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Why don't Indian films capture our real pop culture?
Mint Mumbai
|September 29, 2025
In my screenplay for a TV series, I want my character to hold a conspiracy theory that Zeenat Aman and Parveen Babi are the same person.
This is a riff on the findings of my lifelong survey that 50% of Indians cannot tell the difference between the two film stars, especially from still photographs. But I know that the lawyers of any Indian production house would raise a red flag. They would say I cannot even mention the names of those two stars without their permission. They would be wrong, but that doesn’t matter. A writer’s legal argument is no match for a lawyer’s ‘red flag.’
My riff would be considered legally risky because those who represent the actors may claim that I was trying to exploit the actors’ stardom even if I was only mentioning their names in one scene. This is part of a larger problem that has resulted in Indian cinema and TV failing to capture the essence of our popular culture. If you notice, Indian cinema is a world where there is almost no mention of film stars, films, singers, any other public figure or real-life events. If, say, my screenplay wants to capture the India of 1975 through the film poster of Sholay or the name of any of its famous songs, or a mention of Amitabh Bachchan, there would be ‘red flags.’ It’s another issue that no one knows who can issue such permissions.
This story is from the September 29, 2025 edition of Mint Mumbai.
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