Dhaka at the Palais

The ‘Master’ Plan: Sumit’s Rotterdam winner seeks global audience at Cannes

Sadi Mohammad Shahnewaz
Sadi Mohammad Shahnewaz

Walking through the Riviera stalls inside the Marché du Film stalls truly gives the feeling of being in a global village. Country representatives, sales agents and studios are all hustling to move their projects to the next stage. A small corner of eclectic films– neon-lit, gorey and thriller heavy display of pan Asian offerings catches the eye. It’s led by Julie Pacino’s “I Live Here Now” and the Raindance-selected “The Invisible Half”. The lineup also includes Tetsuya Mariko’s “Dear Stranger”, featuring a powerful pairing of Hidetoshi Nishijima (Drive My Car) and Gwei Lun-Mei (Black Coal, Thin Ice). Twp Indonesian horror entries: Kimo Stamboel’s “Janur Ireng” and its sequel “Danur: The Last Chapter” by Awi Suryadi. 

Master
Photo: STAR

The stall proudly displays a poster featuring Nasir Uddin Khan in an uncharacteristically fitting wig, donning an intensely determined look.

Bangladesh’s “Master” is on display, proudly occupying space beside some other incredible looking pieces at the K6 Riviera Stall.

Rezwan Shahriar Sumit’s “Master” previously made history as the inaugural Bangladeshi production to secure a major prize at a premier European film festival. This is where Sophie Shi, Head of Studios at EST N8, came across the film. EST has taken the worldwide rights for the film.

Master
Photo: STAR

EST N8 is actually a joint venture between EST Studios (founded by Jaeson Ma and Eric Tu, who have roots in 88rising and Vice) and N8, a Bangkok-based production house. By combining forces, they’ve created a "super-agent" that has both the Hollywood infrastructure to sell worldwide and the local boots-on-the-ground to find the best talent in Thailand, Indonesia, Korea, and now with the addition of “Master”, Bangladesh joins the fray.

The company plans to take the film to the European Film Market, the Hong Kong Film Mart, ACFM and the American Film Market, among other notable rendezvous. 

According to Sophie, “Master” is a part of a new wave of Bangladeshi cinema— one that can be marketed to the world. “After the festival ended, I reached out to Sumit and got a screening link for a film. “Master is, by all means, a local story. However, the portrayal of the film when it comes to the metamorphosis of a man is a universal one.”

Master
Photo: STAR 

The narrative follows Jahir—a respected rural high school teacher. In a giant leap of faith, he becomes district chairman. While his platform focuses on advancing education and gender equality, his integrity slowly erodes as he climbs the ladder of local political influence. 

Nasir Uddin Khan helms the lead role, effectively anchoring the film on his back. The stellar cast of Azmeri Haque Badhan, Zakia Bari Mamo, Fazlur Rahman Babu and Sharif Siraj also joins the fray alongside him.

“Master is essentially an arthouse film with commercial appeal”, says Rezwan Shahriar Sumit over the phone. The director was ready to make way to the Sydney Film Festival, which takes place from June 3. “We plan to have the Bangladeshi release of the film in August. If all goes well, we’ll have found some stellar international distributors as well.”

This year, amid the relentless machinery of the global film market, “Master” certainly feels different. In Cannes it is circulating, negotiating and travelling onward. From Busan to Sydney, from the Riviera to potential worldwide distribution pipelines, the journey of the film reflects a broader transformation quietly taking place within Bangladeshi independent cinema.

And somewhere inside the maze of the Palais, among buyers, critics and dreamers, Dhaka continues to echo a little louder.