Tag: Delhi Crime

  • Second season of Delhi Crime releases on Netflix on 26 August

    Second season of Delhi Crime releases on Netflix on 26 August

    Mumbai: OTT platform Netflix has announced that the second season of Delhi Crime will be released on August 26.

    The second season delves into another challenging investigation. spearheaded by seasoned police officer DCP Vartika Chaturvedi (Shefali Shah), along with the newly promoted Neeti Singh (Rasika Dugal) and Vartika’s right-hand man, Bhupendra Singh aka Bhupi (Rajesh Tailang).

    This season will see Vartika and her team manoeuvre through complex situations both personally and professionally as a heinous crime takes centre stage.

    Along with Shefali Shah, Rasika Dugal, Rajesh Tailang, Adil Hussain, Anurag Arora, Sidharth Bhardwaj, and Gopal Dutt, they will reprise their roles.

  • Vidnet attendee Richie Mehta wins Emmy for Delhi Crime

    Vidnet attendee Richie Mehta wins Emmy for Delhi Crime

    MUMBAI: Netflix series Delhi Crime won the Best Drama Series at the 2020 International Emmy Awards. The series features Shefali Shah, Rasika Dugal, Adil Hussain, Rajesh Tailang in key roles and is based on the Delhi police' painstaking investigation in the 16 December 2012 gang rape case in the capital.

    The show has been directed by Richie Mehta. The director in his acceptance speech, paid tribute to the victim and her mother.

    This is the first time that an Indian series has won at the International Emmys.

    He said, “I dedicate this award to all the women who not just endure the violence that so many men inflict on them, but are then tasked to solve the problem. Finally, to the tireless mother, and her daughter. Not a day goes by when I don’t think about you both and what the world subjected you two to. And I hope none of us ever forget that.”

    Shefali Shah, who played the lead role of Vartika Chaturvedi in Delhi Crime, shared her excitement over the big win on twitter.

     

     

    Other actors such as Adil Hussain and Rajesh Tailang too took to Twitter to celebrate the big day.

     

     

     

     

  • FilmKaravan’s Pooja Kohli Taneja on experimenting with genres, episodic format and post-Covid2019 production changes

    FilmKaravan’s Pooja Kohli Taneja on experimenting with genres, episodic format and post-Covid2019 production changes

    MUMBAI: From a serious thriller Delhi Crime to a teenage drama What Are The Odds? That's the route FilmKaravan has taken. While most people experiment with similar genres, FilmKaravan took a bold step and will continue to do the same.

    While What Are The Odds? is streaming on Netflix, the production house is also in talks with other OTT platforms. It currently has a total of 13 projects at different stages, FilmKaravan founder and managing director Pooja Kohli Taneja says.

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com, she speaks about the future plan of the production house, Covid2019 impact and how the post-pandemic world will look.

    Edited excerpts: 

    How was the experience collaborating with Netflix for the second time?

    It was a great experience. The first time we had a show called Delhi Crime that we had produced and we licensed to Netflix. And now for the first time, we were talking about a feature film. What are the Odds? is a very different kind of a film produced by FilmKaravan Originals and Abhay Deol Presents and Netflix was the only platform that really saw the vision that we were coming from. They believed in the content and type of storytelling, especially having gone through once before with a show that was also considered very sensitive. But this collaboration worked really well and the film did wonders on their platform. They were equally eager to see where and how a film like this would go and we got maximum support and love from audiences through their platform. 

    Are you in talks with other OTT platforms?

    Yes, we are in talks with all OTT platforms. We have from our end tried to see what different platforms' mandates are, what they're looking for, what their budgets are, what kind of material is working on their platform since audiences are still very new to this. It's almost like channels from the old days. A show on Zee would technically sometimes be different from a show on Star or Sony and I see all these OTT platforms as the new broadcast channels with their own niche audiences. So as we develop things with different platforms in mind, we keep that audience view of that platform in mind while developing.  

    What are the other genres that you are planning to explore?

    We're working on a bunch of projects, and in fact all genres are completely different from one another. We are working on Delhi Crime season

    two and three. In addition to that we have a bunch of shows that we are currently writing and are in development ranging from a young dance musical to a period piece that is set in pre-Independence India with also a youth relationship drama and a bunch of other things. There's a detective show in the pipeline as well. There are all kinds of genres that we're playing with. The art of telling a story in an episodic manner is something very new to the Indian market and we want to be able to tell something very accurately and authentically for the local audiences, but also have a treatment that is slightly more international and gripping and those are the backbones for which we are developing most of our material.

    How many projects do you have in the pipeline? 

    We have a total of 13 projects right now at different stages. Some are books-based, some are based on true case files or stories, some are completely fictionalised and we have a mix of writer directors from India as well as international talent. We see a huge improvement in the kind of material that we were able to put together if we have some of the senior people that have worked on episodic content outside India previously who bring their learnings along with storytellers from India who can really grasp the characters and the world and tell that story together convincingly and in a tight manner.

    How many of your projects were stuck because of this crisis? 

    We were in the middle of Delhi Crime season 2 shoot. We had eight days left to complete but because of the situation really escalating very quickly in Delhi where we were shooting we had to stop the shoot. A lot of our crew that was from outside India had to fly back to be with their families before the shutdown happened and we're waiting. We're not in a rush to get back. We want to be sure that it's safe and all procedures and protocols that are being set out by the producers unions, as well as the Motion Picture Association, are being followed and we can get back maybe end of July to complete the shoot on our current production and then resume the others but there's just a lot of writing and development work that's going on alongside. 

    How do you see the overall production space changing post-Covid?

    Like I said time will tell as and when things get better, we're in a wait and watch mode. We're not in a rush to get back into production until it is safe for our teams to resume getting on flights and going to locations and being with a hundred plus people on set. We have testing kits that we are organising. We have medical staff on ground and a lot of these protocols that we are planning and ensuring that we can take care of as we move forward into our next phase of post Covid2019 productions. 

    When do you expect everything to go back to normalcy?  

    It's going to be a new space and will be a new normal. It's going to require a lot of checks and takes from our side to ensure the safety and the security of our cast and our crew and moving forward, I think there will be an early check on the kind of material that we are writing whether it is even going to work when it comes to production time, so, you know large crowds, B rolls, street scenes, etc. It will be very difficult to have a crowd scene with a thousand people like we had in a Delhi Crime showing the sights at India Gate in these times. Until we have complete control and check on this situation we'll have to be very creative to make these shoots and stories happen in a post Covid2019 normal that will exist. 

  • FilmKaravan Originals, makers of ‘Delhi Crime’, releases first feature presentation

    FilmKaravan Originals, makers of ‘Delhi Crime’, releases first feature presentation

    MUMBAI: FilmKaravan Originals, the producers of the Netflix Original Delhi Crime, is in it for the long haul. The much-talked about taut thriller based on the investigation of the 2012 Delhi gang rape case had been widely praised and lauded by critics and audiences alike.  Moving to a completely different turf, FilmKaravan Originals, , now releases its second offering, a full-length feature film titled, What Are The Odds?, exclusively on Netflix worldwide. The film is also backed and co-produced by matinee idol Abhay Deol while reprising a pivotal role of a rock star in the film.

    A consolidated content distribution, marketing and delivery service house, FilmKaravan diversified into production with Delhi Crime and now with the release of What Are The Odds? the company has cemented itself as a bonafide content production house in the digital space.  The company operates from two of the largest entertainment hubs in the world- California and Mumbai. In the past, the company has also produced two short films, titled Leeches and Grant Street Shaving Co. Leeches is currently streaming exclusively on Amazon Prime. The film had won a National Award for its music and premiered across multiple prestigious international film festivals. Grant Street Shaving Co. is live on both Amazon Prime and Mubi. The music for the film was given by Sagar Desai who was also given the music for What Are The Odds?

    Sanjay Bachani stated, “Production had always been on the cards and we were scouting for stories that we would be compelled to back. Our effort will always be directed towards being diversified while working with a wide array for makers and talents. We are currently developing a slate across genres and different formats of story telling which are at various stages of production."

    Set in a whimsical version of Mumbai and peopled with characters and incidences personifying the title, 'What Are The Odds?' is an honest, often hilarious and rapt exploration of growing up in contemporary India devoid of its cultural specifications and celebrating unusual friendships. Directed by Megha Ramaswamy, the film features Karanvir Malhotra (Selection Day, Forgotten Army) and Yashaswini Dayama (Delhi Crime, Dear Zindagi) in lead roles. The film also stars Monica Dogra Priyanka Bose, Jugal Hansraj and Manu Rishi Chadha.

    FilmKaravan boasts of tie-ups with the largest streaming platforms to reach maximum viewers and specialises in release over EST, VOD and SVOD services. The company has more than 1000 films and episodic TV catalog (Indian and international) and has successfully executed worldwide Day and Date digital film releases simultaneous to their theatrical release.

  • Films are at the mercy of the director, says ‘Neerja’ writer

    Films are at the mercy of the director, says ‘Neerja’ writer

    MUMBAI: Neerja writer Sanyuktha Chawla Shaikh in conversation with the audiences at The Content Hub 2020 shared some interesting insights from her movie. “All stories come from life experiences. My film Bobby Jasoos was inspired by the family I am married into. The only part is to make it fictional. The major challenge I faced in Neerja was to bring the spirit into a character. Shabana Azmi's character was completely inspired by Neerja's mother. The structuring of this movie was very different,” says Shaikh.

    Shaikh, who never aspired to be a scriptwriter, has given audiences some wonderful movies like Bobby Jasoos and Neerja. She feels digital writing is liberating; you can get into things that are interesting. She, however, found writing dialogues for Delhi Crime very weird as one cannot write dialogues based on real testimonies.

    Shaikh also believes that scripts should be read by the director, writer and the actors. It helps in better functionality. Asked about having the ownership while working with a director, she said, “Films are at the director’s mercy; he has the complete ownership and cast and crew need to have a trust upon him. If you disagree with a certain plot, there is always an option to narrate your story to some other director.”

  • Sacred Games 2, Bard of Blood, and Delhi Crime: Netflix most popular originals in 2019

    Sacred Games 2, Bard of Blood, and Delhi Crime: Netflix most popular originals in 2019

    MUMBAI: Netflix has announced the list of most popular originals and movies in 2019 in India.  Sacred Games 2, Bard Blood and Delhi Crime were the top three most popular series in the list of top 10 most popular series releases of 2019. The list also included Sex Education, Leila, Stranger Things S3, Typewriter, Little Things S3, The Witcher and The Spy: Limited Series. 

    The company took this initiative for helping its customers to know about the popular releases which they can watch in the holiday season. Compared to any other country, the viewership percentage on Netflix is the highest in India as 70 per cent of subscribers watch at least one film in a week.

    The top 10 most popular movies in 2019 on Netflix include Kabir Singh, Article 15, Drive, Badla, House Arrest, 6 Underground, Chopsticks, Baazaar, Luka Chuppi and Romeo Akbar Walter at the tenth position.

    These lists are ranked by the number of accounts choosing to watch at least 2 minutes of a series, movie or special during its first 28 days on Netflix in 2019. At least two minutes is the same way Netflix calculates its daily Top 10 lists in the UK and Mexico – and similar to the way in which the BBC compiles its iPlayer rankings.

  • OTT creators and producers, up close and personal at Vidnet Masterclasses 2019

    OTT creators and producers, up close and personal at Vidnet Masterclasses 2019

    Delhi Crime, Kota Factory, Criminal Justice, TVF Bachelors, Permanent Roommates, Ghoul, Bard of Blood, Sacred Games, Verdict, Little Things, Thinkstan and Mirzapur are just some of the shows that we all watch, love and are inspired by in the last few years that are the content of this, ‘New Wave’ of Indian original shows on OTT platforms Netflix, Amazon, Hotstar, AltBalaji, YouTube and others.

    If you too want to be a writer, creator or director with his idea and vision seen as a reality on any of these platforms then read on.

    On a grey Mumbai morning on 4 October 2019, I got a chance to meet all these brilliant minds behind all these path-breaking shows and ask them questions and learn from them the creator's first-hand knowledge of how these shows were conceived, written and created for all of us to view.

    If you were not present in these two esteemed rooms where all these discussions took place, here is a brief summary from memory, dear reader of what I learned from these Masterclasses.

    I begin with the man about whom I had heard vaguely from people in the industry. A man who from his corporate boardroom job had made the transition and written this hard-hitting gangster Saga that is as good as anything from Hollywood and a truly Original Indian masterpiece on Amazon Prime produced by India’s premiere production house Excel Entertainment.

    Puneet Krishna, the creator of the Epic gangster saga ‘Mirzapur’ got it made on the strength of his concept and what on paper is a mind-boggling 195 speaking characters in one show.

    The biggest learning from Puneet who answered everyone’s questions with such humility was, “I do not have a writers’ room, my writers’ room is my bedroom where my brother and I conceived and wrote this show that is Mirzapur.” Puneet wrote the basic outline for the entire show in four days and Season 2 will be out soon.

    On a personal note, Mirzapur is a show I loved and I did get to tell him face to face that after I had seen it, I felt that all other shows of a similar genre, looked like Kiddy Disney shows to me, he laughed and told me a big thank you.

    From Mirzapur to Om Shanti Om was the next talk with the experienced screenwriter, teacher & lyricist of over 400 Bollywood songs Mayur Puri. He sang the lyrics of two of his famous songs and I was shocked to learn the real double meanings to them which I cannot even mention here, but rest assured I will pay closer attention to these seriously talented lyrics when I hear them next! But on a more serious note Mayur who is from a small town and has truly worked his way to the top gave the room the most enlightening advice when he said that there is no Special Cult ‘Illuminati’ type zone of people with power in film, TV or OTT who meet every night to discuss who will make it through in this big bad world of Bollywood. He said, “If you have a concept or story or lyrics or anything just go out there & put it out to the world.”

    Patrick Graham, a British national, who is a Bandra boy was inspired by the torture chambers set up in Kashmir to make Ghoul. He spoke with his editor Nitin about the use of several techniques of the horror genre and stay away from cliches.

    Nitin Baid, one of India’s top editors, ended the conversation with how he edited Gully Boy with Zoya Akhtar in a most unique way away from India somewhere in Europe.

    Lunch break was a nice long line of hungry delegates where a lot of people in both rooms got to meet and greet each other. If you want to know, the line was so long that I started with dessert first & then my food!

    Post lunch was director Raghav Subu & editor Gourav Gopal of the current new age cult show Kota Factory by TVF.

    Kota Factory is a show I have not seen but have heard in glowing appreciation from various people from within the industry.

    Did you know that Raghav, on pure instinct, decided the show would be in B&W, a decision he was not sure of and hence shot it with 2 cameras – one in colour & one B&W. Days before the launch, he informed the backers of the show that it will be in B&W and they were fine with it!

    There was also a rather interesting take on all the drone shots used in the show and how they were used to tell the story in a far more constructive way.

    Danish Aslam was up next with his young DOP Jay Bhansali. Danish, who has been to film school, assisted big directors, made a film & so much more, was giving a crash course on guerilla filmmaking and how he had to unlearn everything he learned in film school to move forward in the real world. His was a no holds barred take on what you have to do to convert your ideas into reality in the limited budgets & time constraints. Those who are NOT in the top 2 per cent of makers who get to make a Sacred Games or Made In Heaven with lavish budgets have to adhere to make the most of what we have with our stories and ideas.

    I would strongly recommend that you see his Masterclass if and when it comes on YouTube and learn from what he showed by several examples of his own footage to the rest of us with his shows It’s Not That Simple and Time Out and how he & his DOP shot some of the footage on the streets in unique ways with no lights or fancy equipment. His was a real-time learning lesson for future makers of content on the web.

    From here I managed to rush to the other room where I caught and wished had heard the full soul-bearing method & methodology of actor, writer & director Dhruv Sehgal (for the record you could only attend one Masterclass but I paid for both & hence managed to jump between both rooms).

    Upon entering the room, Dhruv was speaking and there was an image on the large display screen on stage, of a cheap blue bed sheet on a table, a laptop and a pizza box in a Mumbai home and how Dhruv was telling the enthralled audience in the room of future aspiring writers and creators about his office space that was his room in Mumbai and how he wrote his show, ‘Little Things’ in that humble room of his which made to Netflix and all our rooms across the planet.

    Tea Break – Somewhere at this point, while eating cake, I met the organisers of Indiantelvision.com and was asked by the organizer and owner Anil Wanvari if I would be interested in writing a review/critique of the event.  Which I agreed to do and now I am an actor who is about to become a first time writer!

    For the record, I always wanted to be a writer since my film appreciation course and with all the films I have been watching since age five and with the current amount of content I watch daily, here was my chance. So I say 'YES' looking at the man. I have no idea what I was doing saying yes to him in all honesty, but do let me know if I did alright dear readers.

    Anil tells me casually to do a 500-word piece on the event. I am on word 1326 as I type this!

    BUT,

    I have saved the best for the last and I hope you are still with me dear reader and have not gone on to check your phone for all the notifications popping on your screen from Instagram or Facebook and other social media platforms that have been calling you all this while. I am trying to explain in as concise a manner all that I learned and absorbed on that day at the Westin hotel in Mumbai.

    The last session of the day at 5 pm on 4 October 2019 was a tough choice. In one room were the multiple writers of Sacred Games & in the other room the one that I did not move from for some strange reason was the writer, director, creator, and if I can say with no doubt in my mind, a genius of a man  Richie Mehta. He has given us all the most important show (in my personal opinion) of this decade – Delhi Crime.

    Delhi Crime is a show that I first urge all of you who have not seen, to see today, right now if you can. Those of you who are worried or afraid to see it let me assure you.  The graphic violence of the incident that every Indian never wants to feel again is not depicted in the show (necessary spoiler for all those who have not seen the show) but what is shown in the show in painstaking detail is how the Delhi Police captured the criminals who committed the most heinous crime in the collective memory of India to date.

    This is a procedural drama that should be mandatory in all training academies in India and how this one man from Canada single-handedly researched the show for four years and how he managed to bring the reality of it to the viewers.

    Richie Mehta is a zen-like man with a soft-spoken voice and a crystal clear thought process.

    While he was on stage, this frail man in a jeans and T-shirt took off his floaters (I have not seen those in years on anyone’s feet since college) and sat barefoot on stage, first took everyone’s questions in the room as notes on his phone all of them methodically and then began to answer the questions in a systematic manner on how he made Delhi Crime or rather how he made it with so much authenticity that made the show look so real to all of us who have seen it.

    He explained how he studied the case files, the hours of interviews with the Delhi Police, his observations while he waited in police stations and spoke to the senior officers, traffic police constables and other officers in charge of the case, how they told him facts about the case and other cases because nobody ever bothered to ask them these basic questions that Richie asked while he did the research for the show. He also had to keep an objective viewpoint to the show while he shot it with his Danish DOP with no Netflix on board (which came in much later after the show was made).

    What I learned most from this unique human being was that he had no big aspiration with what he was making apart from a duty-bound conviction to tell the story with utmost honesty.

    In conclusion, here is what I learned from all these brilliant minds on that day.

    All that matters is your idea, your conviction, your belief in the idea, and the desire to make it. Nothing can stop you.

    The industry has gone through a paradigm shift in its outlook to content. Especially when it comes to OTT platforms, they are looking for the next big idea more than you know. It's not about stars, nepotism, contacts, money or power. It's about the idea and that can come from anywhere in this current set up whether you are from the industry or from outside from a small town or a big city. It can be made into a show whether you are an experienced old-time writer or a first-time corporate who has a show in his mind. It can come from you who is reading this or from me who is writing this for you, the new world of content for OTT is open to us all, so write it down and get it made, or wait for Vidnet 2020 to get inspired.

    (The author is a TV actor. The views expressed in this article are his own and Indiantelevision.com may not subscribe to them.)

  • Indian content creators must find out right stories to reach global audiences

    Indian content creators must find out right stories to reach global audiences

    MUMBAI: Over the top platforms have opened up the doors for content creators to share their creativity across the world. Despite the influx of major companies such as Netflix and Amazon Prime Video in India, content creators are still figuring out how to make their stories go global.

    At the stage of Indiantelevision.com’s Vidnet 2019 summit, some of the successful creators spilt the beans on their strategies. The creators of Delhi Crime, Lunch Box and Bard of Blood believe that stories that resonate and connect emotionally with the global audiences do travel. 

    The panel discussion ‘Making Indian Stories Travel’ in the creators’ track was moderated by BookMyShow VP content and strategy Manisha Singh Katial and the panellists were MUBI India content advisor Guneet Munga, Delhi Crime creator, director and writer Richie Mehta, and Red Chillies Entertainment chief revenue officer Gaurav Verma. 

    Katial opened the discussion by stating, “Yes, stories that are good do travel. But they also have to be culturally connected and I think that also becomes the challenge. Something that culturally connects with you resonates more, and something that connects with you emotionally, definitely works. I do feel making stories that travel is a challenge because it depends on the content that one is creating.”

    Katial asked Mehta to share the feedback he received on Delhi Crime. “The feedback for Delhi Crime is global. I have been hearing that the story has travelled quite far, and seems to have resonated with people all over the world. I knew this when I was conceiving the project.”

    He further elaborated, “I was in Delhi when the crime happened. So I reacted to it as somebody in India would. Then I left and went to Toronto and there I realised that this wasn’t just an ‘Indian’ thing, this was a humanitarian issue for the planet’s citizen. When I pieced together my work I figured out that it could have deep meaning for the Indian audience.”

    Mehta’s aim was to show a positive representation of India through his story. “It is the worst thing that has ever happened in this country and if you can spin that around to make a story of the extreme positive environment, especially for somebody outside with no knowledge and understanding about India, I certainly want to make it like that,” he said.

    Monga, the creator of Lunch Box, also expressed that content creators have tried to represent Indian beyond Bollywood’s depiction. Distribution has been the challenge previously. She said, “Across the world there are different sets of distribution, buyers and strategies. So it was not the same release day of films worldwide. Lunch Box released over two years around the world. And it is important for us to understand there are many layers to this.”

    Monga said that films can travel either because of its content or because of the choice of distribution partners. Sometimes a really good film is unable to travel because it does not have the right access. “So having the right access and having that distribution division, which is not just diaspora, is important. I feel with Netflix coming in India the lines are merging and now people will be able to see what India is with all its languages and colours, all its type of filmmaking and storytelling.”

    Katial commented that while having partners like Amazon and Netflix is great, it is also necessary to think internationally. To this, Verma added that one should not try to attempt an international story with the pressure that one has to appeal to seven billion consumers because emotional stories will connect to people. The best way to dazzle the audience is through content and script. Verma also opined that the industry is facing the issue of lack of talent. OTT platforms need writers who can understand the audiences’ need. 

    The panellists also said that apart from appealing stories and subjects, subtitles and dubbing of the content in different languages are also extremely pivotal in reaching global audiences.

  • OTT series’ directors, editors share experiences, learning at Vidnet 2019’s Masterclasses

    OTT series’ directors, editors share experiences, learning at Vidnet 2019’s Masterclasses

    MUMBAI: Indiantelevision.com’s Vidnet 2019, for the first time, conducted Masterclasses for aspiring directors and editors of the OTT space. Masterclasses brought directors and editors of successful series like Ghoul, Gullak, Rangbaaz, Kota Factory, It’s Not That Simple, Criminal Justice and Delhi Crime to share their experiences and learning as creators.

    The initiative is an attempt to help the audience learn from the OTT industry’s best creators on creating successful web series. In the opening remark, Indiatelevision.com founder and CEO Anil Wanvari said, “This is the first time that we have organised Masterclasses and our vision is to create a platform and to build a community for aspiring creators."

    The first Masterclass was held by the makers of Netflix’s Ghoul. Creator, writer and director Patrick Graham shared insights on the process of making Ghoul which was initially written as a film and later converted to three-episode original premium content for Netflix. Graham also revealed that he took six months to write and research on the script of Ghoul and the post-production took three to four months. He said that horror is the most untapped genre in India and the concept of military horror was never attempted. Ghoul editor Nitin Baid briefed the audience on how he started working on the psychological horror-thriller and his experience while working with Graham on the project.

    The next Masterclass was conducted by Sachin Pathak, director of Rangbaaz S-2 who shared his experience on how he started his journey in the industry and how he got the opportunity to direct Rangbaaz S-2 for ZEE5. Pathak said that experience is the best teacher on shooting-related challenges.

    Another interesting Masterclass was on SonyLIV’s Gullak. Amrit Raj Gupta who directed Gullak began his journey in 2013 as an intern in TVF. He also directed TVF Bachelors season one and two. Amit Kulkarni editor of Gullak, Tripling S-2 and TVF Bachelors shared his two pence with the audiences. The duo said that the major challenge while creating content for OTT is to deliver satisfactory shots within a limited time span.

    Kota Factory director Raghav Subbu and editor Gourav Gopal Jha enlightened the audience on their recent success. TVF's Kota Factory premiered on YouTube this year and the show grabbed attention for being the first black and white web series. Subbu revealed that the idea of doing black and white web series hit him two weeks before the shoot and the team was slightly sceptical about it. They shot the show with two cameras- one for black and white series and another for colour series so that they have a backup if the concept didn’t work. They also explained motives behind having excessive aerial shots in the show and creating characters which resonate with the viewers. Subbu said that it is the responsibility of the director to turn the script into live characters on the screen. He said, “I follow the thought which says there is no good or bad film, there is a good or bad director and I come from that school. It’s important that the association with the script and directors works well.”

    At the Masterclass, Danish Aslam who directed It’s Not That Simple for VOOT touched the practical aspect of directing a show for an OTT platform. He explained the differences between shooting a film and a web series. He said, “The storytelling format is a crucial differentiating factor – episodic versus long-form storytelling. India has more daily soaps which stretch beyond 100 episodes. The concept of seasons is completely new in our country.”

    Aslam also explained how to keep the spark alive between episodes. He also gave some examples from his experience in addressing the challenges one faces while working on the limited budget and time constraints on OTT platforms.

    Vishal Furia, director of Criminal Justice and Lapachhapi, a Marathi Film, threw light on the concept and making of Criminal Justice and the research he conducted to bring the actual story from paper to screen. He too commented that the horror genre is not so evolved in India.

    The last and the most interesting Masterclass was taken by Delhi Crime’s writer, director and creator Richie Mehta who informed that he took four years to research on the subject and connected with most of the characters to understand their views. Mehta answered the audience's questions like how much fiction was added to the show, realism of the scene, deciding the point to start and stop the story, and psychological impact while researching and writing for Delhi Crime.

  • ‘Delhi Crime’ creator, writer & director Richie Mehta to discuss craft of digital storytelling at Vidnet Masterclasses

    ‘Delhi Crime’ creator, writer & director Richie Mehta to discuss craft of digital storytelling at Vidnet Masterclasses

    MUMBAI: Creator, writer and director Richie Mehta, famous for writing and directing Netflix Original Delhi Crime is going to be sharing his expertise in the field of creating content for the web at Indiantelevision.com’s Vidnet Masterclasses, by directors & editors, happening at The Westin, Mumbai on October 4.

    Vidnet Masterclasses are an Indiantelevision.com initiative to facilitate the creative process of young and aspiring creators willing to work in the digital domain. The Masterclasses will host directors & editors, and writers who will be talking to the audience directly about the craft of video creation.

    He will be discussing with the attendees the craft of creating a compelling narrative and direction techniques to ace in the competitive digital video ecosystem, drawing instances from his personal experiences that he has gathered while working across mediums like films and digital.

    Mehta has been a successful and revered creator since the initial days of his career. His first film
    Amal (2007) became a recipient of over 30 international awards, was nominated for 6 Genie Awards, including Best Picture, Director, and Adapted Screenplay, and was named one of the top ten Canadian films of the decade by Playback Magazine.

    He then wrote and directed several films and programs including I’ll Follow You Down, Siddharth, India in a Day, and Delhi Crime that revolved around the Delhi Police’s investigation of the infamous gang-rape of a young medical student on a bus in 2012.

    Other speakers at the Masterclasses include Patrick Graham, Amit Kulkarni, Bhavani Iyer, Puneet Krishna, and Danish Aslam.