(C) Red Light Films, Inc. 2004
"Anyone who has ever thought that documentaries lack the emotional impact, drama or sheer movie-going pleasure of fiction films will likely change their mind after seeing Born into Brothels ... this is a work of art so deep and resonant that it puts most narrative films to shame."
- James Greenberg, Hollywood Reporter
“This is the kind of film that reminds you of what movies, at their best, are capable of.” – Boston Globe
"Heroism can come in subtle forms. This is one of them."
-- Desson Thomson, WASHINGTON POST
"Zana Briski's documentary about children growing up in Calcutta's rough and squalid red light district is moving, charming and sad."
-- A.O. Scott, NEW YORK TIMES
"Beautifully filmed, and devoid of the kind of patronizing beneficence that First Worlders often bring to the Third World."
-- Steven Rea, PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER
"This is the harsh reality that London-born, New York-based photographer Zana Briski captures in her documentary Born into Brothels. Yet what lingers is not the difficulty of the children's lives, but their resilience, wisdom, humour and talent."
-- Gabriella Coslovich, The Age
"Juror Mark Salisbury summed it up well in a statement: "Seeing the film is a life-changing experience. It has re-set my life's barometer. The things I moan about now pale into insignificance."
-- Wendy Mitchell, indieWIRE.com(*)
manik - puja
Born into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids is a 2004 American documentary film about the children of prostitutes in Sonagachi, Kolkata's red light district. The widely acclaimed film, written and directed by Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman, won a string of accolades including the Academy Award for Documentary Feature in 2004.(*)

avijit - dog
Briski, a documentary photographer, went to Kolkata (Calcutta) to photograph prostitutes. While there, she befriended their children and offered to teach the children photography to reciprocate being allowed to photograph their mothers. The children were given cameras so they could learn photography and possibly improve their lives. Much of their work was used in the film, and the filmmakers recorded the classes as well as daily life in the red light district. The children's work was exhibited, and one boy was even sent to a photography conference in Amsterdam. Briski also recorded her efforts to place the children in boarding schools.(*)
There is debate about the extent to which the documentary has improved the lives of the children featured in it.
The film-makers claim that the lives of children appearing in Born into Brothels have been transformed by money earned through the sale of photos and a book on them. Ross Kauffman, co-director of the documentary, says that the amount earned is $100,000 (about Rs.4.5 million), which will pay for their tuition and for a school in India for children of prostitutes. Briski has started a non-profit organization to continue this kind of work in other countries, named Kids with Cameras.
A film is being made on the life story of a high profile trio call girl sisters, Shaveta, Khushboo and Himani, born in one of the brothels of Haryana.(*)
However, Partha Banerjee, who worked on the film as an interpreter, has disputed the claim that the children's lives have been improved. In a February 2005 letter to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, he says that many of them ended up in worse circumstances than they had been in before their involvement in photography classes.Critics argued that the lives and family circumstances of these children were too complex to be revolutionized by educating one family member in photography, or even by sending them to boarding school.The documentary itself acknowledges that many of those saved from the red light district and put into boarding school ended up leaving the school and returning to their families before long.(*)
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In November 2006, Kids with Cameras provided an update on many of the children's conditions, asserting that they had entered high schools or universities in India and the United States, or found employment outside of prostitution. Kids with Cameras continues to work towards improving the lives of children from the Calcutta Red light district with the a plan to build a Hope House.(*)
suchitra - girl on roof
I just watched an extraordinary documentary called "Born Into Brothels". Filmed in the miserable red-light
I highly recommend the film. To learn more about the organization that now funds similar projects, visit Kids with Cameras. More at Kids With Cameras Cairo, Jerusalem, Haiti, and Calcutta.
*=wikipedia
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