"Why must every love story bloom only in Paris, every honeymoon end in Switzerland?": Kamal Haasan calls for judicious use of resources in film industry
Chennai (Tamil Nadu) [India], May 15 (ANI): In a significant move reflecting Prime Minister Narendra Modi's call for responsible use of resources, veteran actor and politician Kamal Haasan on Friday penned an open letter to the Indian film industry, urging the members to come up with "practical and sustainable operating practices for efficient filmmaking."
He spoke about how, instead of relying on foreign locations for shooting, filmmakers should explore and utilise local destinations.
"Let me be clear. Any correction in cinema economics must never come at the cost of workers' wages, safety, dignity, food, transport, accommodation, or humane working conditions. The burden cannot fall on those who labour the hardest. The correction we need is elsewhere: in avoidable waste, poor planning, inflated entourage culture, unnecessary foreign travel, production delays, and the growing disconnect between spending and purpose. Why must every love story bloom only in Paris, and every honeymoon end in Switzerland? Romance, fortunately, does not require foreign exchange. Indian cinema, and Indians, deserve a little more confidence in themselves and our beautiful country. I believe this is the right time for a meeting of minds across the Indian cinema industry," he said.
Kamal Haasan urged "an industry-wide conversation between producers, actors, directors, unions, studios, exhibitors, distributors, OTT platforms, and guilds towards an industry-wide dialogue on how we collectively navigate the economic challenges ahead. "
"Together, we must evolve practical and sustainable operating practices for efficient filmmaking: better shooting discipline, tighter schedules, reduced luxury and entourage expenses, limiting avoidable foreign travel where suitable local alternatives exist, conserving energy across sets and studios, and encouraging sustainable set construction and reuse of materials. Extravagance has often been mistaken for scale. But some of our greatest films were made not with excess, but with clarity, discipline, and conviction. The national call for responsible consumption and collective discipline is a timely reminder that every sector must act with foresight and restraint in periods of global uncertainty," he added.