IFFI, but still fun 
 
FREEZE FRAME 
Amit Khanna / New Delhi December 14, 2005 

Why crib? A film festival is all about fun, festivity and films.  
  
Every winter, India hosts a number of film festivals including ones in
Kolkata, Mumbai, and Thiruvananthapuram and, of course, the IFFI for the
last two years in Goa.  
  
For some strange reason, the festivals generate more controversy than
camaraderie. This year was no exception. One of the main culprits is the
media. Most journalists reporting on such festivals are ill-informed
twits who have now been joined by young and pretty mike-toting twerps
from an assortment of TV channels.  
  
Hungry for a controversy, they will help create one when none exists.
The critics are caught in some time warp of good cinema and didactic.
Let's get some things in the right perspective.  
  
There are about 4000 film festivals held every year around the world and
about a dozen of these like Cannes, Venice and Berlin really matter.
This does not take away the spirit behind other festivals like Pusan or
Montreal, Tokyo or even Cairo. Given the fact that we have a robust
domestic industry, there is an inherent insularity in our traditional
movie industry.  
  
Therefore, in spite of a brave and welcome effort by event managers
WIZCRAFT to get the local Industry involved in IFFI, there is a callous
indifference to it. On the other hand, the last relics of parallel
cinema are upset about what they see as a takeover of their traditional
territory. Come on guys, we are talking about cinema and not the
Sarsiaka tigers!  
  
Then there is the perennial question of a film market. Well, the fact is
that, except for Cannes no major festival has actually a market of any
importance. Lots of people including the media keep harping about lack
of deal-making during Indian festivals.  
  
Well, does any deal-making happen at the Cannes Lions or even at Davis,
or the countless industry-events that are held around the world? It is
time we learn to accept that this is what a film festival is all about
-- fun, festivity and films.  
  
Goa over the years can actually become a favoured destination for
showcasing movies from around the world. The government should gradually
fade out and hand over the event to professional organisers and local
filmmakers must begin to take an active part.  
  
Another interesting factor, which clearly emerged in Goa, is the
polarisation of the has-beens and the new emerging order of showbiz. So
a bunch of fuddy-duddies from the Film Federation of India went about
complaining that the authorities were ignoring them.  
  
It is time the government too recognises that there are new stakeholders
in this business. An archaic institution, functioning on outdated
regional lines, cannot take our cinema to global standards.  
  
Obviously the people who matter will attract attention, and nothing can
keep a good film or a genuine talent away from public acclaim. Did it
make any difference to the greatness of Satyajit Ray, Mrinal Sen, G
Arvindan, Adoor Gopalakrishnan and many others that they made their
films in languages other than Hindi?  
  
What is heartening amidst all this is that there is certain vibrancy in
Indian cinema today. The advent of multiplexes, satellite TV and
corporatisation heralds a lot more room for alternative cinema.  
  
Some veteran filmmakers like Shyam Benegal, Gautam Ghose, Mani Ratnam
and Ketan Mehta are tapping these new resources. What is important is to
celebrate cinema in all its forms and on every occasion.  
  
That's what will make our film festivals work!  

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