Advertisement

The dystopian world of Deepa Mehta’s “Leila’ is not a subliminal, but a blunt reminder of the world that could be in reality. An acclaimed filmmaker, whose brand of cinema has been fearless in confronting the harsh truths of the society, says showcasing reality is merely cautionary and not meant to be scary.

“Leila”, adapted from Prayaag Akbar’s eponymous novel, is a dark and ominous tale set in the fictional world of Aryavarta, where a leader’s motto delves on ‘peace by segregation’ and where clean water and air become luxury. It’s a world where there’s suffering, totalitarian rules of engagement and an obsession with ‘purity’.

To many, it may seem a world that doesn’t seem far from the near future.

Advertisement

Deepa Mehta On Leila Propagating ‘Hinduphobia’: “First Watch The Show, Then We’ll Talk”

Mehta, the creative executive producer and one of the three directors behind the series, says most dystopian films she has seen recently are extremely real.

“Whether it’s the ‘Blade Runner’, ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ or it is the world of ‘Leila’… they are all very real. Every dystopian film that is based on a book, a part of it is actually set in the present. Otherwise it wouldn’t be relevant to anybody,” the Indo-Canadian director told IANS in an interview.

Heaps of garbage, toxic air, lack of water, religious divide… there’s a lot more that the show touches upon, apart from having a mother’s search for her daughter, at the core of the story. It seems a tad scary.