Marching in the Dark: screening and masterclass with Kinshuk Surjan

CINEMA RITCS
Tuesday 29.04.25 , 19:00–22:30
Screening and Masterclass
Register

Screening of the recently released film Marching in the Dark (2024) and following masterclass with film director Kinshuk Surjan and film theorist Gawan Fagard on empathy and solidarity through cinema. 

About Marching in the Dark:

Rural regions in India suffer a high suicide rate among farmers. A group of women farmers who recently lost their husbands, have decided to meet a local psychologist and activist to share their stories and problems and help others in their grief. In this act of silent rebellion against a patriarchal society, the 28-year-old introverted Sanjeevani finds the courage to be self-reliant. 

Since its release at CPH:DOX in Spring 2024, the documentary Marching in the Dark has been on an impressive journey not only in international film festivals, but also within India, where the film was screened in cinemas, festivals and community centres on multiple locations. Now the film has been released in selected theatres in Belgium. Screening in presence of director and PhD candidate at RITCS, Kinshuk Surjan.

Masterclass 'Cinema (process, ethics, and aesthetics) as an act of empathy and solidarity'
with Kinshuk Surjan in conversation with Gawan Fagard and the audience.

Often, filmmakers are told not to seek change but to ask the right questions. But when working with vulnerable communities, can we remain passive?
This masterclass explores empathy, solidarity, and impact through cinema. How is empathy structured within the cinematic apparatus? What can cinema do beyond representation? How can we create reciprocating, collaborative filmmaking? How can we be better allies to those we work with? To what extent can cinema amplify everyday resistance in precarious conditions? Does this contradict a director’s concern for set narratives, composition, light, and soundscape in a practical and philosophical manner?
Beyond the film’s sensory experience, how can film stand in solidarity with widowed farmer women? Should impact be expected only after the film is finished, or can the process raise awareness and foster change? Can a film emerge from a broader engagement rather than merely crafting a narrative?

This public event takes place in the framework of the seminar on ‘philosophical questions’ by Gawan Fagard at RITCS as well as in the framework of Future Narratives and Kinshuk Surjan’s PhD research project that he developed parallel to the making of Marching in the Dark.

Kinshuk Surjan is an Indian filmmaker based in Brussels and in Bhopal, India. His film Pola (2013) won the Indian National Student Film Award for Best Film & Best Script. During his master at DocNomads, his short film Divided Lines was screened at the 2015 Jihlava FF. His graduation film De Flandrien (2017) won the Wildcard of the Flemish Audiovisual Fund. All films were broadcast on CT1, WDR and VRT. His first feature documentary Marching in the Dark premiered at CPH:DOX in 2024. Currently, Kinshuk Surjan is finishing a PhD in Arts at the RITCS/VUB. His doctoral research deals with the precarious situation - often leading to suicide - of peasant families in India.

Gawan Fagard is a film scholar and writer focusing on notions of film community and empathy in cinema. He’s co-founder of Cinemaximiliaan and currently a lecturer at Université libre de Bruxelles and RITCS School of Arts where he is teaching philosophy and cultural theory.