India-inspired ‘Smile Pinki’ bags Oscar for best short documentary from SindhToday.net

Smile PinkiLos Angeles, Feb 23 (IANS) American filmmaker Megan Mylan won the best short documentary Oscar for her movie “Smile Pinki”, a heartwarming tale of a poor Indian village girl whose cleft lip made her a social outcast.

The documentary, which bagged the award here Sunday, traces Pinki’s journey from being ostracised to being treated like a normal girl after a social worker helped her undergo surgery.

Mylan says the happy ending inspired her to show Pinki’s story.

“As a filmmaker who focuses on social issue documentaries, it is rare that I get into a film knowing we’re likely to have a happy ending. So, I was excited to tell the story of this beautiful hospital and a team of doctors and social workers treating their patients with such compassion and quality care and making a positive impact,” said Mylan.

“We didn’t have any money for the surgery and I used to wish that she would die. But things changed after the operation. And I really wish that the film wins at the Oscars,” said Pinki’s mother before the ceremony.

“Spielzeugland (Toyland)” won the best short film (live action) Oscar. A Mephisto Film Production by Jochen Alexander Freydank, the 14-minute film is set in 1942 and is the story of a German boy who believes that his Jewish neighbours are going to Toyland.

"Smile Pinki" wins Oscar for Best Documentary Short from Media dis&dat

Smile PinkiThe short documentary "Smile Pinki" focuses on children born with cleft palates and a program called Smile Train that provides them with corrective surgery.

Here's what CNN said about Pinki Sonkar, the Indian girl who is the focus of the film:

    While all eyes seem to be on "Slumdog Millionaire" for the Oscars, one very courageous little girl will be focused on another India-based film at the ceremony.

    Pinki, like millions in developing countries, had to live with her deformity and suffer the social consequences.

    It's called "Smile Pinki," and it's up for an Oscar, too -- nominated for best short documentary, which it won on Feb. 22.

    The little girl watching it from inside the Oscar ceremony has traveled all the way to Los Angeles, California, from her small Indian village with her dad -- and it has been an incredible journey for Pinki Sonkar.

    "Smile Pinki" tells the story of her transformation from a sad outcast to a vibrant 8-year-old with plenty of spunk.

    Pinki was born with a cleft lip, and her impoverished family did not have the money for corrective surgery.

    Like millions of other children born with the lip deformity in developing countries, Pinki simply had to live with it and suffer the social consequences.

    Her father Rajendra Sonkar says: "She used to go to school and the kids would not befriend her. She would say, 'I don't want to go to school.'"

    "Pinki was a depressed, sad, lonely, shy, young little girl, growing up on the periphery of the society in a little village," said Satish Kalra, director of Smile Train's South Asian region, after meeting with Pinki.

    The little girl's own family was ashamed of her, Kalra says.

    But all of that has changed. Pinki is now a real pistol, full of energy and confidence, and she has a fantastic smile too -- thanks to the Smile Train charity.

    Smile Train teaches doctors in their own countries to operate on cleft lips, a deformity afflicting up to four million children across the world.

    Pinki just happened to be one of the chosen candidates for surgery and was also chosen to be the subject of the documentary.

    The film chronicles her transformation, following her from her village to the hospital and home again.

    "She has absolutely and totally changed," said Pinki's surgeon, Dr. Subodh Kumar.

    The film's director is Megan Mylan. She has won several awards but not an Oscar -- until now.

    For Pinki and her dad, being able to see the film's director win an Oscar would be a thrill. But they know they already have the greatest prize: Pinki's new smile.

    "I am so happy that my daughter's lips have been repaired," her dad Rajendra said with a smile, expressing hope that the movie will inspire people to help children whose families can't afford the surgery.