Veteran filmmaker Hansal Mehta, known for his unflinching storytelling and recent successes like Scam 1992, has stirred a wave of reflection across the entertainment world with a searing post on his X profile. The powerful piece, written in poetic prose, is a scathing critique of the culture of sycophancy, compromise, and hollow rewards that often dominate the film and media industries. Shared shortly after revisiting the painful memory of his 2000 film Dil Pe Mat Le Yaar — a commercial failure that left him financially and emotionally bankrupt — the post feels deeply personal, yet widely resonant.
"TO WHOMSOEVER IT MAY CONCERN ABOUT WHATSOEVER YOU MAY CALL ‘IT’ - It buys you awards - plastic trophies polished with borrowed spit. It buys you freedom - from questions, from conscience, from the burden of standing tall. It buys you wealth - a glittering leash you mistake for a crown. It buys you favours - the kind that expire quicker than milk. It garners invites - to rooms where backs are bent lower than chandeliers. It garners protection - until the protector finds a fresher pair of knees. It showers you with praise - manufactured in bulk, sold wholesale to the highest groveler. It gives you support - like a crutch made of sugar. It gives you security - a fortress of mirrors that cracks when you breathe. But what about the spine? Ah, the poor spine - sold cheap, traded daily, discarded like a receipt no one keeps. The economy is booming. The vertebrae are bankrupt."
In this blistering passage, Mehta dismantles the illusion of success — where awards are “plastic,” praise is “manufactured,” and support is as fragile as a “crutch made of sugar.” The imagery is brutal yet poetic, a deliberate act of exposing the underbelly of industries that demand conformity, reward flattery, and discard integrity. Mehta doesn’t name names, nor does he have to — his words speak to a systemic rot, a shared understanding among those who’ve witnessed or endured the price of staying silent, or of playing along.
By ending with the metaphor “The economy is booming. The vertebrae are bankrupt,” Mehta contrasts material success with moral decay. The post suggests that while the outward markers of prosperity — awards, invites, security — are thriving, the internal compass, the “spine,” is being eroded daily. It's a chilling observation, implying that this isn't just a personal lament, but a commentary on the ethical bankruptcy of a larger system — not just in cinema, but in any arena where truth is inconvenient and power is transactional.
Currently working on Scam 2010: The Subrata Roy Saga, Mehta’s upcoming project may well be an extension of this critique — once again diving into themes of illusion, power, and downfall. With this post, he appears to draw a firm line in the sand, refusing to barter his spine for borrowed praise. It’s a statement not just of discontent, but of intent — an artist choosing discomfort over compromise, and reflection over reward.
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