Deepa Mehta News
With the growing popularity of OTT shows, it has become excessively important for creators to deliver shows that keeps the audience on their tenterhooks.
Mehta, the creative executive producer and one of the three directors behind the series, says most dystopian films she has seen recently are extremely real.
From 1996 when her film "Fire" showcased a homosexual relationship to 2019 when a web series like "Made In Heaven" has tackled the LGBTQ subject with deft, veteran actress Shabana Azmi has witnessed a change worth applauding.
The Canadian Screen Awards are awards given annually by the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television.
It is a new and sexually liberated India, say those bringing lesbian stories to the screen.
Actress Huma Qureshi can't contain her excitement about being directed by acclaimed filmmaker Deepa Mehta for the "Leila" web series.
Indo-Canadian filmmaker Deepa Mehta swears by Tony Morrison's famous quote, "All art is political" and says artistes across the world will always fight for freedom of expression, trying not to succumb to "self-censorship."
For all its flaws, Reema Kagti's "Gold" must be applauded in the loudest possible way, for bringing to the screen lives of unsung heroes involved in a sport that lacks the glamorous appeal of cricket and football.
The filmmakers had to continue shooting in a different country.
Veteran actress Sharmila Tagore, "Slumdog Millionaire" star Freida Pinto and director Deepa Mehta feature among Indian-origin film personalities invited by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to be part of its new class of members.
Her 1996 controversial film "Fire" has recently cemented a place at the top 10 female content film by British Film Institute.
Shabana Azmi today said that the censor board's decision to shorten the kissing scenes in James Bond movie "Spectre" was arbitrary
Shabana Azmi said the growing intolerance in the country was a worrying factor
Nandita Das feels people in Bollywood still shy away from voicing opinion
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