HomeEntertainmentLaapataa Ladies vs All We Imagine as Light Controversy Explained: Why India doesn't get the Oscars

Laapataa Ladies vs All We Imagine as Light Controversy Explained: Why India doesn't get the Oscars

Oscars 2025 watch: India selects Kiran Rao's sophomore Hindi film Laapataa Ladies as its official Oscar entry while sidelining two award-winning Malayalam films, Anand Ekarshi's National Award winner Aattam and Payal Kapadia's Cannes Grand Prix winner All We Imagine As Light

September 30, 2024 / 13:08 IST
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Payal Kapadia's Cannes Grand Prix winner 'All We Imagine as Light' has lost out to Kiran Rao's 'Laapataa Ladies' as India's official 2025 Oscar entry.
Payal Kapadia's Cannes Grand Prix winner 'All We Imagine as Light' has lost out to Kiran Rao's 'Laapataa Ladies' as India's official 2025 Oscar entry.

History loves to repeat itself in India. Come fall, the Oscar-submission jury falls a little more in esteem by picking an Oscar entry that, in all likelihood, will lose out in the Shortlist race. The reason for that is beyond what the film shows on the screen.

In India, irony dies a thousand deaths every day. It is ironic that National Award-winning and internationally critically acclaimed Assamese director Jahnu Barua, who was the jury chair of India’s Oscar submission committee, would along with 12 other jury members would snub both a National Award-winning and Cannes Grand Prix-winning films to pick a mainstream popular favourite as India’s official entry. Ironic because he has been on the other side nearly two decades ago. In 2006, when Barua’s Hindi film Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara was snubbed for Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra’s Rang De Basanti as India’s Oscar entry, his producer and actor Anupam Kher stepped up to egg Barua to send his film on his own to the Oscars. As the jury chair, Barua should have done better.

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For a country that produces the maximum number of films annually, India has landed only three nominations in the best International Feature Oscar category over the last 77 years — with Mehboob Khan’s Mother India in 1957 (India’s first submission), Mira Nair’s Salaam Bombay! in 1988, and Ashutosh Gowariker’s Lagaan in 2001. The country still awaits its first win in the international category.

Earlier this week, the 13-member jury, constituted by the influential industry body Film Federation of India (FFI), ‘unanimously’ selected as India’s official Oscar entry the Kiran Rao-directed popular commercial film Laapataa Ladies, from a pool of 29 films (that demonstrates Hindi supremacy with 12 Bollywood films), including — hold your breathAnimal, Chhota Bheem, Hanu-Man, among others. This longlist (not a selection, any producer who can pay a hefty sum of Rs 1.25 lakh + GST, can submit their film to the FFI) also contained two worthy films — Payal Kapadia’s Grand Prix-winning All We Imagine as Light on systemic social traps for women in India and female friendships and Anand Ekarshi’s National Award-winning Aattam on sexual harassment — which were shorn off the final-five shortlist: Laapataa Ladies and Srikanth in Hindi, Vaazhai and Thangalaan in Tamil, and Ullozhukku (Malayalam).