Hindi
Film industry wants separate courts to deal with pirates
NEW DELHI: A law on the lines of the Goonda Act of Tamil Nadu or the Maharashtra Prevention of Dangerous Act should be enacted by the Centre to deal with the menace of piracy which is eating into the vitals of the film industry, according to a memorandum submitted to President Pratibha Devisingh Patil.
Film Federation of India Honorary General Secretary Sushama Shiromanee told indiantelevision.com that Patil gave a patient hearing to the 22-member film delegation led by FFI President Jitendra Jain which met her here and immediately forwarded the Memorandum to the Government for action.
Shiromanee said the President agreed that the entertainment sector had become a major force in earning foreign exchange and also in terms of the tax revenues it paid to the government.
Shiromanee who is also Senior Vice President in the Indian Motion Pictures Producers Association said the Maharashtra Government’s law had been forwarded to the centre and it was now up to the Union Home Ministry to act upon drafting a similar law, since the Copyright Act had failed to check the rampant piracy of entertainment software.
The industry has also demanded a separate Court to deal with issues linked to the film industry, apart from a special police cell.
Shiromanee denied that pirates continued to thrive because there was no unity in the film fraternity and many filmmakers were hands in glove with the law-breakers. In fact, she said different sections of the industry had met the Information and Broadcasting Minister and officials several times in recent years to find ways to tackle this menace.
The delegation also told the President that while the Government had constituted several consultative committees for all sectors including one recently for the media, it had failed to do so for the film industry. Furthermore, the government had either not received or not acted upon the reports of the five core groups set up by former Information and Broadcasting Minister Priyaranjan Dasmunsi.
Shiromanee said that the FFI was planning to give due place of honour to those who had been awarded the Dadasaheb Phalke Awards for Lifetime Contribution and even those who had served silently without expecting recognition, for the growth of Indian cinema.
While the industry has demanded uniformity in taxation – particularly entertainment tax – vis-?-vis the film industry, Shiromanee said the FFI had written to several state governments to ensure this since the centre had maintained that Cinema was a state subject.
The memorandum demanded abolition of service tax since there was no transfer of property as defined in the Finance Acts of 2007 or 2008.
The industry also wants that the counterveiling duty on set top boxes should be exempted for the next ten years to help the television industry to grow.
It reiterated the need for complete excise duty exemption on import of colour jumbo rolls and total abolition of excise and customs duty for import of broadcast equipment.
Taxes on raw stock should be reduced in the case of small budget films, Shiromanee said, to help the growth of good cinema.
She said the base of the fringe benefit tax charged by hotels from film crews should be reduced from 20 to five per cent or completely abolished.
Replying to a question, Shiromanee criticized the exemption of entertainment tax on ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ in Delhi after it won the Oscars awards and not on the basis of the quality of the film. She said this also exposed the attitude towards Indian films which seldom received tax exemptions even if they won awards outside or within the country.
Among others, the delegation included FFI Vice Presidents Ravi Kotarakara and Sangram Shirke, eminent filmmakers T P Aggarwal and Jahnu Barua, and short filmmaker Ramesh Tekwani, apart from FFI Secretary General Supran Sen.
Hindi
Marico founder Harsh Mariwala’s book Harsh Realities set for film adaptation
Almighty Motion Picture taps Karan Vyas to script Marico story
MUMBAI: Almighty Motion Picture is turning its lens on India Inc., with plans to adapt Harsh Realities: The Making of Marico into a screen project. The story charts the rise of Harsh Mariwala, the chairman and founder of Marico, and is currently in early development, according to a report by Variety.
Writer Karan Vyas, known for his work on Scam 1992, Scoop and Made in India – A Titan Story, is attached to pen the screenplay. The project continues the studio’s growing interest in real-life Indian narratives that blend business with human drama.
At the heart of the story lies a defining moment in 1987, when Mariwala chose to step away from the family-run Bombay Oil Industries and strike out on his own. What followed was not just the creation of a company, but the reinvention of a legacy. Marico would go on to become a global FMCG player, with brands like Parachute, Saffola, Set Wet and Livon becoming household names, reaching nearly one in three Indians.
The source material, co-authored by Mariwala and renowned business strategist Ram Charan, offers more than a boardroom chronicle. It captures the grit behind the growth, the risks behind the rewards and the leadership lessons forged along the way.
The adaptation aims to move beyond balance sheets and brand milestones, focusing instead on the person behind the enterprise. Expect a narrative that leans into the emotional stakes of entrepreneurship, where decisions are as personal as they are professional.
Today, Marico draws about a quarter of its revenue from international markets across Asia and Africa, reflecting its steady transformation from a domestic player into a multinational force. Yet, if the makers have their way, the screen version will remind audiences that every global success story begins with a leap of faith.
With development set to begin soon, this is one business story that may just trade spreadsheets for storytelling, and profit margins for moments that linger








