Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Filmmakers shouldn’t have to apologise for showing reality

TIME FOR CHANGE Indian cinema needs to be reimagined to ensure that actors are free to portray flawed characters and producers aren’t bullied to alter the product they create

- TAAPSEE PANNU

wrong, but it is us who are to be blamed for staying quiet and giving into their conditioni­ng for years. By us, I mean all of us, you and I together.

From what we wear, to what we speak, what we do to what we think is also governed by people who have become the self-proclaimed leaders of religion and nationalis­m in our country.

Time and again, we are told our medium is dying because the West has taken over with content thanks to platforms such as Netflix and Amazon.

Even the theatrical releases of the western world get bigger openings than our movies.we are told and made to realise that we are not as good, or rarely so.

The content there in the West is far more challengin­g and relatable than the aspiration­al world we create and sell here in India. But I beg to differ.

Yes, we do create content that reflects our society, the society which is so unique and special, which has its own shortcomin­gs but knows a beautiful art to coexist, a society that is so colourful amid the grey shades of people, a society where variety can put any spice to shame. But here we are, letting our ideas and thoughts get censored and tampered with while we choose to sit and see the slaughterh­ouse celebrate.

I refuse to believe that we, as creators and consumers, are brain dead to not see or approve of all this, but yes we are to be blamed.

We are letting this slow poison ruin the fabric of our lives and cinema, which is so acidic that no amount of plastic surgery will help it recover once taken too far.

Are we so fragile as a society or is our moral- ity worse than sugar glass that a film or its depiction can ruin its mere existence or is it the existence of an opinion that threatens the self-created power play of few?

I want to reimagine cinema in India where a filmmaker doesn’t have to bow down and apologise for showing reality on screen, where an actor need not feel sorry while portraying a flawed character, where a writer doesn’t need to apologise for being a woman with an opinion contradict­ory to that of the masses, where a producer isn’t bullied to tamper with his product against his will, where an exhibitor isn’t threatened against safety of his property, a cinema where a movie will not be held ransom to against conditions satisfying the fanatics of sorts.

Then, surely we can get the youth back into theatres proud of the content we create and probably telling the West how it is really done.

 ?? SANJEEV VERMA/HT ARCHIVE ?? The mangled remains of a Haryana bus that was set on fire by a group protesting the release of film ‘Padmaavat’ earlier this year.
SANJEEV VERMA/HT ARCHIVE The mangled remains of a Haryana bus that was set on fire by a group protesting the release of film ‘Padmaavat’ earlier this year.
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