Questions For MD Swati

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

~ The Maharashtra Film Stage and Cultural Development Corporation Limited (MFSCDC) showcased the highlights of its film city infrastructure in Mumbai at the ongoing International Film Festival of India (IFFI), emphasising how its signature cinema ecosystem provided a fillip to regional cinema, film infrastructure and talent development. The Corporation’s participation highlights how Maharashtra, anchored by a multilingual film culture, continues to function not only as one of India’s most influential creative hubs in the country, but also as a nursery for regional cinema.~

  1. Bollywood is already so entrenched in Mumbai. What was the need to develop a Film City?
  • Even though Mumbai is the heart of Bollywood, filmmaking demands controlled, reliable spaces and the city’s increasing urbanisation has made outdoor shooting challenging. A Film City was developed to bring all essential production resources together in one professionally managed ecosystem. Our vision is to provide a larger space where sets can be erected without legal or logistical hurdles.
  • At Mumbai, Karjat and Kolhapur we have ready-made permanent locations such as forests, lakes, bungalows, roads, and villages.
  • We have the supportive infrastructure like sound stages, equipment, security, and post-production facilities. A single-window clearance system to reduce delays and costs. In short, a Film City is created to streamline the production process and ensure filmmakers don’t have to battle congestion, permissions, and rising real- estate challenges across Mumbai.

2. What are the positive spin-offs for a district/state/region that hosts a Film City?

  • Hosting a Film City has multiple economic and cultural benefits, generates steady local employment; technicians, carpenters, costume designers, caterers, drivers and boosts tourism, especially if iconic sets or locations become public attractions. Encourages ancillary industries such as hospitality, transport, and equipment rental and draws investment from production houses, OTT platforms, and ad agencies. This helps promote local culture, art, and language through increased content creation
    and encourages start-ups in animation, VFX, post-production, and creative technology.
  • Also improves local infrastructure; roads, communication networks, utilities, creates a streamlined administrative ecosystem for permissions and shooting logistics. Overall, a Film City acts as an economic multiplier and a creative catalyst for the region.

3. What incentives does a Film City offer to film industry stakeholders?

  • Film Cities typically offer a mix of financial and infrastructural incentives subsidised shooting rates for long schedules, discounted packages for regional cinema or student filmmakers and state-backed rebates on production costs (where applicable).
  • Basically controlled environments that save time and reduce unpredictability, access to locations that would be difficult or impossible to secure in urban areas.
  • Basically, single-window permissions for shooting, security, parking, logistics and crowd management. Availability of skilled crew in-house or through affiliated networks. The goal is to reduce costs, increase efficiency, and simplify the entire production lifecycle.

4. Do you think hosting a Film City in Goa will create a positive spin-off for Konkani regional
cinema?

  • Yes, it has the potential to be transformative—if implemented with a clear strategy. A Film City in Goa could provide affordable, accessible infrastructure for Konkani filmmakers attract regional talent who currently migrate to Mumbai or Hyderabad, increase visibility of Konkani stories by bringing in more productions and co- productions, encourage film schools, workshops, and training programs, post film festivals, cultural exchange, and tourism linked to cinema.
  • Goa already has strong tourism branding and a globally recognised film festival. A Film City could anchor a full-fledged creative economy, giving Konkani cinema a stronger platform and more consistent output.

5.In the age of AI, where technology can create videos on demand, will Film Cities remain
relevant?

  • AI will change filmmaking, but it will not eliminate the need for Film Cities—rather, it
    will evolve their purpose.
  • Why Film Cities Will Still Matter; Physical sets offer authenticity that is hard to replicate for certain genres, actors and directors still rely on real environments for performance chemistry, large-scale productions (historicals, action films, big-budget dramas) need physical infrastructure. Many international productions prefer real locations for tax incentives and credibility.
  • How Film Cities Must Evolve; Integrate virtual production stages (LED walls, XR environments), Offer hybrid spaces for AI-assisted filmmaking and CGI, provide training centres for AI tools, unreal Engine, VFX, and volumetric capture, create data and asset libraries for AI-driven pre-visualisation. Film Cities of the future will be mixed-reality hubs, combining physical sets with cutting-edge virtual production
    technologies.