Film industry insiders from India, Europe and Latin America brought a wealth of experience and perspective to a discussion session on "Piracy and original creation" held as part of the ongoing International Film Festival of Kerala - 2015 here.
Celebrated filmmakers Jabbar Patel and Shaji N Karun headed the panel that debated the twin issues from the point of view of the artist, industry and the audience for pirated works, and concluded that a firm stand must be taken in the fight against piracy.
"Today when people tell me, 'We don't get to see your movies anywhere'. I tell them Go on YouTube and you can watch it in HD", Patel said in a lighter vein.
Concurring that the shift in movie piracy from DVDs and VCDs to online uploads, Lohitha Sujith, a representative of the Motion Picture association, said "Piracy threatens both local industry and careers in film. These need to be protected. Copyright must not be a right to copy."
More From This Section
There is a model to be followed in Europe, said Golda Sellam, a French producer and programmer. "In Europe and France, we have a very proud legacy of strict adherence to author rights," Sellam said.
If Europe can do it, so can India, said Patel, who added
that there was political consensus on this issue since "Javed Akhtar's Copyright Amendment bill successfully passed through both Houses of Parliament" without a hitch.
While backing the need to protect original work, Shaji N Karun offered a note of caution, "the laws must be relevant to the situation as it exists today, not what it was 10 years ago. There must a be line drawn between enforcing the protection of intellectual property and safeguarding the critical right to fair use."
Filmmaker Kamal KM, who moderated the panel, agreed, saying that "once this copyright becomes a narrowly defined law, you are denying its capacity for knowledge too".
"If we don't give that respect, and our money, that kind of art can not be sustainable," he added.