Hank and Asha | |
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Directed by | James E. Duff |
Written by | Julia Morrison James E. Duff |
Produced by | James E. Duff |
Starring | Mahira Kakkar Andrew Pastides |
Cinematography | Bianca Butti |
Edited by | Julia Morrison |
Music by | Lara Meyerratken |
Distributed by | FilmRise |
Release dates |
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Running time | 73 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $16,878[2] |
Hank and Asha is a 2013 comedy-romance directed by James E. Duff, and produced and co-written by James E. Duff and Julia Morrison. The film stars Mahira Kakkar and Andrew Pastides. It premiered in competition at the 2013 Slamdance Film Festival where it won the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature,[3] and was later acquired for US distribution by FilmRise.[4]
Asha (Mahira Kakkar), born and raised in India, is studying abroad in Prague. She longs for deeper connections with people at a time in her life when everything is about to change. Hank (Andrew Pastides), a filmmaker and lonely new transplant to New York City, is still reeling from a romantic breakup, and facing increasing pressure from his parents to return to North Carolina to rescue the failing family business.
When Asha sees Hank’s documentary at a film festival, she feels inspired to send him a video message. Intrigued, Hank responds in kind. Their friendship develops through an unconventional video correspondence, and as their relationship intensifies, they must decide whether or not to take a chance on meeting face to face.
‘Hank and Asha’ is a subjectively told cross-cultural love story that explores themes of isolation, identity, and the universal appeal of entertaining life’s what-ifs.
Husband-and-wife filmmakers James E. Duff and Julia Morrison produced the film while they were teaching at Prague Film School in the Czech Republic. It was shot in 11 days in Prague, and 10 days in New York, and the two lead actors never met during production.[5]
The film played at 40 international film festivals including the Slamdance Film Festival, Rhode Island International Film Festival, BendFilm Festival, Heartland Film Festival, Savannah Film Festival, Indie Memphis, Thessaloniki International Film Festival, Napa Valley Film Festival, Ashland Independent Film Festival, and the RiverRun International Film Festival.[6] It won 20 awards including 5 best narrative feature awards and 7 audience awards.[7] The film had a limited theatrical release starting April 11, 2014,[8] and was later released on DVD and digital platforms by FilmRise.[9]
Award | Year | Category | Recipient | Result |
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CINE Golden Eagle Award, Independent and Emerging Media | 2015 | Narrative Feature | James E. Duff, Julia Morrison | Won[10] |
Berkshire International Film Festival | 2014 | Audience Award Best Feature | Won[11] | |
Ashland Independent Film Festival | 2014 | Best Feature | Won[12] | |
RiverRun International Film Festival | 2014 | Altered States Award for Best Indie | Won[13] | |
Prescott Film Festival | 2014 | Best Screenplay | James E. Duff, Julia Morrison | Won[14] |
Napa Valley Film Festival | 2013 | Grand Prize Best Narrative Feature | James E. Duff | Won[15] |
Napa Valley Film Festival | 2013 | Audience Award Best Actor | Andrew Pastides | Won[16] |
Napa Valley Film Festival | 2013 | Audience Award Best Actress | Mahira Kakkar | Won[17] |
Savannah Film Festival | 2013 | HBO Films Best Producer Award | James E. Duff, Julia Morrison | Won[18] |
Portland Film Festival | 2013 | Best Feature | Won[19] | |
Rhode Island International Film Festival | 2013 | Best Feature First Prize | Won[20] | |
Woods Hole Film Festival | 2013 | Directors’ Awards Cinematography Best Narrative Feature | Bianca Butti | Won[21] |
Slamdance Film Festival | 2013 | Audience Award Narrative Feature | James E. Duff | Won[22] |
BendFilm Festival | 2013 | Audience Award | Won[23] | |
Brooklyn International Film Festival | 2013 | Best Producer | James E. Duff, Julia Morrison | Won[24] |