The Age of Reason - The Doon School Quintet (Part 5)

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MacDougall, David

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THE AGE OF REASON was made in parallel with THE NEW BOYS and intersects with it at several points. However, instead of looking at the group, it explores the thoughts and feelings of Abhishek, a 12-year-old from Nepal, during his first days and weeks as a Doon student. This is at once the story of the encounter between a filmmaker and his subject and a glimpse of the mind of a child at 'the age of reason'. "It was a remarkable decision to end the Doon School series with this portrait of one child, after having moved progressively closer to it in the earlier, more collective and group-oriented films. The Age of Reason demonstrates once again how respectful MacDougall is of his young subjects in all of these films. This peculiar tact is rare in representations of children's lives and can teach other filmmakers much about ethical concerns and awareness. Here Abhishek, the 12-year-old from Nepal, seems in fact to invite MacDougall to share the actual moments of his emerging self-awareness, as a child becoming a responsible adult. We follow the formation of his patterns of sociability, his emerging agency as a growing adolescent encountering new rituals and social constraints, his personal discoveries, and the processes by which he learns. Never seen simply as an "assimilated" subject, Abhishek shares with the filmmaker, and with an attentive audience, the building up of a particular way of 'reasoning' in the world - as it occurs, and in context." - Rossella Ragazzi, director of the film La Mémoire Dure. "I loved it... elegantly shot, understated, nudging the boundaries between observation and authorial engagement." - Michael Renov, Professor of Critical Studies, University of Southern California; editor of Theorizing Documentary and author of The Subject of Documentary. "Without doubt the Doon Project will provide plentiful material for discussion of such matters as the place of such a school in a democratic society; the acculturation of children; identity in its old sense versus 'identity' in its new sense of national or cultural conformism; how an elite perpetuates its values; or, at a more experiential level, how we may each position ourselves in relation to the machineries of social constraint. Nevertheless, simply to call these anthropological films would, while true, be a little like calling [Chinua Achebe's] Things Fall Apart an anthropological novel. They are major contributions to our screen culture, and deserve to be seen well beyond the confines of the discipline." - Dai Vaughan, Visual Anthropology. ALSO AVAILABLE FROM RONIN FILMS IN THE DOON SCHOOL QUINTET PART 1 - DOON SCHOOL CHRONICLES PART 2 - WITH MORNING HEARTS PART 3 - KARAM IN JAIPUR PART 4 - THE NEW BOYS

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2037-12-31