Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Netflix, Amazon woo viewers in India with offbeat television

Global streaming websites like Netflix and Amazon Prime are bankrollin­g new series, like Emmy-winner "Delhi Crime." They address social taboos rarely seen in mainstream entertainm­ent in India.

-

Netflix and Amazon Prime are investing hundreds of millions of dollars in India, driving an unpreceden­ted entertainm­ent boom in the country. By backing more subversive and taboo-breaking shows — which address sexual violence, caste inequaliti­es and political corruption — these online giants are also fostering a new generation of Indian storytelle­rs who are giving their country — and streaming audiences worldwide — a new view of themselves.

Netflix's Sacred Games, which kicked off the Indian streaming boom three years ago,

is a thriller — adapted from Vikram Chandra's 2006 novel — which mixes "24"-style beat-theclock action with topical satire on police corruption and caste inequaliti­es. A subplot involving a theatrical agent who farms out Bollywood actresses for sex could have been taken directly from several real-life prostituti­on scandals.

Delhi Crime, another Netflix show, goes further, crafting its script using the actual police files of the investigat­ion of the notorious 2012 gang rape and murder that led to the reform of India's sexual assault laws. Starring Shefali Shah, of Monsoon Wedding fame, Delhi Crime in November became the first Indian series to win best drama at the Internatio­nal Emmy awards.

Tandav, a gritty new political drama from Amazon Prime, is billed as India's answer to House of Cards. Aravind Adiga's Booker Prize-winning novel White Tiger is another Indian movie premiering on Netflix.

Change in style

Long-form immersive storytelli­ng like this was almost unknown in India before the streaming boom. Indian TV focused mainly on soaps and longrunnin­g serials with mainstream, family-friendly appeal. Similarly, the bulk of Bollywood movies studiously avoid controvers­y, focusing instead on big dance numbers with a guaranteed happy end.

A more critical and nuanced view of Indian society has come from independen­t cinema — from the neo-realism of Satyajit Ray's films of the 1950s and 60s to recent works by the likes of Ritesh Batra ( The Lunchbox) and Anurag Kashyap ( Gangs of Wasseypur). But before Netflix and co., these indie directors never had the money to make big shows or the opportunit­y provided by global streamers to have their work seen by millions worldwide.

The Indian streaming boom comes at a time when Bollywood itself is shifting. In the past three to four years, notes Indian-Canadian filmmaker Dylan Mohan Gray, "the movies have become shorter, there tends to be fewer

songs, there are more musical montages." Gray, who directed the popular Netflix docuseries Bad Boy Billionair­es: India — an investigat­ion into India's most infamous tycoons — believes one this online shift to more provocativ­e material is in part due to this "changing in the cinematic landscape."

Just two years ago, many of Indian's most acclaimed actors and actresses wouldn't have signed up for a film or series made just for a streaming site. "Now they're willing to do it because the prestige related to it and the viewership has changed a lot," notes Gray, who says there is an "arms race" underway between internatio­nal and domestic platforms competing for Indian viewers.

Indian streaming sites, backed by big local content providers and corporate financing, are facing major competitio­n from the likes of Netflix, Amazon

Prime and Hotstar, a streaming service owned by Disney. The global platforms see huge opportunit­y in the Indian market and, to attract Indian viewers, are pouring cash into local content.

In 2019-20, Netflix invested around 30 billion rupees ($410 million) to produce and license Indian content, including provocativ­e series like Delhi Crime and Leila, but also mainstream, broad-appeal shows like animated kids series Mighty Little Bheemand the satisfying­ly trashy reality series Fabulous Lives of Bollywood Wives. In addition to shows in Hindi and English, Amazon and Netflix are also creating original content in regional languages including Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam.

The COVID-19 crisis, which has shut down Indian cinemas, has also made streaming more attractive for viewers and film producers alike. Increasing­ly, producers are experiment­ing with online-only releases.

Online backlash

But increased popularity has brought increased attention, not all of it welcome.

Deepa Mehta, the IndianCana­dian filmmaker behind the acclaimed Elements trilogy, directed episodes of Netflix's Leila, a Handmaid's Tale- style dystopian drama based on Prayaag Akbar's critically acclaimed novel. Leilabegin­s in 2047, a century after India's independen­ce, the show imagines a country transforme­d into a militarize­d Hindu state called "Aryavarta,” where caste and religious communitie­s are strictly segregated and anyone marrying outside their group is severely punished.

It's an obvious reference to the Hindu nationalis­t politics of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party. The show has come under attack online, with Twitter alight with those accusing the show of "Hinduphobi­a."

There's also been an online backlash against other boundary- pushing series, like Amazon's Paatal Lok, which shows police brutality, rape and attacks on Muslims, or Rasbhari, also from Amazon, which features Bollywood star and outspoken government critic Swara Bhaskar, and which highlights issues of sexual repression and double standards for Indian men and women. In what looks like a coordinate­d campaign, online reviewers on film website IMDb targeted Rasbhari, driving down its rating to 2.8 out of 10.

Censor troubles

Until now, the streamers in India have had free reign, unconstrai­ned by the censorship and regulation that governs Bollywood (where nudity and explicit sex are forbidden) and traditiona­l Indian TV. It's helped that, because mobile data is comparativ­ely cheap in India, most locals access Netflix and Amazon on their personal mobile devices, notes documentar­y filmmaker Dylan Gray.

"A lot of Indians live in joint families, which means that often, the television sets are dominated by the parents' and the grandparen­ts' generation. A lot of younger people watch content they want to watch on their phones and because censorship has been lax or non-existent for streaming, a lot of erotic or general youth-centered content, with swearwords et cetera — things that one wouldn't be able to show in the cinema — has been very popular," he tells DW.

But that could soon change. On November 11, the Indian government announced that all digital platforms would come under the jurisdicti­on of the informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry, which regulates TV and other media. It's unclear what this will mean in practice, but many are already warning it could mark the beginning of the end of India's new progressiv­e breed of must-see TV.

 ??  ?? Indian-Canadian Dylan Mohan Gray has directed the acclaimed docuseries 'Bad Boy Billionair­es'
Indian-Canadian Dylan Mohan Gray has directed the acclaimed docuseries 'Bad Boy Billionair­es'
 ??  ?? The series "Delhi Crime" is based on a true story
The series "Delhi Crime" is based on a true story

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany