This year's Retrospective section will feature film maker Rakesh Sharma's acclaimed documentary 'Final Solution'(2004) on the 2002 Gujarat Riots, with testimonies from victims and perpetrators, organisers said in a release here.
The film was initially denied Censor Board certification, fearing repercussions for the view it conveyed that the right conservative state was responsible for the communal violence.
But after the ban was lifted, the film went on to win President's Indian National Film Award, before winning two awards at the Berlin International Film Festival 2004.
The movie also discreetly explores how the Indian government allows corporate interests to thrive on our land irrespective of its after effects.
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Sharma, who will deliver this year's John Abraham Memorial speech, also heads the jury to select the best film and documentaries in the competition section.
Eight short fictions of Promod Pati (1932-1975), a mastermind who believed in cinematic experiments without inhibitions, will also be screened under the Retrospective section.
Most of Pati's works are reflections of a mind that travelled beyond time constrains, in an unconventional form.
A filmmaker with a journalistic quest and unique style of visualisation , Balakailasam's documentaries always combined aesthetic values and reality.
Veli, a poetic documentary on the River Cauvery with a philosophical angle, is among his most anticipated works at SiGNS.
Remembering legendary personalities whose recent demise has created a huge void in art and literature, the Homage section will feature documentary on the work and life of Bengali writer-activist Mahasweta Devi, the release said. Joshi Joseph's documentary "Mahasweta Devi" showcases the struggles, activism and protests of the writer-activist, who died this July.