a piece in the Hindustan Times,
it was said that Ratnam was worried at how the movie would be perceived
by the Tamil community. Although acknowledging the suffering of the
Tamil community, Ratnam was ‘shattering a taboo’, the Hindustan Times posited, by interrogating the violence perpetrated by the LTTE.
Following its debut, ‘Demons in Paradise’ received some criticism on framing. The Hollywood Reporter notes that the
film is very much ‘eye-level’ i.e. a personal viewpoint of the
conflict, and often glosses over important details that a local viewer
would intuitively understand, but that would be missed by a foreigner.
Many of the scenes where subjects relived memories of the conflict were
physically re-enacted, which while meant to add visual drama, ended up
feeling forced, as the review above notes. These finer points however,
were lost in the ensuing discussion, especially so due to a BBC interview where Ratnam controversially said that he ‘wanted [the war] to end… even if my own people had to be killed’.
The conversations on Twitter in reaction to the film being pulled from the Festival line-up revealed a range of perspectives.
Groundviews believes the
conversation is an important one, and one worth preserving. We used
Twitter’s ‘Moments’ feature, to capture some of the discussion.
Click here to view them, or scroll below.
Demons in Paradise
