Dinata was born Nurkurniati Aisyah Dewi in Jakarta on 4 March 1970. As a child, Dinata watched movies weekly. After finishing high school, she received a bachelor's degree in mass communications from
Elizabethtown College in
Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, where she became interested in
cinematography. She then took a filmmaking course at
New York University. After returning to Indonesia, she took her first job as an apprentice reporter for
Seputar Indonesia. She later began directing video clips and commercials with Iguana Productions in the mid-1990s, studying the techniques on her own. Dinata made her directorial debut with the 1998 made-for-television film
Mencari Pelangi (
Looking for the Rainbow), which won two national awards. She then started her own production company,
Kalyana Shira Film, around 1999. Her first feature film,
Ca-bau-kan, was produced by Kalyana Shira and dealt with the trials and tribulations of
Chinese Indonesians in pre-independence Indonesia. After being trimmed from its original running time of 160 minutes to 124 minutes for commercial viability, the film—adapted from the novel by
Remy Sylado—was critically panned; Dinata herself was satisfied, saying it was "as good as it could be for that short running time". She produced
Sekar Ayu Asmara's debut,
Biola Tak Berdawai, the following year. The next film she directed, 2003's
Arisan! (
The Gathering), had gay themes and was produced on a small budget. It is considered one of her more commercially successful films, being seen by over 500,000 people, and the first Indonesian film dealing with homosexuality. Its success surprised her, as most of the commercially successful films at the time were horrors and children's films. After the success of
Arisan!, Dinata was able to find more sponsors for her movies. In 2004, she was invited to join the Cannes Young Directors Program, and the following year she produced
Joko Anwar's directorial debut
Janji Joni (''Joni's Promise''). Another film she directed, 2006's
Berbagi Suami (
Love for Share), about polygamy in Indonesia, was based on her personal experiences when her father took a second wife. In 2007, Dinata produced
Quickie Express, described in the press as a
sex comedy but by Dinata herself as a "love story with social content". This was followed by the short-film collection
Perempuan Punya Cerita (
Chants of Lotus), which featured one directed by her,
Gara-Gara Bola (
Soccer Riot), which she produced, and the documentary
Pertaruhan (
At Stake). In 2009, Dinata and the Kalyana Shira Foundation she runs started the Indonesian International Children's Film Festival. The festival showcases both local and international children's films and involves children in all aspects of the festival. , it has been run three times. , Dinata is producing a sequel to
Arisan!. Filming was expected to begin in May, with the release scheduled for 1 December 2011, eight years after the first instalment. In 2011 Dinata also collaborated with
Ucu Agustin on
Batik: Our Love Story, a documentary on the traditional textile
batik. Dinata directed, while Ucu served as screenwriter. ==Controversy==