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Madras Cafe Filmyzilla -
Opening vignette Begin with a concise, vivid scene: the midnight release of a digital copy of Madras Cafe on a piracy site, its torrent page populated by thousands of seeders and comments. Contrast: a sleepless filmmaker watching analytics drop as an unauthorized stream spreads, and an urban viewer in a smaller city discovering the film for the first time via a free download. Use this moment to frame competing narratives—access vs. rights, exposure vs. loss.
Synopsis "Madras Cafe Filmyzilla" is an investigative feature that traces the intersection of one acclaimed political-thriller film, the notorious piracy site Filmyzilla, and the broader cultural and economic forces that shape how Indian cinema is consumed, monetized, and contested online. The piece connects film history, piracy mechanisms, creators’ responses, legal frameworks, and audience behavior to reveal why a single film’s online afterlife matters for the industry and for cultural memory. Madras Cafe Filmyzilla
Editorial Board
Greg de Cuir Jr
University of Arts Belgrade
Giuseppe Fidotta
University of Groningen
Ilona Hongisto
University of Helsinki
Judith Keilbach
Universiteit Utrecht
Skadi Loist
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Toni Pape
University of Amsterdam
Sofia Sampaio
University of Lisbon
Maria A. Velez-Serna
University of Stirling
Andrea Virginás
Babeș-Bolyai University
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NECS–European Network for Cinema and Media Studies is a non-profit organization bringing together scholars, archivists, programmers and practitioners.
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