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April 22, 2008

Bottled Water – A Fashion Statement!

Without asking me when the hotel servers place bottles of mineral water on my table thinking I would not refuse to accept it - I ask them to take it off immediately and make them bring me ‘saadaa’ (plain) water to drink. I know he might feel that I don’t belong to the elite upwardly moving rich people as yet - but then I don’t care. I think it is a duty of any eatery or hotels to first provide clean drinking water free – even without asking. And if they insist us to buy bottled water for hygiene purpose – then it surely means that there own water isn’t clean enough. If water isn’t clean, how could we expect their food to be clean?

These days in many hotels and restaurants I notice that they don’t provide plain water, and / or deliberately delay serving plain water. They just want you to buy chilled bottled water even if you don’t want to. In fact they serve bottled water much faster.

A couple of decades back it was supposed to be a good joke. People would sarcastically comment about a stingy businessman that – he wouldn’t even mind to sell water! But today it is a reality. Now I will tell you a joke – you will have to buy fresh air to breath in near future!

I think Indian government, which shamelessly collects hefty water tax from every household should assure each and every individual that their water is pure enough to drink - so that people stop suspecting the purity of it, and avoid investing in costly water purifiers. If the government isn’t in a position to provide clean drinking water in spite of charging us the tax – then it is high time we fucked the government itself.

My conviction for non-usage of bottled drinking water became stronger after reading this particular interview of Shekhar Kapur published on few Internet sites. After reading this thought provoking interview I have decided today – that I won’t buy bottled drinking water ever in my life!

I want to rekindle the anger through my films: Shekhar Kapur

Mumbai, April 1 (IANS): After winning over the West with his two Elizabethan sagas, Shekhar Kapur is back in India to 'rekindle the anger' over what's happening in the world.

His next film, 'Paani', is set in 2025 in a city polarised by water scarcity, a world divided into the haves and have-nots - those who have water and those who don't.

'The reason I came back to India is to walk the streets of Mumbai and rekindle the anger that I feel about what's happening to the world,' Kapur, who refuses to drink bottled water, told IANS in an interview.

' 'Paani' is not just about water shortage. It's about the callousness of a world where about three percent of the populace are haves; the rest are have-nots. And what a wonderful way to speak of that disparity through the one resource that we're most squandering away,' said Kapur.

Kapur felt that he got more freedom while making movies in India than the West.

During the making of 'The Four Feathers', 'they (the West) muzzled me. That's one of the reasons why I fled the West. In 'Masoom', 'Mr India' and 'Bandit Queen', which I made in India, I had the freedom to say what I wanted'.

Excerpts from the interview:

Q. What made you return to Mumbai?

A. My life is about yearning for the impossible. It's time to ...create the intellectual property in India. Microsoft has held the copyrights for all intellectual property in Seattle. In Asia we must learn to hold on to our intellectual property. That's one of my big dreams for India.

The comic books based on Indian mythical characters that I've started in the West are all sourced back to India. It's created and implemented by Indians. Until we hold the intellectual property in Asia, we won't prosper. And to those who say Shekhar Kapur has come back home to make a million dollars, I say, I don't want a single cent. I just want to be the conduit of my dreams.

Q. Is your next directorial venture going to be from Mumbai?

A. Yes, I'm finalising the script. I've been desperate to make that film for a long time. The reason I came back to India is to walk the streets of Mumbai and rekindle the anger that I feel about what's happening to the world.

'Paani' is not just about the water shortage. It's about the callousness of a world where about three percent of the populace are haves; the rest are have-nots. And what a wonderful way to speak of that disparity through the one resource that we're most squandering away.

My first story was about this runaway kid who sees this big van of water and is asked to pay for it. It struck me then that the first thing about city life is you've to pay for the water.

Q. Sounds extremely socialistic.

A. Once Devi Lal said something about the way the privileged squander money. 'The rich flush down more water in their toilets than farmers get for a whole day of irrigation.'

Then one day I went to a producer-friend's place on the 13th floor and I was told he was bathing. Go down to the ground floor and you pass through the Dharavi slums and you see hordes of women and children queuing up for a bucket of water. I realised the poor are paying 2,000 times more money for their water than the guy who was in the shower for half an hour.

Q. Is that where 'Paani' was born?

A. Yes, to me water is the basic resource, the next thing to air. Water is already being bottled and sold. Nobody has the right to pollute our water resources. Imagine mineral water being sold at Rs.90! Water as a fashion statement!

I refuse to drink bottled water. I know it's the beginning of the process to privatise water. The ecological cost of bottled water is immense. A story developed in my mind. I had to make a film. My film deals with a city of 20 million people polarised by water scarcity.

Q. Mumbai?

A. I'll shoot it in Mumbai. But it could be any major metro - from Bangkok to New Mexico. The city would be divided into two - below and above the flyovers. The one above would be the cosmopolitan city. That's what's going to happen in the future.

And that upper city takes over the water resources in 'Paani'. They control the water that filters down to the ghettos.

I'm going to make the film contemporary and trendy. I want it to appeal to youngsters.
It's about the exploitation by the first world. And the place where the first world meets the third world is paradise. You get any kind of sexuality and thrills there. I'm setting it in 2025. That isn't so far away.

Q. Who will pay for this dream?

A. The issues involved are so against what the studio style of filmmaking (of the West) represents that I don't want to make 'Paani' with their money. They'll ask for cuts. It happened during 'The Four Feathers'. They muzzled me. That's one of the reasons why I fled the West. In 'Masoom', 'Mr India' and 'Bandit Queen', which I made in India, I had the freedom to say what I wanted.

Posted by Kenni at April 22, 2008 09:59 AM

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