Shamayita C (BOMBAY TIMES; January 12, 2021)

His film Mulk was recently screened at the 26th Kolkata International Film Festival (KIFF) to pay tribute to Rishi Kapoor, and Anubhav Sinha spent the rest of the day meeting other dignitaries, and most importantly, presenting this year’s Satyajit Ray Memorial Lecture on Social Responsibility in Mainstream Indian Cinema. In a chat with us, the filmmaker talked about his favourite film among the ones directed by him, the impact of OTT on the industry and bringing social issues in the spotlight through his films and more. Excerpts:

You travelled to another city in the middle of the Coronavirus pandemic to be a part of a physical film festival. How does it feel?
I am very happy to be in Kolkata. Though the vaccine is about to roll out, things will not get back to normal overnight. So, what we need to do is take good care of ourselves, always wear masks and use sanitisers.

While cinema halls struggle to bring the audience back to the theatres, a lot of films are being released online. How do you think this impacts the industry?
When television was launched, people asked if that would take away from cinema’s craze. Now OTT is here. But cinema is cinema, you know. It is not just about watching a certain content and story. It is also about the experience of watching it collectively. So I think, OTT, cinema halls, television, radio — all of these will coexist.

Your film Mulk was screened at this festival.If you had to choose one of your films for the screening, which one would that be?
My last three films (Mulk, Article 15 and Thappad) are also the most talked about films of my career and Thappad is my most favourite. Though it did not appear so, it was a very difficult film. In fact, all three were difficult because they were swimming against the tide, at least the perceived tide.

Article 15 put the spotlight on the issue of discrimination on the basis of caste. A subject that’s rarely tackled in our mainstream cinema.
Mainstream cinema doesn’t talk much about the caste discrimination prevalent in our society. With Article 15, it turned into a mainstream conversation. Even kids from posh neighbourhoods started talking about it. Now, whenever a caste-based incident takes place in our country, they can relate to it.