New Delhi, Jul 21 (PTI) Scriptwriter-turned-director Abbas Tyrewala whose
debut film 'Jaane Tu ya Jaane Na' hit the bull's eye at the Box Office, says
writers are still given raw deal and suffer from an identity crisis in the
film industry.

"Not many know that the script of the film was rejected four times by some
of the big corporate producers," says Tyrewala.

Script writers often remain unnoticed in Mumbai's film industry, but the
rejection which Tyrewala received seems a little unfair considering his
reputation for penning scripts for some of the most successful and acclaimed
films like 'Maqbool' and 'Munnabhai MBBS'.

"The problem is that the people who are supposed to evaluate the scripts at
the corporate houses know very little about cinema and unless that changes,
we are going to have bad films," he adds.

Talking about the film, he says, "The script appealed to Aamir so much that
he decided to produce it. A R Rahman too liked it and decided to give music
at a very nominal renumeration." So, what kind of challenges did the newly
turned director face in his almost nine year long career as a script writer?
"The biggest challenge is when a very good script is not made into a good
film or get stuck at the pre-production stage due to financial problems.

"That happens too often in a scriptwriter's life and the film industry is
not organised enough to compensate the writer for the loss. We don't even
get back our scripts sometimes," says the writer.

However, he adds that the fault is not entirely of the film industry but
some script writers are also responsible to some extent. PTI
http://www.ptinews.com/pti%5Cptisite.nsf/0/1E16473D4C4D95F06525748D0029C680?OpenDocument

-- 
regards,
Vithur

ARR -- The Sweet Cube always

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