Key Points

Arnab Chatterjee faced nightmarish conditions while shooting Murderbaad in West Bengal due to questionable union rules. The director-producer revealed how local mandates forced him to hire redundant crews and endure financial exploitation. His crew including veteran cinematographer Binod Pradhan suffered through 25-hour shifts and hotel lockdowns over payment disputes. Despite these challenges, the film completed production and is set for 2025 release.

Key Points: Murderbaad director Arnab Chatterjee exposes Bengal film union's unfair rules

  • Murderbaad crew faced 25-hour shifts due to union-mandated cuts
  • Bengali film union forces hiring of unnecessary local technicians
  • Binod Pradhan among 180 crew members trapped in payment dispute
  • Budget doubled due to West Bengal's restrictive filming policies
3 min read

'Murderbaad' director Arnab Chatterjee sheds light on strange rule of Bengali artistes union

Director Arnab Chatterjee reveals shocking Bengal film union mandates that doubled Murderbaad's budget and harassed crew including Binod Pradhan

"The local federation has self-declared rules forcing redundant crews on producers - Arnab Chatterjee"

Mumbai, July 16

Writer-director-producer Arnab Chatterjee, who is awaiting the release of his upcoming film ‘Murderbaad’, has shared an anecdote from the film’s shoot. He shared how he encountered the logistical and financial difficulties faced during the film’s first schedule in West Bengal.

Arnab, who himself belongs to the Bengali community, revealed that the initial shoot in Bagdogra, Siliguri, became a deeply challenging experience due to complications involving local federation rules, redundant crew mandates, and last-minute harassment that impacted the entire unit, including industry veterans like cinematographer Binod Pradhan.

Talking about the same, he said, “It was the very first schedule of the film, and we were a unit of nearly 180 travelling from Mumbai to Bagdogra (Siliguri). The local federation in Kolkata has a self-declared rule of a certain number of technicians which a producer has to hire during shoot in Bengal. This rule becomes extremely unfair for producers with budget constraints, irrespective of Bengali or Hindi films”.

The director said that the whole Bangla film fraternity is suffering from this issue, since the business is already affected post-Covid.

He went on , “So you end up with your already signed-up crew from Mumbai, an additional crew from Kolkata whose services are redundant, and in addition to that, you have to bear travel, food and stay expenses for the whole schedule obviously. To go with this, there are several local line-production loopholes which are exercised to take advantage of producers. I realised this game on the second day of shoot, and took an overnight call to cut short the schedule to 4 days from 7, which didn’t sit right with the locals”.

Although a bold decision, it pushed the crew to its limits, as it resulted in a 25-hour long shift without breaks, just so he could finish the pending scenes and leave for Mumbai with the unit immediately. To add to the harassment, his entire unit was locked up in several hotels they were lodged in, for an instant demand to clear all payments, and there was no time given to tally expenses.

He further mentioned, “More than 100 tickets in waste, several crew members in distress, including my senior DOP, Binod Pradhan. As the director while on set, and producer after pack-up, it was very taxing to address all these production hassles on spot, and simultaneously direct the film keeping shoot quality and productivity in place. I’m glad we overcame this schedule and despite budgets shooting up to nearly double of what was on paper, we managed to resume shoot soon after returning from Bagdogra”.

“While making an independent film, if the very first schedule jolts you financially, you wire yourself differently for the remaining shoot as producer-director. All of this is part of the learning process, and in hindsight, I wish all of them well who have unintentionally taught me the harder way”, he added.

Despite the setback, ‘Murderbaad’ was able to resume filming shortly after the truncated Bagdogra schedule.

‘Murderbaad’ stars Sharib Hashmi, Nakul Sachdev, Kanikka, Manish Chaudhari, Saloni Batra, Amole Gupte, and Aanjjan Srivastav. The film is backed by Reliance Entertainment and produced under Chatterjee’s ACjee Entertainment banner with cinematography by Binod Pradhan and music by Rickie.

The film is set to release in cinemas on July 18, 2025.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone from Kolkata, I'm ashamed to hear about this harassment. Our film industry should welcome outsiders, not create hurdles. Wishing Murderbaad team all the success! 🤞
A
Aman W
Respect for Binod Pradhan sir for sticking through this mess. He's a legend who has shot films like Devdas, and shouldn't have to face such unprofessionalism. Shows his dedication to craft!
S
Sarah B
While I sympathize with the director, locking up the crew seems extreme. There must be better ways to protest than holding people hostage. Both sides need better conflict resolution mechanisms.
K
Karthik V
This is exactly why many producers avoid shooting in Bengal despite beautiful locations. Government should intervene and modernize these archaic rules. Tourism and film industry both suffer because of such practices.
N
Nisha Z
As a film student, this scares me! If veterans like Binod Pradhan face such issues, what hope do newcomers have? 😔 We need more transparency in regional film industries across India.

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