The filmmaking community has witnessed a change in mindset, believes Zoya Akhtar, as producers have started chasing new and refreshing scripts for making money.
The filmmaker says earlier, a project was bankrolled only if it had a star name attached to it and then the scripting phase would follow. But it is no longer the case now.
"Suddenly, money is chasing content. Earlier we used to write a script, begging, and if you attach an actor, you will get money from a producer. Today, there are so many platforms where you can show content. People are saying here is the money, give us something good. This has never happened before.
"People in between had forgotten that script writing is important. You are giving weightage to it and I am very happy about it. The story is the core part of a film," Zoya told PTI.
She was talking on the sidelines of Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival's fourth edition of the 'Word to Screen Market' initiative, where the literary world engages directly with content creators for film, TV and digital.
Zoya believes the initiative brings together two distinctive forms of storytelling since book adaptations is an important source of content for both the makers and the audiences.
"There are about 550 titles being pitched and there are filmmakers coming here. There is this marriage happening. There will be better stories coming out and it is fantastic.
"As a storyteller, beyond a point, how many ideas would one person have? It will come from various places and this (book adaptations) is a great way. The core thing is the story."
"For me, one filmmaker, who has adapted difficult books is Stanley Kubrick. 'Lolita', '2001: A Space Odyssey', 'A Clockwork Orange' and 'The Shining' are very difficult books. When you watch the film, you will see they have changed it but the essence is the same."
"I was pitched one story as I liked it. It is political but a satire. I can't tell you in detail otherwise someone else will take it."
"The whole point of this anthology is to keep doing genres that we normally don't do. It is a very exciting space. It is a very nice club to be a part of - Karan, Anurag and Dibakar. You can't replace them with anyone. Each one is unique."
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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