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Women in Cinema Collective | |
Founded | 1 November 2017 |
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Headquarters | Stadium Link Road, Kochi, India[1] |
Location |
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Website | wccollective |
Women in Cinema Collective, abbreviated as WCC, is an organisation for women working in the Malayalam cinema industry.[2]
On 1 November 2017, Women in Cinema Collective Foundation was registered as a society in Kerala following the sexual assault case involving a prominent film actress in the Malayalam Cinema.[3][4] The organisation aims to bring social awareness against misogyny practices and intends to be the unified voice for the welfare of women artists by promoting gender neutral practices in the Malayalam movie industry.
Women in Cinema Collective sought the intervention of Kerala High Court to ensure formation of Internal Complaints Committees (ICC) and strict implementation of Protection of Women from Sexual Harassment at Workplace (PoSH) Act, 2013 in all Malaylam film production units. Kerala High Court announced the verdict to adher to the PoSH Act in all film units - which was a significant milestone after the establishment of WCC.[5]
Hema committee formed by the state government to study about the problems faced by women in Malayalam film industry, was a direct result of WCC's request to the Chief Minister. The committee submitted its report in December 2019 but the report was only made available to the public in August 2024. The report described 17 forms of exploitation faced by women in the film industry including sexual harassment by male actors and unleashed a major political storm in the state upon its release.[6]
Actor Parvathy Thiruvothu, a member of AMMA and WCC, was one of the first to openly state that films with misogynist dialogues should not be encouraged. She named the senior actor Mammootty’s film Kasaba (2016) as one such movie. She requested that senior actors like Mammootty who is much respected and has a wide fan following should henceforth refrain from acting in movies that has such misogynistic scripts for the betterment of the society at large.[10] Parvathy's viewpoint received mostly criticism but also some support from the film fraternity and she became the victim of cyber-bullying. She was viciously trolled and abused by the actor’s fans and two of them were arrested by the Kerala Police following a complaint from Parvathy.[11]
Film Employees Federation of Kerala (FEFKA) rolls out its own women's wing. Bhagyalakshmi, the chairperson of the newly created women's wing, criticised WCC in being selective in its approach. The new women's wing which in many ways is looked upon as a parallel association to WCC, is claimed to be a platform where concerns of women technicians can be voiced out and they would act as arbitrators with the concerned producers to sort them out.[12]