The 54th International Film Festival of India hadThe 54th
International Film Festival of India had a great start with the opening film,
‘Catching Dust’ directed by British-born but very much Indian at heart, Stuart
Gatt. 2023 is a special year for the young filmmaker as his directorial debut
has been to Tribeca Film Festival in the USA and the Raindance Film Festival in
the UK and now to IFFI. Coming to IFFI is even more special for Stuart as it is
the homeland of his maternal family. Stuart’s mother was born in Bangalore but
traces her roots to Chennai. “She was born in a small mining town, KGF. At the
time, my grandparents left and came to the UK when she was very young. We were
part of a much bigger Indian community in London, in the UK, it’s like so many
of us. You always feel like you’re connected to the motherland even though you
don’t live there. That’s been an important part of my identity. My dad left
when I was very young, so my mum raised me. I grew up in an Indian household
and coming back here, it feels like home,” says Stuart Gatt, who is on his
first visit to India. Speaking about the success of the film at the festivals,
he says, “It has been incredible. You make a film in a vacuum, in a way. I
learned, recently, that as a filmmaker, you just have to have complete confidence
in your own choices. You can’t make films hoping someone else might think this
or think that. You have to let your instinct drive you and then hope that once
it’s done, that people will respond to it. It’s so surreal that the film has
had the reception that it has and it feels really humbling,” says Stuart.
Written and directed by Stuart Gatt, the film stars Jai Courtney, Dina Shihabi,
and Ryan Corr. The film is produced by Mark David, Jon Katz, Stuart Gatt, and
Edward R Pressman. Instead of shooting on the digital format, the entire film
was shot on 35mm roll. Stuart loves the classics when it comes to cinema and
even though he grew up watching a lot of Hindi movies, he was hugely influenced
by the works of Satyajit Ray. “Satyajit Ray is more like my style of
filmmaking. I love Bollywood, but he was someone that I studied a lot,
actually, just watching as a filmmaker. He’s one of the greatest filmmakers
ever, and he really spoke to me. I don’t watch a lot of modern cinema, no
matter where it’s from. I’m someone who would rather watch a Satyajit Ray film
300 times than watch some modern film that’s not very good. I’m definitely more
someone who’s obsessed with the classics,” says Stuart. Stuart is certainly
taking a lot of stories back from India. “I would see how things develop, but I
would love to make films here. I’ve made films like about the Asian diaspora in
the UK. I would love to do that here.” Stuart will be heading to Bangalore, his
mother’s hometown for a few days.
Satyajit Ray is more like my style of filmmaking: Stuart Gatt
Stuart Gatt, the director of ‘Catching Dust’, the opening film of the 54th International Film Festival of India speaks about the festival circuit journey of his directorial debut film and how he hopes to make films in India

