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Filmmaker delves into rape culture with unflinching new feature

Filmmaker Deepa Mehta has never shied away from controversial, complex, or otherwise complicated topics.
1208 Reel Anatomy of Violence

Filmmaker Deepa Mehta has never shied away from controversial, complex, or otherwise complicated topics.

Mehta鈥檚 previous films have tackled misogyny and ostracism (Water), homosexuality (Fire), religious intolerance (Earth), and organized crime in the Indo-Canadian community (Beeba Boys) 鈥 and she鈥檚 received critical acclaim and numerous awards for her efforts, including a Governor General's Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award for Film and an appointment to the Order of Canada.

With her latest film, Anatomy of Violence 鈥 which had its Western Canadian premiere this past weekend at the Whistler Film Festival 鈥 the writer and director takes a sharp look at the rape culture that seemingly permeates modern-day India.

Based on the true incident from 2012 in which a young woman was gang-raped inside a bus in New Delhi, Mehta and 11 actors collaborated on a fictional dramatization that focuses on the lives, values, and poverty of the rapists.

鈥淚f you keep on looking at the rapists as just monsters, they become the other; but if you look at them as a part of society with the lens of humanity, then actually we have control,鈥 Mehta tells Reel People, between screenings at the Whistler Film Festival, where the Toronto resident served as head of the Borsos Competition for Best Canadian Feature Film jury.

Mehta was in Delhi in December 2012 when the world first learned about the horrific gang rape of 23-year-old physiotherapy student Jyoti Singh. The attack ultimately claimed the young woman鈥檚 life and compelled tens of thousands of Delhi residents into the streets to protest systemic misogyny and violence against women.

Mehta was one of the protestors.

鈥淚 felt it was horrific and it was brutal, and I didn鈥檛 think about making a film at that point. That was the last thing in my mind,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t took about three years to actually look back at it, because I didn鈥檛 want to revictimize the victim. That was extremely important. And why would I want to make the film? I had to be very clear of that in my own head.鈥

But Mehta wanted to 鈥渨iden the dialogue.鈥

鈥淚t has to be about prevention,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really important that we just don鈥檛 stick to monsters and victims. We have to talk about how it keeps on happening.鈥

Thus, Anatomy of Violence seeks to understand the confluence of events and factors that create perpetrators of sexual violence.

鈥淵ou have patriarchy, you have misogyny, you have gender inequality, you have a guy just using physical power 鈥 and having the permission somewhere feeling that he can do it,鈥 says Mehta, whose film does not depict the rape out of respect for the victim. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not that he had a genetic monster gene. He鈥檚 somebody鈥檚 son. He鈥檚 somebody鈥檚 brother. And he is what he is because it made him like that.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not that he鈥檚 not accountable for what he鈥檚 done, because of course he is,鈥 she continues, 鈥渁nd it鈥檚 brutal and it鈥檚 horrible and of course he should be punished. But the point is how do we stop it in the future? How are you going to stop a little rapist being actually nurtured?

听鈥淭he conversation has started. If we start the conversation, then there鈥檚 hope.鈥

For more about Anatomy of Violence, click .

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