Suranga Katumgampala is a director I have followed with great pleasure for two or three years. The first film of his I saw was Son of the lovely capitalism (2015), a stunning portrait of alienation in a world of expanding capitalism. For a Son is his first feature film, and it is a strong one. Suranga follows his intention to look into the aspects of migration, and how it can cause conflicts between generations. But not only . . .
Please register and become a member of The Arts of (Slow) Cinema or login to continue reading. I will not sell your data, I just want to protect my writing from the all-devouring AI bots.