Netizens angry with FFI; hail ‘All We Imagine as Light’ missed Oscar opportunity
Industry stakeholders and netizens slam FFI for not picking Payal Kapadia's 'All We Imagine as Light' as India's Oscars entry after 'Laapataa Ladies' misses shortlist.
‘Laapataa Ladies’ was India’s official entry for the Best International Feature category at the 2025 Oscars but did not make the shortlist.
Filmmaker Hansal Mehta and Grammy-winning composer Ricky Kej have voiced their criticism of the Film Federation of India (FFI) after Kiran Rao’s ‘Laapataa Ladies’, India’s official entry for Best International Feature at the 97th Academy Awards, failed to make it to the Oscars shortlist.
Hansal Mehta took to X (formerly Twitter) to express his disappointment. He shared a screenshot of the shortlisted films in the Best International Feature category and questioned India’s film “selection” process.
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“Film Federation of India does it again! Their strike rate and selection of films year after year is impeccable,” he wrote.
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Film Federation of India does it again! Their strike rate and selection of films year after year is impeccable. pic.twitter.com/hiwmatzDbW
— Hansal Mehta (@mehtahansal) December 17, 2024
Ricky Kej also shared his thoughts on X, calling ‘Laapataa Ladies’ the “wrong choice” to represent India at the Oscars.
“When are we going to realise… year after year… we are choosing the wrong films? There are so many excellent movies made, and we should be winning the #InternationalFeatureFilm category every year!” he wrote.
“Unfortunately, we live in a ‘Mainstream Bollywood’ bubble, where we cannot look beyond films that we ourselves find entertaining. Instead, we should just look for good films made by filmmakers who are uncompromising in their art… low budget or big budget… star or no star… just great artistic cinema. Below is the poster of #LaapataaLadies. I am sure most Academy voting members dismissed the film just by looking at these,” he added.
In September, the Film Federation of India, led by Jahnu Barua, selected ‘Laapataa Ladies’ from a list of 29 films in several Indian languages, including Payal Kapadia’s All We Imagine As Light and the National Award-winning Aattam.
While ‘Laapataa Ladies’ is out of the race, Shahana Goswami-starrer ‘Santosh’, directed by British-Indian filmmaker Sandhya Suri, is still in contention as the United Kingdom’s official entry. Apart from this, Guneet Monga’s live-action short film ‘Anuja’ has been shortlisted, giving India some hope at the Oscars.
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