Sunday, June 04, 2006

Celebrating its uniqueness

I’m totally disappointed.

They are, in effect, proclaiming themselves as the Culture police and they won’t allow any film to be produced which doesn’t follow some prescribed guidelines. I don’t like it.

I’m not in a mood to talk about today’s worshop(?). In the previous two workshops there were at least some efforts in the direction of introspection—how the artiste would relate to their society, how they would grasped the essence of their society, their life in their creative pursuits. Some people like Prof Nabakumar came up with some striking ideas as well.

I was excited then. But today’s affair is a damp squib.

Read here, here, and here about the previous two workshops.

Do we want Manipuriness in our films?

I think we should not go in that direction. Going that direction somehow sends out a message of erecting walls around us and erecting barriers do not help anybody. See, most of the Muslims immigrants (and even those who are born in the British soil) do not like themselves to be suffused with Englishness. In practice, the Brits are saying that come to us, all right but only after climbing the barrier of Englishness. Same thing is happening to France. We all know how the Indian Muslims (most of them are converts from Hindus and those coming outside India have at least 600/700 years of history behind them) react to the idea of Hindutva, which those in the Sangh peddle as same as Indianess.

I would like going this way:

Suppose the world cinema one big corporate structure. We know ‘same size fits all’ is the thing of the past. With the idea of functioning with bottom up approach every constituent cinemas of the world have to find its voice and creatively contribute to the whole structure.

Looking from this angle, Manipuri cinema should be celebrating its own uniqueness. Focusing on its own ‘identifying characteristics’ it should creatively put together the imageries of its society, stories and technical inputs to bring forth a vibrant and entertaining statement to this hyper-competitive world.

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