The director of the first Sanskrit film on a social theme, said films made merely for the sake of entertainment and pleasure cannot sustain.
"Films based on artistic reality may not get producers and commercial success. In that case it is the duty of other sources like governments and film societies to come forward and ensure such films are made and released in theatres for an audience interested in good cinema," he said at the first Guwahati International Film Festival here.
"According to me, art is not an industry alone. It is a part of intellectual creative consciousness and I am not ready to compromise with art," he said.
Released in 2015, 'Ishti' is only the fourth Sanskrit film to be made in the country, after 'Adi Shankaracharya' and 'Bhagavad Gita', both directed by G V Iyer, and 'Priyamasanam' by Vinod Mankara, based on the 17th century poet-scholar Unnayi Warrier.
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The film had run into trouble with the Kerala Brahman Sabha filing a case against the filmmaker and Censor Board for hurting sentiments of the community. The case is still pending.
"It has created problems, no doubt, as the film cannot be released in theatres, though it is being screened at film festivals. But it is not a figment of my imagination, but a part of reality that existed in the early part of the last century," he said.
He, however, said the task would not be easy as it is very difficult to find producers and distributors.
"Sanskrit is not state-specific but is a language of the entire country. All other languages have a platform but in all these years, only four films have been made in Sanskrit. I hope there is a change in the future," he added.