Tag: Vani Tripathi Tikoo

  • Madhya Pradesh, from heartland to global screens

    Madhya Pradesh, from heartland to global screens

    MUMBAI: Lights, camera, action, and Madhya Pradesh is ready for its close-up. The heartland of India is fast emerging as a vibrant hub for filmmaking, blending local authenticity with stories that resonate across the globe.

    At the recent session From Heartland to International Screens: MP in Focus, celebrated filmmakers, actors, and state leaders came together to explore how Madhya Pradesh is shaping narratives that travel far beyond borders. The panel was moderated by actor and voice artist Vijay Vikram Singh, who set the tone by highlighting the state’s unique blend of culture, heritage, and cinematic potential.

    Madhya Pradesh tourism board additional managing director Bidisha Mukherjee, credited the state’s success to its film-friendly policies, ease of doing business, and exotic locations. “From heritage cities like Mandu and Orchha to rural landscapes such as Chambal, MP offers a range of locations that can fit any story,” she said. The state also incentivises women-led and environmentally conscious projects, providing additional support for filmmakers.

    Speaking from personal experience, Sunny Hinduja, actor and producer from Indore, praised the warm hospitality and the homely feel of shooting in MP. “The people, the food, the culture, it all makes the filmmaking experience so welcoming,” he said. Hinduja also revealed plans to produce more content in the state, highlighting MP’s potential as a creative springboard.

    The Viral Fever president Vijay Koshy underlined the professionalism and dedication of local crews, pointing out that the availability of trained technicians reduces the logistical burden for production houses. Filmmakers also noted that MP’s bureaucracy is unusually proactive, with shooting permissions granted quickly and processes made fully online.

    Director Jitank Gurjar, hailing from Gwalior, reflected on the cultural diversity across the state. “Every 50 kilometres, the dialect, the culture, even the way people express emotions changes. Yet human emotions are universal, and MP captures that beautifully,” he said.

    Actor Huma Qureshi added her perspective on MP’s growing film landscape, “The state doesn’t just provide locations; it becomes part of the story. There is a warmth and openness here that instantly connects with everyone on set, making creativity flow effortlessly.”

    The session underscored Madhya Pradesh’s growing role in India’s creative economy. With a combination of government support, diverse locations, skilled talent, and a welcoming culture, the state is positioning itself as a preferred destination for filmmakers looking to tell stories that resonate both locally and globally.
     

  • Ficci Frames and market concludes on grand note

    Ficci Frames and market concludes on grand note

    MUMBAI: The FICCI Frames and the newly launched content market as part of FICCI Frames 2018 concluded on a grand note.

    The three-day conference and adjoining market saw the who’s who in the entertainment business attend and part take in the conference, in addition to buyers and sellers from across the globe and country engage in active meetings regarding a diver range of content.

    The conference  saw I & B and Textiles minister Smriti Zubin Irani launch the three-day conference and market and engage in a riveting discussion with noted Filmmaker Karan Johar. This was followed by a range of conference panel discussions that saw the likes of Siddharth Roy Kapur, Nandita Das, Madhu Chopra, Rima Das, Sanjay Gupta (MD, Star India), Ajit Andhare, Vani Tripathi Tikoo, Megha Tata among many others take part.

    The first year of the content market was also a grand success, with the participation of over 100 buyers and festival programmers of Indian content and content sellers from across many countries..  With active meetings held across the three days, the international companies such as 102 distribution, Alpha Violet, Karma Films, Wild Bunch were also present.

    “In two days I had about 35 meetings with investors from all around the world. I was successful in raising interest of a total of 5 million dollars which we will now move forward to close with the help of my producers George Merkert and Academy Award winning Tim McGovern from LA Based Whisper Pictures…The Market was so well organized…”  said Reena NeGandhi an attendee of the market.

    “…This content market will help to unite the production houses with best content creators and will change the phase of Indian entertainment ecosystem.” said Satish Narayanan, Founder, Design Media and Edutainment Solutions.

    Furthermore 9 films including new Indian films such as Mudita by Swaroop Kanchi, Once again by Kanwal Sethi, Oh Shit! by Kamakhya Narayan Singh, Hamid by Aiijaz Khan, Ee Ma yau by Lijo Jose Pellissary and Rana Dugabbati presented C/O Kancharapalem among others were showcased to leading festival programmers from Venice, London, Edinburgh and Italy among others as a first of it’s kind initiative to fuel the discovery of Indian films internationally.

    The three-day event also saw a special installation of the mobile theatres by Picturetime digiplex where the films were screened. 

  • Piracy at YouTube under check, claims Raghavan

    Piracy at YouTube under check, claims Raghavan

    NEW DELHI: YouTube India head of content operations Satya Raghavan has claimed that it has succeeded in curbing piracy on its platform to a large extent. Veteran actress Shabana Azmi along with the young actor Tannishtha Chatterjee was the cynosure of all eyes as they conducted a session in Producers’ Lab at the ongoing Film Bazaar at IFFI Goa on ‘How to Pitch an Actor’.

    Speaking in the Building Communities and Icons section at the Bazaar, Raghavan said “When you upload a film on YouTube, a fingerprint of that film is created. If somebody else is uploading that film, there are a certain proofs by which you come to know about this. YouTube is perhaps the only platform where you can actually know that someone has put up your content but you need to put your content up first, because about 500 hours of content is being uploaded every minute. This is a great system that allows the content owner to understand if their content is being pirated.” He was conducting an engrossing session about the burgeoning digital space and the platform that Youtube has provided filmmakers.

    On monetisation of a Youtube channel, he said, “Once you turn on the section called monetisation in your backend control centre, only then will it serve you ads. You also have to think about whether you’re sending the right signals through your content, which is by giving good descriptions, that help to identify the content and helps us match it with viewers on the other side.”

    The Bazaar organized by the National Film Development Corporation concludes tomorrow. It is held to coincide with the International Film Festival of India which will conclude on 27 November.

    Azmi, who attended the Film Bazaar for the first time since it commenced a decade earlier, was also there to promote her upcoming film Idgah which is a part of the ‘Film Bazaar Recommends’ section. She said, “I learnt there is a formal way in which film business can be conducted. I think it’s important because I’m very interested in the work of first-time filmmakers.”

    “I think these tags of a film being ‘women-oriented’ and ‘heroine-oriented’ have to slowly go out at some point, to feel that we are reaching a point of gender equality, and recognising that cinema is essentially a medium of storytelling,” said Chatterjee.

    “It’s important to highlight the truths about women today, no matter how ugly they are,” said theatre artist/filmmaker/screenwriter Vani Tripathi Tikoo. “Once we address this, the change is cumulative, and only then will it be accepted widely as a part of our culture and society.”

    Producer Kiran Rao, who spent most of her time catching diverse south Asian films in the Viewing Room, said Aamir Khan Productions will attend the next edition of the NFDC Film Bazaar.

    “The Film Bazaar has changed the landscape of how films are made and distributed, and really brought the film community together. It’s a fantastic and much-needed annual event. Aamir Khan Productions will hope to look for projects, meet people and find talent here. The Viewing Room is a great resource that Deepti DCunha, programmer of WIP, has created,” Rao said.

    The Knowledge Series started with the Investor Pitch of Film Bazaar Recommends (Part I) which screened documentary and film trailers followed by a short presentation by the filmmakers, highlighting the support that they needed to complete their process.
    Baradwaj Rangan moderated a discussion with filmmaker Prakash Jha, Chatterjee and Tikoo on “Women Protagonists in Indian Filmscape – Changing Dynamics.”

    In the discussion on Unique Distribution Models – Reaching Out With Independent Films moderator by filmmaker Rohan Sippy, panelists included filmmakers Sandeep Mohan, director of Love, Wrinkle-Free and Hola Venky!, and Sanal Kumar Sasidharan, who started ‘Cinema Cab’, a movement to screen films across the length and breadth of Kerala, and co-founder and CEO of Reelmonk Vivek Paul.

    Rohan Sippy explored the intricacies of the two filmmakers’ approaches, which both thrived on a non-monetary promotional approach and remarked, “It’s very interesting how you have managed to create unique models that work for you and your specific films and audiences. It takes a lot of conviction to follow through on such a vision of involving the audience, and taking the film to them.”

    In Storytelling & Narratives in 360 degrees section, Amsterdam Creative Industries Network Coordinator of Interaction and Games Lab Mirjam Vosmeer presented an illuminating presentation on Virtual Reality, and spoke at length about the various aspects of the uncharted territory that are being researched upon.

    Filmmaker and animator Gitanjali Rao who moderated the discussion and posed questions from the point of view of a filmmaker.“It is such a different way of telling stories. Besides, the fantasy and pleasure aspect of Virtual Reality, it is the empathy that it can induce in the viewer that really fascinates me,” she confessed. “To be able to involve an audience in such an immersive way has a lot of potential, especially for documentary filmmakers.”

    The panel discussion on Queen’s Journey & Filming In the Netherlands moderated by the media specialist and author Vanita Kohli-Khandekar included film commissioner, Nederlands Filmfonds, Bas Van der Reem, the producer Thomas Drijver and the producer of Queen Vivek Bajrang Agrawal. The panel discussion on VOD as the key distribution platforms for independent films included founder of The Film Collaborative, Orly Ravid, and Vista India CEO Suri Gopalan.

    ​Before the film bazaar commenced, the Film Facilitation Office had organised a one-day Workshop with Nodal Officers appointed by various State Governments and Central Government Ministries / Departments / Agencies to act as the one-point contact for easing the process of filming in their respective jurisdiction.

    The workshop included a case study presentation by Gujarat, which won the National Award for the Most Film Friendly State in 2016. It is envisaged that these discussions would motivate and mobilize the Nodal officers from State and Central Governments towards not only easier and timely facilitation of permissions for shooting films in their State, but also undertaking initiatives for a favorable filming environment.​

  • Piracy at YouTube under check, claims Raghavan

    Piracy at YouTube under check, claims Raghavan

    NEW DELHI: YouTube India head of content operations Satya Raghavan has claimed that it has succeeded in curbing piracy on its platform to a large extent. Veteran actress Shabana Azmi along with the young actor Tannishtha Chatterjee was the cynosure of all eyes as they conducted a session in Producers’ Lab at the ongoing Film Bazaar at IFFI Goa on ‘How to Pitch an Actor’.

    Speaking in the Building Communities and Icons section at the Bazaar, Raghavan said “When you upload a film on YouTube, a fingerprint of that film is created. If somebody else is uploading that film, there are a certain proofs by which you come to know about this. YouTube is perhaps the only platform where you can actually know that someone has put up your content but you need to put your content up first, because about 500 hours of content is being uploaded every minute. This is a great system that allows the content owner to understand if their content is being pirated.” He was conducting an engrossing session about the burgeoning digital space and the platform that Youtube has provided filmmakers.

    On monetisation of a Youtube channel, he said, “Once you turn on the section called monetisation in your backend control centre, only then will it serve you ads. You also have to think about whether you’re sending the right signals through your content, which is by giving good descriptions, that help to identify the content and helps us match it with viewers on the other side.”

    The Bazaar organized by the National Film Development Corporation concludes tomorrow. It is held to coincide with the International Film Festival of India which will conclude on 27 November.

    Azmi, who attended the Film Bazaar for the first time since it commenced a decade earlier, was also there to promote her upcoming film Idgah which is a part of the ‘Film Bazaar Recommends’ section. She said, “I learnt there is a formal way in which film business can be conducted. I think it’s important because I’m very interested in the work of first-time filmmakers.”

    “I think these tags of a film being ‘women-oriented’ and ‘heroine-oriented’ have to slowly go out at some point, to feel that we are reaching a point of gender equality, and recognising that cinema is essentially a medium of storytelling,” said Chatterjee.

    “It’s important to highlight the truths about women today, no matter how ugly they are,” said theatre artist/filmmaker/screenwriter Vani Tripathi Tikoo. “Once we address this, the change is cumulative, and only then will it be accepted widely as a part of our culture and society.”

    Producer Kiran Rao, who spent most of her time catching diverse south Asian films in the Viewing Room, said Aamir Khan Productions will attend the next edition of the NFDC Film Bazaar.

    “The Film Bazaar has changed the landscape of how films are made and distributed, and really brought the film community together. It’s a fantastic and much-needed annual event. Aamir Khan Productions will hope to look for projects, meet people and find talent here. The Viewing Room is a great resource that Deepti DCunha, programmer of WIP, has created,” Rao said.

    The Knowledge Series started with the Investor Pitch of Film Bazaar Recommends (Part I) which screened documentary and film trailers followed by a short presentation by the filmmakers, highlighting the support that they needed to complete their process.
    Baradwaj Rangan moderated a discussion with filmmaker Prakash Jha, Chatterjee and Tikoo on “Women Protagonists in Indian Filmscape – Changing Dynamics.”

    In the discussion on Unique Distribution Models – Reaching Out With Independent Films moderator by filmmaker Rohan Sippy, panelists included filmmakers Sandeep Mohan, director of Love, Wrinkle-Free and Hola Venky!, and Sanal Kumar Sasidharan, who started ‘Cinema Cab’, a movement to screen films across the length and breadth of Kerala, and co-founder and CEO of Reelmonk Vivek Paul.

    Rohan Sippy explored the intricacies of the two filmmakers’ approaches, which both thrived on a non-monetary promotional approach and remarked, “It’s very interesting how you have managed to create unique models that work for you and your specific films and audiences. It takes a lot of conviction to follow through on such a vision of involving the audience, and taking the film to them.”

    In Storytelling & Narratives in 360 degrees section, Amsterdam Creative Industries Network Coordinator of Interaction and Games Lab Mirjam Vosmeer presented an illuminating presentation on Virtual Reality, and spoke at length about the various aspects of the uncharted territory that are being researched upon.

    Filmmaker and animator Gitanjali Rao who moderated the discussion and posed questions from the point of view of a filmmaker.“It is such a different way of telling stories. Besides, the fantasy and pleasure aspect of Virtual Reality, it is the empathy that it can induce in the viewer that really fascinates me,” she confessed. “To be able to involve an audience in such an immersive way has a lot of potential, especially for documentary filmmakers.”

    The panel discussion on Queen’s Journey & Filming In the Netherlands moderated by the media specialist and author Vanita Kohli-Khandekar included film commissioner, Nederlands Filmfonds, Bas Van der Reem, the producer Thomas Drijver and the producer of Queen Vivek Bajrang Agrawal. The panel discussion on VOD as the key distribution platforms for independent films included founder of The Film Collaborative, Orly Ravid, and Vista India CEO Suri Gopalan.

    ​Before the film bazaar commenced, the Film Facilitation Office had organised a one-day Workshop with Nodal Officers appointed by various State Governments and Central Government Ministries / Departments / Agencies to act as the one-point contact for easing the process of filming in their respective jurisdiction.

    The workshop included a case study presentation by Gujarat, which won the National Award for the Most Film Friendly State in 2016. It is envisaged that these discussions would motivate and mobilize the Nodal officers from State and Central Governments towards not only easier and timely facilitation of permissions for shooting films in their State, but also undertaking initiatives for a favorable filming environment.​

  • Pahlaj Nihalani appointed new Censor board chairperson

    Pahlaj Nihalani appointed new Censor board chairperson

    MUMBAI: After last week’s fiasco, which saw Censor Board chief Leela Samson and nine members quitting over clearance been given to the controversial movie ‘MSG:Messenger of God’, the body has got a new chairperson in filmmaker Pahlaj Nihalani.

     

    According to the government release, “In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Cinematograph Act, 1952 (37 of 1952) read with rule 3 of the Cinematograph (Certification) Rules, 1983, the Central Government is pleased to appoint Shri Pahlaj Nihalani as Chairperson of the Central Board of Film Certification in an honorary capacity from 19th January, 2015 for a period of three years or until further orders, whichever is earlier.”

     

    The statement added, “Further, in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) of Section 3 of the Cinematograph Act, 1952 (37 of 1952) read with rule 3 of the Cinematograph (Certification) Rules, 1983, the Central Government is pleased to appoint the following persons as members of the Central Board of Film Certification with immediate effect for a period of three years and until further orders.”

     

    Nine other members have also been appointed.

     

    The new members are: Mihir Bhuta, Syed Abdul Bari, Ramesh Patange, George Baker, Chandra Prakash Dwivedi, Jeevitha, Vani Tripathi Tikoo, S Ve Shekhar and Ashoke Pandit.