The operator of a troubled observation center in Mumbai abandons police protocol and begins investigating what happened on his own.
Privacy is a human privilege. Valued, appreciated. He craved. It is precious to all of us.
And yet it seems to be diminishing not only by the day, but by the hour. In fact, in the micro-second captured on a security camera frame.
Is our privacy really being destroyed? Becoming an alarmingly scarce commodity? Face-down and inexorably headed for irrevocable extinction?
I don’t play “Chicken Little”…
but even if the sky is not falling, to ignore that at least a significant crack has occurred is to bury your head in the clouds.
Writer/director Sudeep Kanwal provokes and unsettles his audience in his yet-to-be-released film simply titled ‘Privacy’. I recently spoke with Kanwall about his fascinating chronicle, which explores what can happen when evil mortal machinations infect a high-tech surveillance system supposedly created for the greater good.
Here’s our conversation on my YouTube channel:
Privacy is currently on the film festival circuit looking for a distributor and a later release date.
Let’s do this!
You can watch all of my independent entertainment interviews PLUS film reviews on my YouTube channel at this link:
JOHN SMISTAD (“TQFC”) Film Reviews & Interviews – YouTube
“DATA PROTECTION” (2023): Exposing the wrong committed is our inherent right
- acting – 7.5/10
- Cinematography/Visual Effects – 7.5/10
- Plot/Scenario – 7.5/10
- Setting/Theme – 7.75/10
User review
( vote)
“DATA PROTECTION” (2023): Exposing the wrong committed is our inherent right
The operator of a troubled observation center in Mumbai abandons police protocol and begins investigating what happened on his own.