Basu recalls that a parallel film society movement, focusing on non-fiction, had started taking shape in different parts of India from the first decade of the new century. There’s Pedestrian Pictures in Bengaluru, Vikalp in Mumbai, Marupakkam in Chennai, Samadrusti in Bhubaneswar, and Akhra in Ranchi. Calcutta’s strong film culture of the 1950s and 1960s that focused on fiction, died down by the 1980s, and no such initiative of documentaries ever consolidated. “We felt a vacuum in West Bengal. So many documentaries and short films were being made across India, but such screenings do not get space in theatres, TV channels and digital platforms. Moreover, the underprivileged hardly have access to these platforms,” says Basu.