“Justine” screening at the Inaugural ACT Human Rights Film Festival, April 15 – 22, 2016 in Fort Collins, Colorado, USA

“The ACT Human Rights Film Festival is born out of expertise in the Department of Communication Studies at Colorado State University in the area of media and visual culture. Dr. Scott Diffrient, Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies and recipient of the William E. Morgan Endowed Chair of Liberal Arts, is using funds from the endowed chair to establish the first-ever human rights film festival in Northern Colorado.

Human rights film festivals bring together, educate, and create a forum for dialogue among artists, filmmakers, citizens, scholars, advocates, and students on social justice issues of every kind. ACT will focus on the issues of LGBTQ rights, human trafficking, the fight for democracy, disability rights, homeless and more – issues which touch our community at a local and global scale”.

Justine directed by Pratap Rughani, screening Sunday, April 17, 2:30 p.m.
Lory Student Centre Theater

ACT Colorado 2016

“Justine” Screening and discussion @ Leicester DocMedia month

Director Pratap Rughani will attend Documenting Disability: Policy, Politics and the Personal at University of Leicester, November 18th 2015, for a screening of his film Justine, followed by a discussion with Dr E. Anna Claydon, of the Department of Media and Communication, University of Leicester. The day starts at 10:00 with a debate on politics and policy and disability, followed by the film screening. Discussion is scheduled to start around 11.30 for approximately an hour.

Justine review by Dr E. A. Claydon

Leicester DocMedia

“Justine”: resources

Justine rarely speaks.

She communicates through looking, gesture and the body language of her movement and interactions. What can be understood across the language divide?

This documentary portrait of a young woman living with severe neurological disorders observes the close rhythms of her days in the run-up to her milestone birthday, at a crucial moment for Britain’s strained welfare system.

“Cinematically, the film represents Justine with breathtaking delicacy and sets a high ethical bar that challenges future filmmakers to rise to the same level of awareness and respect when documenting the lives of disabled individuals.” 
Cineaste review of Justine by Deirdre Boyle, Winter 2015

Professor Michael Renov, one of the pioneering thinkers and theorists of Documentary Studies (of the School of Cinematic Arts, University of Southern California, L.A., U.S.A.) discusses the making of Justine and its relationship to the documentary tradition with director Pratap Rughani, and the absence of documentaries about people like Justine which refuse to be defined by a deficit model.

Read the transcription here.

Listen to a short interview with Pratap Rughani on the research process of making Justine.

Microphone and boom Sound recordist Iris Wakulenko writes about working with Justine.

Justine screening at the Inaugural ACT Human Rights Film Festival, April 15 – 22, 2016 in Fort Collins, Colorado, USA

UAL Animated shorts & Documentaries at Fastnet Film Festival, 27 May 2016

British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies (BAFTSS) BAFTSS Practice Research Awards 2016, for Justine.

Screenworks Peer Reviewed for Practice Research

The Ethics of Participatory Research and Arts Practice, Tate Research Centre: Learning, at the Tate Modern

Justine Screening and discussion @ Leicester DocMedia month November 18th 2015

Poetics and Politics Documentary Research Symposium, USA, May 15 – 17 2015

Justine screening and discussion May 6 2015 Biennale of Research Moose on the Loose event, LCC

Justine at Cinema and Human Rights Day, Birkbeck University 14 March 2015, screening and discussion

Justine screening and Q & A @ the London Short Film Festival 2015

“The Art of Not Knowing” by Pratap Rughani, chapter in Anthology Project Art Works: 1997 – 2012

Visible Evidence XX, the annual conference on documentary film, Stockholm, Sweden, 15 – 18 Aug., 2013

Pratap Rughani presents “Justine” at the 20th anniversary of the Visible Evidence conference.

Vis Ev XX 2013  Necs