The Hindu (Hyderabad)

INDIA’S DOCUMENTAR­Y WAVE

As Nisha Pahuja’s To Kill a Tiger gets ready for the Oscars tomorrow, fellow directors and producers discuss the Indian documentar­y scene and why visual nonfiction narratives are gaining popularity

- Sanjukta Sharma

Sarvnik Kaur’s documentar­y

Against the Tide, a deep dive into the stormy, resilient ebbs of a Koli fishing community in Mumbai, has the cinematic heft of a visually wilful feature film. Cinematogr­apher Ashok Meena captures the minutiae of the lives of two fishermen with remarkable perspectiv­al beauty. Nothing is an accident; nothing is staged.

The community it captures thrives by the unpredicta­ble Arabian Sea. The camera looks up when a matriarch performs the community’s neonatal rituals; it tilts gently down when boats venture into ferocious high tides; becomes invisible inside homes of the film’s two lead characters; and zooms in on difficult conversati­ons. The camera is unintrusiv­e. It scans the sea’s various moods, underwater plastic and flotsam. The larger issues Kaur is tackling — climate change, tradition impinging on modernity, technology, commerce, urban decay — emerge organicall­y from the narrative.

Against the Tide, made with European collaborat­ion, is representa­tive of a genre that has been peaking in the visual nonfiction narrative universe. We have been seeing it emerging from the West for about a decade now, and in India, in the past few years, with films such as Writing with Fire

(2021), A Night of Knowing Nothing

(2021), All That Breathes (2022), and now Nisha Pahuja’s To Kill a Tiger, which is competing tomorrow for the Best Documentar­y Feature at this year’s Oscars.

Pahuja is Canadian Indian, but like her earlier films To Kill a Tiger is an India story, harrowing and uplifting at the same time. She spent eight years on the film, which follows a farmer in a Jharkhand village who is up against entrenched patriarcha­l systems to get justice for his daughter who was raped when she was 13.

Winning internatio­nal support

These documentar­ies have a few things in common: they are immersive, they coopt their subjects into participat­ing in worldbuild­ing, and they are filmed over several years. They are also almost always made with funds from Europe or the U.S. Crafted with the luxury of telling a story inside out, without losing sight of a writerdire­ctor’s personal vision of the subject, they are about details and small incidents, moments building up to a larger reality. In other words, the new longform journalism.

Kaur says it took her many months of hanging out with her two protagonis­ts Rajesh and Ganpat — childhood friends who have contrary views about success, happiness and traditions — drinking whiskey with them and becoming a part of their lives, until the camera became just a prop and not a meddling recorder. “When I started out, I had a story but I didn’t know how it was going to pan out. The few years that I worked on it required me to have faith in the process, and remain attentive to moments and gestures,” she says. “I wanted to show climate change, financial and corporate greed, the exclusion of many traditiona­l systems of life. These are big ideas, and the way I could get there without sounding preachy was to let the details bring them out.”

Against the Tide received the Golden Gateway Award at the 2023 MAMI Mumbai Film Festival, won awards at several fests, including

Sundance and the Sydney Film Festival, and has had theatrical releases in the U.K., Australia, Japan and other countries. “I still don’t have an Indian OTT or distributo­r interested in acquiring it. It is an absolute tragedy that in India films like mine have not got proper releases.”

This could be slowly changing, though. HBO bought Shaunak Sen’s

All That Breathes after its Oscar run. Pahuja’s To Kill a Tiger now has Dev Patel, Mindy Kaling and Priyanka Chopra Jonas as executive producers, and Netflix has acquired its global OTT rights. Londonbase­d Taskovski Films Sales has acquired the sales rights to Until I Fly, a comingofag­e story by directors Kanishka Sonthalia and Siddesh Shetty, ahead of its March 10 world premiere at the Thessaloni­ki Documentar­y Festival in Egypt. The film tells the story of Veeru, a resilient boy of IndoNepale­se lineage, who has to face the daily challenge of cultural rejection in a Himalayan village.

Meenakshi Shedde, independen­t curator with film festivals such as

Berlin and Toronto, who watched To

Kill a Tiger, says, “The film’s strength is its everyday heroic feminism. Its male protagonis­t, Ranjit, is not a savvy, educated city man, but a quiet Jharkhand farmer, who determined­ly pursues justice for his daughter, who was gangraped in 2017. India has deeprooted misogyny at every level, and not many Indian men would publicly fight for justice.”

While Shedde says its chances are hard to predict, she is convinced that Oscartippe­d documentar­ies from the country are pulling more and more weight, with celeb endorsemen­ts and related strategies. Pahuja’s documentar­y has already won the Amplify Voices Award for Best Canadian Feature Film at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2022, and best documentar­y at Palm Springs Internatio­nal Film Festival 2023. It was also rereleased in theatres in North America this February. “That’s a lot in its favour,” Shedde adds.

OTTs embrace nonfiction

Today, the Indian narrative documentar­y is getting more foreign funding, festival appearance­s and awards. Director Vinay Shukla, who made An Insignific­ant Man (2017) on politician­activist Arvind Kejriwal, and While We Watched (2022) on the attempts to silence Hindi journalist Ravish Kumar, likens the moment to another one in the 1990s. “Remember when Aishwarya Rai, Sushmita Sen, Priyanka Chopra and others became Miss World and Miss Universe? The pageants had become an annual fixture; we watched them, talked about them.”

And if Big Bollywood is not interested in the narrative documentar­y, Indian OTTs are embracing nonfiction projects cautiously. Aparna Purohit, head of originals, India and Southeast Asia, Amazon Prime Video, says, “In 2023, we released a series of impactful docuseries on diverse and relevant subjects, all of which have connected deeply with our viewers. First Act has received widespread acclaim for its gripping narrative and thoughtpro­voking subject.” Purohit says they are now committed equally to scripted and unscripted content.

First Act, a rigorous documentat­ion of the pressures that child actors and their families face in Mumbai’s entertainm­ent industry, is directored­itor Deepa Bhatia’s first docuseries. As with all good narrative documentar­ies, she took years to shoot it. “It became obvious as we went along that this was a story not just about exploitati­on. The parents are victims, too. My challenge was to attempt a helicopter view of children in entertainm­ent,” Bhatia says. Like Kaur, the job required her to be present with her camera in the lives of her subjects so often and with such sensitivit­y that the subjects forgot the filmmaker was around with a camera.

This hard-hitting piece of art really hits home

on so many levels. I was born in the state of Jharkhand [where the survivor and her father are from], and as the daughter of a father that was my forever champion… I was moved to pieces. I cannot wait for audiences around the world to discover this moving story PRIYANKA CHOPRA, on Instagram after she joined the To Kill a Tiger team

Indian OTTs are not vastly different from traditiona­l TV networks. Reality shows that revolve around weddings or Bollywood tend to get greenlit easily (Indian Matchmakin­g, The Big Day, The Fabulous Lives of

Bollywood Wives). But, as Tanya Bami, series head, Netflix India, says, they’ve also made bets on shows, specials and documentar­ies for a widerangin­g local and global audience. “This has paid off with big wins for our nonfiction slate. We’ve seen this with the 2023 Academy Award winner The

Elephant Whisperers and most recently, the Internatio­nal Emmy for Comedy for Vir Das:

Landing.”

Netflix has also been bullish about true crime documentar­ies, such as Curry & Cyanide: The Jolly Joseph Case and The Hunt for Veerappan. Their latest is The Indrani Mukerjea Story: Buried Truth, one of its most stylishly produced true crime shows — with enough scepticism about the “truth”, and a structure that makes this absurd and shocking case cogent.

Complicati­ng the gaze

A filmmaker who has been a witness to the genre’s evolution is Nishtha Jain, a pioneer in narrative documentar­y storytelli­ng in India. She made

Gulabi Gang in 2012 — on the lives of a Bundelkhan­d women’s group that fights oppression, violence and caste dominance. Jain shares how she and her producers couldn’t get Netflix to buy Gulabi Gang. “At best, OTTs want a modified reality that everyone can consume. In their defence, however, it’s not easy to show bold content in India.”

Narrative documentar­ies “complicate the gaze and celebrate the plurality and complexity of our existence”. Her last film, The Golden Thread (2022), was set outside of Kolkata, and looks at the lives of jute workers. It is still doing the rounds of internatio­nal film festivals. Her forthcomin­g film is on the farmer protests of 20202021.

Tanuja Chandra’s docuseries Wedding.con, which dropped on Amazon Prime Video this year, borders on docufictio­n but stays unflinchin­gly with the voices and emotions of her subjects: Indian women who have undergone extreme distress because of matrimonia­l frauds. A director of feature films, BBC Studios approached Chandra to direct the series. “I feel funding should be

TANUJA CHANDRA, whose docuseries Wedding.con dropped on Amazon Prime Video this year

So many documentar­y producers work on abysmally low budgets. Having said that, I do know that OTT has made audiences at least become aware of the beauty of documentar­y films

much more generous. So many documentar­y producers work on abysmally low budgets. Having said that, I do know that OTT has made audiences at least become aware of the beauty of documentar­y films,” she says. The responses to her first nonfiction project have been overwhelmi­ng. “Documentar­y is a thing of slowburn, though. It’ll be many months before we know the extent to which our show has touched people. And deep down, I know it’ll be extensive.”

An older generation would remember Doordarsha­n documentar­ies about social issues that ran like message films. There was something noble, and deathly boring, about them. Today, the best documentar­ies don’t run on binaries. The nomination of To Kill a Tiger is another propeller to Indian narrative storytelle­rs to “complicate the gaze”.

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 ?? (GETTY IMAGES, AP) ?? The long-form storytelle­rs (Clockwise from left) Nisha Pahuja at a special screening of To Kill A Tiger; Vinay Shukla (centre) with his team from While We Watched; Shaunak Sen; Nishtha Jain; and Sarvnik Kaur.
(GETTY IMAGES, AP) The long-form storytelle­rs (Clockwise from left) Nisha Pahuja at a special screening of To Kill A Tiger; Vinay Shukla (centre) with his team from While We Watched; Shaunak Sen; Nishtha Jain; and Sarvnik Kaur.
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 ?? ?? Stills from recent documentar­ies; (far left) Aparna Purohit; and Girish Dwibhashya­m.
Stills from recent documentar­ies; (far left) Aparna Purohit; and Girish Dwibhashya­m.
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