"'All That Breathes' is an ecological film that deals with the relationship between man and bird and the internal emotional struggle between the brothers.
The minute I met them with industrial decay on one side and these regal-looking birds on the other, I immediately sensed it was an inherently cinematic place.
Creative non-fiction, the film follows the lives of siblings Nadeem Shehzad and Mohammad Saud, who rescue and treat black kites in the house basement in Wazirabad, Delhi.
The documentary looks at the environmental and social decay in the country's capital through man-animal relationships and their interdependence.
"As I travelled looking for the film's lead actor, I realised that we are filled with talent. The non-actors were so good and exactly what I had imagined. @PanNalin
60 of them were shortlisted, 6 were taken, and the roles they were to play were decided.", says writer-director #PanNalin on the recently #Oscars2023 nominated #ChellowShow.
Set in rural Gujarat, the film is the story of a 9-year-old boy who begins a lifelong love affair with cinema when he bribes his way into a rundown movie palace and spends a summer watching movies from the projection booth.
So, when the district officials contacted our Gram Panchayat and asked for volunteers, I stepped in.", says Sunita Devi, who embarked on a #ranimistri (woman mason) career to build toilets urging other women to join in.
Sunita is a postgraduate in political science and lives in Udaypura village in the Latehar district of #Jharkhand with her husband and two children.
(1/5) #Gurugram-based Abhilasha Purwar and her brother Kshitij are laying the foundation to build a Bloomberg-style data analytics firm for the #environment.
(2/5) Founded in 2018, their #startup Blue Sky Analytics created Zuri, an #AI platform to measure and monitor #farmfires and #stubbleburning in India.
Zuri can predict high-risk zones as well as expected volume and calorific value of crop waste.
(3/5) It also includes information on marketplaces to enable farmers to sell stubble rather than burn it.
And, more importantly, a scholarship allowing him to study at the Government Arts College in the town of Kumbakonam.
Despite being a mathematical prodigy, Ramanujan's career did not begin well.
He received a college scholarship in 1904, but he quickly lost it by failing in non-mathematical subjects because of his strong inclination towards mathematics.
India's greatest mathematical genius, Srinivasa Ramanujan, lived a short but very productive life and continues to be an inspiration for mathematicians across the world, and his work has inspired a lot of research over the years.
The Better India pays homage to this special man with 5 little-known facts about his life.
- Ramanujan was one of several siblings, but he lost all of them to a smallpox epidemic in 1889.