...
...
...
Next Story

Pallavi Joshi: We got to stop catering to the NRI audience

ByAkash Bhatnagar
Published on: Mar 18, 2024 11:09 AM IST

Post her nomination by the Government at the Film and Television Institute Of India, Pallavi Joshi opens up on the state of such institutes today

Actor-producer Pallavi Joshi was recently nominated by the Information and Broadcasting Government Of India as a member of Film and Television Institute Of India Society (FTII). While the development had been in the offing for a while, Joshi was still not sure about it. She shares, “I was shooting in Landsdowne with horrible network. The first time I got to know about it was through a newspaper the next day.”

Pallavi Joshi

Under her new role, Joshi, along with her fellow committee members aims to create more space and opportunities for creativity to flow freely. She insists FTII graduates have raised the bar high in Indian cinema, yet she acknowledges the decrease in their relevance and value in the industry. “The focus mainly nowadays has been on ‘aapsi bhaichara’. People leave their cities and come to institutions like NSD and FTII in pursuit of excellence and spend time honing their craft. All they need is someone to give them a platform, but the producers have kind of shifted away from brilliance. If we can somehow bring it back and create more opportunities where they cannot be ignored, it will take them to another level.”

The actor-producer's nomination interestingly comes on the second anniversary of The Kashmir Files. The film became a mammoth success and got Joshi her third National Award. Prior to that, the actor and her husband, filmmaker Vivek Agnihotri achieved success with The Tashkent Files too. When asked if the successes makes them feel more responsible, Joshi iterates, “We felt responsible; hence we made these films. The first film was about Right to Truth, the second was Right to Justice and now The Delhi Files is about Right to Life. The true responsibility lies in being factually correct, well-researched and presenting the truth to people. This is the movement that we have started; we just hope we are able to walk down that path because it’s a very difficult path to walk on.”

 
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Subscribe Now