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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, April 06, 2001 |
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Opinion
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Leave cinema alone
CINEMA IS THE newest art form which continues to explore,
learning and unlearning as it moves along. Its freshness of
ideas, its novelty of experiments and its ease with technology
amaze us no end. And it is this medium that the Government at the
Centre seeks to control and capture in the most devious of
fashions. We saw the way India's highest film awards were
tarnished so shamelessly the other day, even as some jurors
literally rose in revolt against what they termed highly
unethical practices. Hardly had this furore died down when the
Union Information and Broadcasting Ministry set up a committee to
try and shift movies to the Concurrent List of the Indian
Constitution.
This exercise seems harmless at one level, but at another, it
smacks of the BJP Government's almost ruthless ambition to
``enslave'' cinema, whose power and hold over the masses are
enormous. Tamil Nadu is perhaps a classic case, whose example
others have followed. Some Indian actresses and actors have
almost become demi-gods whose writ sometimes negates law and
legality. Fully conscious of this, the administration has, more
recently, sought to manipulate and even openly interfere in
organisations like the Directorate of Film Festivals and the
National Film Development Corporation of India, which though
wings of the Information and Broadcasting Ministry were
established with a clear understanding that they would enjoy a
certain comfortable degree of autonomy. But this freedom has been
steadily eroded by a Government which is determined to keep the
medium firmly in its grip.
Nothing can be more destructive than this. Movies, all said and
done, are expressions of creativity that need space and liberty
to grow and flourish. In fact, the world over, there is a feeling
that motion pictures should not have restrictions of any kind,
and this includes censorship. America does not have any. The
British Board of Film Classification is far more liberal today
than what it was even a couple of years ago. A major survey there
revealed that most adults believed that they should be allowed to
make up their minds about what they wanted to watch. But, in
India, the Censor Board has merely grown into a domineering,
insensitive and illogical body which is sadly ignorant of global
realities. The question is, why have censorship at all? If the
press does not need one, why must cinema? Certainly, a mechanism
like the Press Council is more than adequate to serve as a
watchdog for films, which can be left alone with age-based
suitability certificates. The Government should confine itself to
providing better infrastructure instead of tinkering with, let us
say, prizes and lists. Years ago, there was a plan to build small
auditoriums to promote works with greater aesthetic qualities.
Nothing has been done here, with the result that parallel or
better cinema made with very little money continues to languish
for want of distributors and exhibitors - and hence patronage.
Most important, now that movies have been declared an industry,
the Government can help them find ``clean'' institutional funds,
and allow them to create the best. After all, there is an
intelligent audience to judge cinema, an exercise that no
Government should be tempted to indulge in.
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