IFFI 2024

Works from down under to be in focus

Phillip Noyce, will be honoured with the prestigious Satyajit Ray Lifetime Achievement Award at IFFI

Herald Team

Every year, the International Film Festival of India has a country of origin. Its films, documentaries, and series are showcased. This year, it is Australia.

Veteran Australian filmmaker Phillip Noyce, renowned for his acclaimed works such as ‘Clear and Present Danger’, ‘Salt’, and ‘Rabbit-Proof Fence’, will be honoured with the prestigious Satyajit Ray Lifetime Achievement Award at the 55th International Film Festival of India (IFFI).

Philip Noyce’s work has had a lasting impact on both mainstream and critical cinema, shaping suspense and action genres while contributing to cultural conversations through his films.

The festival will play host to some of the best cinema that has emerged from Australia in 2023 and 2024. A total of seven films from various genres will be screened at the festival.

Clear and Present Danger (1994)

Jack Ryan returns, but this time, the enemy is within his own government. When Admiral James Greer falls ill with cancer, Jack is promoted to acting CIA Deputy Director of Intelligence. Soon after, the president’s close friend and his family are killed, apparently by drug cartels. Jack is tasked with investigating, but he doesn’t know the CIA has already sent a secret team to Colombia to fight the cartels illegally. Things take a darker turn when his team is betrayed, an agent is lost, and a secretary—also his wife’s friend—is murdered. Jack must risk everything, including his life, to uncover the truth.

Salt (2010 )

Evelyn Salt is a trusted CIA agent, admired by everyone, including her boss, Ted Winter. One day, a Russian spy comes to their office with shocking news: the Russian president will be assassinated during a visit to New York, and the assassin is Evelyn Salt. Fearing for her husband’s safety, Evelyn goes on the run. Ted doesn’t believe she’s a traitor, but her actions make him suspicious. Is Evelyn a loyal agent, a spy, or something else?

Rabbit-Proof Fence (2002)

In 1931 Australia, the government forces half-Aboriginal children to leave their families and work far away, claiming it’s for their own good. Molly, her sister Daisy, and their cousin Grace are taken to a camp but quickly escape. Led by Molly, the girls walk hundreds of miles, following a long rabbit-proof fence to find their way home. Meanwhile, they are hunted by a tracker and police, under orders from A.O. Neville, the government official in charge of Aboriginal policies. Can the girls outrun their pursuers and survive?

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