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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 08:35 UTC
  • UTC08:35
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← The MonexusCulture

The Quiet Revolution: How India's Independent Filmmakers Are Rewriting the Rules of Cinema

As streaming platforms reshape India's entertainment landscape, a new generation of independent filmmakers is carving out space beyond the commercial mainstream — and finding audiences that never existed before.

As streaming platforms reshape India's entertainment landscape, a new generation of independent filmmakers is carving out space beyond the commercial mainstream — and finding audiences that never existed before. Al Jazeera / Photography

The Indian Express reported on 30 May 2026 on Tribeny Rai and her film Shape of Momo as an example of what the publication called championing independent cinema in India. That phrase — independent cinema — covers a good deal of ground in a country that produces more films annually than any other nation on earth. But what it describes is real, and it is growing.

India's film industry is not one industry. It is several, layered on top of one another, operating on different economics and speaking to different audiences. At the base sits the commercial mainstream: Hindi-language studios producing films built around stars, festivals, and television rights. Above that sits the middle tier of urban multiplex cinema, where content has slowly begun to matter as much as star power. And then there is the space that Tribeny Rai occupies — small-budget, often regional-language, auteur-driven work that reaches audiences not through theatre releases but through film festivals, selective streaming, and word-of-mouth.

The economics of this last category have shifted considerably over the past decade. Streaming platforms — Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and their domestic equivalents — have become significant buyers of non-commercial content. What once required a theatrical release to find any audience now has a viable distribution path. That shift has not solved the problems of independent filmmaking in India. But it has changed the equation for creators willing to work within tighter constraints.

Independent cinema in India has historically faced a structural challenge: the cost of theatrical distribution favours scale, which favours commercial logic. Films that do not fit into established commercial categories — genre, star, language — have struggled to recover production costs through traditional channels. The result was a paradox: a country producing enormous volumes of film had, for much of its post-independence history, very little space for the kind of auteur-driven, formally experimental work that flourishes in European and East Asian cinema traditions.

What has changed is not the existence of that gap — it persists — but the visibility of the work being done to fill it. Directors working in Malayalam, Marathi, Manipuri, and other regional languages have built international reputations over the past fifteen years. Films from Kerala and the northeast in particular have attracted festival attention and critical acclaim that would have been much harder to find a generation ago. The infrastructure of international film festivals — Cannes, Berlin, Toronto, Busan — now actively seeks Indian work that falls outside the commercial mainstream. That attention has a practical effect: it generates international pre-sales, streaming rights, and the kind of profile that domestic distributors previously withheld from work without star casts.

There are limits to this optimism. Independent cinema in India still operates with minimal institutional support compared to its counterparts in France, South Korea, or Japan. State film funding bodies exist but have historically prioritised commercial production. The tax regime for film exhibition has changed slowly. And the streaming platforms that have opened distribution channels are also commercial entities with their own algorithmic preferences — they favour content that generates viewership data, which does not always align with the interests of formally ambitious or politically challenging work.

The structural question for Indian independent cinema is whether the streaming era represents a genuine expansion of possibility or merely a new set of constraints wearing different clothes. The honest answer is both. Films that would have been unreleasable a decade ago now find audiences. At the same time, the economics of streaming create pressure toward certain kinds of content — the accessible, the easily marketed, the generically labelled — that can sit uncomfortably with the ambitions of the filmmakers who make the work.

Tribeny Rai's Shape of Momo sits somewhere in this tension. The film — whether it is a documentary, a narrative feature, or some hybrid form — represents work that exists because the conditions to make it have improved, even if they remain imperfect. That it has been noted by a publication as prominent as The Indian Express is itself a marker of the changed landscape. A decade ago, independent Indian cinema received coverage primarily in specialist publications. Today it appears in mainstream general-interest outlets. That shift reflects not just the quantity of work being made but a slow change in what Indian audiences and media are willing to take seriously.

The stakes, for those working in this space, are not abstract. Independent cinema does not merely produce entertainment that differs from the mainstream — it produces the work that trains audiences to expect more, and it creates the directors who will shape Indian visual culture over the next thirty years. The question is whether the infrastructure that currently exists — streaming, festivals, international co-production — is robust enough to sustain that development over the long term. The evidence is mixed but not discouraging. More space exists now than existed in 2015. Whether it continues to expand depends on commercial incentives that do not always align with cultural ones.

Tribeny Rai's Shape of Momo was covered by The Indian Express on 30 May 2026. The article cited in this desk note characterised the work as representative of independent cinema's growing presence in Indian public discourse. This publication's own framing emphasises the structural conditions — streaming, festival infrastructure, regional-language visibility — that have made work like Rai's more viable than it was a generation ago, while noting the constraints that persist.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire