Friday, April 4, 2008

Enter filmi fundamentalism

As the dates of the assembly and general elections approach nearer you will find politics playing an increasing part in creating fissures within the film industry. Karnataka goes to polls in May and that is why tempers have been lost over the Tamil Nadu's decision to go ahead with the Hogenakal water project. Which was fine until pro-Kannada supporters decide to stop screening of Tamil films in Karnataka. And now the Tamil film industry is retaliating with Rajnikanth also joining a protest fast.

The irony is that Rajnikanth is a Maharastrian brought up in Karnataka who became a super star in Tamil Nadu. Tamil Nadu's other icon MGR was born in Kerala. With politics increasingly rearing its head are we soon going to see days where a Kannada actor or technician cannot work on a Tamil film, a Tamil musician cannot compose for a Telegu flick, a Hyderabad studio will be banned from hosting a Malayalam crew....?

Elections will take place in Maharashtra by the year end. Should we be ready for Raj Thackeray's MNS ranting about why people from Bihar and UP should not be allowed to work in Bollywood? Will theatres get ransacked in Nashik and Ranchi?

I hope not. The film industry should clearly see that politicians will play the villain. And it should start doing its homework right away to to see that it is not taken for a ride.

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