Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Bollywood

'Katiyabaaz': A documentary maker challenges mainstream space

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Aug, 2014 07:01 AM
  • 'Katiyabaaz': A documentary maker challenges mainstream space
The release of an 80-minute documentary on Kanpur's electricity hassles against a big banner Bollywood film didn't seem an alien concept to the makers of "Katiyabaaz", who were confident of "challenging the mainstream".
 
Director duo Fahad Mustafa and Deepti Kakkar struggled their way for nearly three years to get a commercial release for "Katiyabaaz" across almost 50 screens in the country. They now hope the film spreads its light far and wide.
 
"We are sort of challenging the mainstream. We are trying to compete with the Bollywood space," Mustafa told IANS in an interview.
 
The co-directors were never worried - not even when a film festival organiser once told them not to call "Katiyabaaz" a documentary because they are those films that are played before the "real film" begins.
 
"That's the kind of mentality that has existed and somewhere our intention was to break that. We didn't want to go in to formulate Bollywood direction. Someone once told us this is a new genre. This is Bollywood documentary. Fahad and I were wary of accepting that tag," said Kakkar.
 
Made at a budget of over Rs.1 crore, the documentary has an entertainment factor too - courtesy music by "Black Friday" fame Indian Ocean band.
 
"We wanted the audience to be slightly entertained and carry something home. We wanted a band that would capture the flavour of the place (Kanpur)," said Kakkar.
 
With a presenter as strong as production banner Phantom Films, co-owned by filmmaker Anurag Kashyap, Vikramaditya Motwane and Vikas Bahl, and funding from international sources, "Katiyabaaz" had a limited release in cities like Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Kanpur and Lucknow Friday.
 
It clashed with a movie as big as Yash Raj Films' Rani Mukerji-starrer "Mardaani". But the duo is set in their mission to get more eyeballs for their work via word-of-mouth, and eventually, more screenings even beyond India.
 
"We would love to get it released in Pakistan. We will go to Bangladesh and hopefully other South Asian countries. It has travelled to the Lahore and Sindh film festivals. We made small outings there and the response was phenomenal. In Karachi, people said, 'This is not Kanpur. This is Karachi.'"
 
It's this similarity and universality that they hope to cash in on.
 
"The things are so familiar to everyone in the northern belt. Electricity goes off everywhere and after all it is a human story. You could supplant Kanpur with Ghaziabad or Lahore or Meerut - there will be the same story, and that works," said Kakkar.
 
The film, which won the coveted National Award for Best Investigative Film, has already been telecast in European countries and shown in theatres in countries like Italy and Britain. It will be on the TV in the US in November.
 
Bringing the film so far was not easy for the duo, who studied together in the capital's St. Stephen's College. It took them two years to make it and eight more months to bring it to audiences.
 
Funds were a major hurdle.
 
"We had no funds from India which was sad. We had reached out to a couple of people and they are still averse to take that risk in terms of getting returns on their investment. We were lucky to get funds from across the world. We got support from places like Busan and Amsterdam," said Kakkar.
 
"With a documentary, the kind of investment you have to make is a blind chance you take. You don't know if you'll take two or three or four years to tell the story. You have to support your crew on ground and most importantly distribution is such a complex beast that you don't know how to recover all that investment," she added.
 
But having tasted success in bringing their project to shape, they believe times are changing.
 
"Independent cinema is finding place in theatres and we are a part of that change," said Mustafa.

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

Not my fault that my dad's a director: Alia Bhatt

Not my fault that my dad's a director: Alia Bhatt
 Being filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt's daughter doesn't make her privileged. Being successful doesn't make her snobbish. And despite all the luxuries and luck, Alia Bhatt says her survival in filmdom is as difficult as any outsider and she has to work harder too to stay put.

Not my fault that my dad's a director: Alia Bhatt

Thank you for the jokes, says Poonam Pandey

Thank you for the jokes, says Poonam Pandey
Controversial model-actress Poonam Pandey grabbed attention on microblogging platform Twitter, courtesy a "#iHaveAjokeOnPoonamPandey".

Thank you for the jokes, says Poonam Pandey

Alia finds jokes on her GK funny

Alia finds jokes on her GK funny
Jokes on Alia Bhatt spread like wildfire after she gave some bizarre answers to general knowledge questions asked by Karan Johar on his celebrity chat show. But the young actress didn't mind any of the Twitter trolls.

Alia finds jokes on her GK funny

I'm not dating anyone: Varun Dhawan

I'm not dating anyone: Varun Dhawan
People have made these (reports) up obviously. I have lot of friends who are girls...but as far as any romantic liaison is concerned, I genuinely don't have the time right now

I'm not dating anyone: Varun Dhawan

For perfecting Deccani Urdu, Parineeti gives credit to Habib Faisal

For perfecting Deccani Urdu, Parineeti gives credit to Habib Faisal
The recently released trailer of Yash Raj Films' "Daawat-e-Ishq" sees Parineeti Chopra and Anupam Kher speaking Deccani Urdu (Hyderabadi). The actress gives credit to director-writer Habib Faisal for helping them pick up the accent.

For perfecting Deccani Urdu, Parineeti gives credit to Habib Faisal

I am a bad singer, but I sing: Salman Khan

I am a bad singer, but I sing: Salman Khan
Superstar Salman Khan, who has sung the song "Hangover" for his film "Kick", says he is a bad singer but that doesn't stop him from singing.

I am a bad singer, but I sing: Salman Khan