Regional Cinema Is the Opportunity: Writing for Gujarati Film
Everyone points at the big industry and its closed doors. Meanwhile the real opening is right here, closer to the ground, hungry for the exact stories an outsider can tell.
Stop staring at the big industry and its guarded gates. The opportunity for a new screenwriter is not there, where ten thousand people fight for one door. It is closer to home, in regional cinema, and for a writer from Gujarat that means Gujarati film. I do not say this as a consolation prize for people who cannot reach the top. I say it because it is, coldly and practically, the faster road, and almost nobody talks about it that way.
I was born in Jetpur and I live in Ahmedabad, and I write in Gujarati, Hindi, and English. So I have a stake here, yes. But the argument does not rest on sentiment. It rests on arithmetic, on the plain economics of where a beginning writer can actually get made.
The math of a smaller pond
Here is the reframe. The giant industry has enormous audiences and enormous competition, which means the odds for any single new writer are brutal. A regional industry has smaller audiences but a fraction of the competition, and that ratio is what matters when you are starting with nothing. You are not trying to beat ten thousand people to one slot. You are one of a few hundred, in a place where knowing the language and the land is a real credential rather than a given.
Budgets are smaller too, and that cuts in your favor more than you would think. A lower-budget film is a lower-risk bet, which means producers can afford to gamble on an unproven writer with a strong, specific story. The distance from your finished script to an actual production is simply shorter here. I shot my one produced short, CLICK, in 2020 at a scale I could reach, and it taught me that a small thing that got made beats a grand thing that stayed on the page. Regional cinema is full of small things that can get made. That is the whole point.
It is better to be a made film in a small industry than an unmade masterpiece in a large one.Wr. Sarkhedi
Your material is already local
The second reason is the one I care about most. Regional cinema wants exactly the story you are best placed to write: the specific, rooted, local one. The world you grew up in, the town, the family, the particular texture of life in Gujarat, is not a limitation here, it is the product. A producer in this space is not looking for a diluted imitation of a big-industry hit. They are looking for something that could only have come from here.
This is where the outsider from a small town holds a genuine advantage, the one I wrote about in how to become a screenwriter with no connections. You know the sound of the streets, the shape of the silences at a family dinner, the way pride and tenderness get tangled in the same gesture. A writer parachuting in would have to research all of it and still get the accent slightly wrong. For you it is free and true. Write the world you actually know, deeply and without apology, and you are handing a regional producer the one thing they cannot get anywhere else.
The story only you could tell is the story a regional producer most wants to hear.
Write it well, not merely local
A caution, so this does not read as a shortcut. Regional does not mean lower craft. The smaller pond is an opportunity, not an excuse to be sloppy. The competition may be thinner, but the audience is not less demanding, and a badly built story fails here just as surely as anywhere. Everything about structure, character, and restraint still applies. You still need a want that drives the film, scenes that turn, dialogue that works by what it withholds. The method I laid out in how to write a screenplay does not change because the film is in Gujarati. It changes because you now have material a big-industry writer would kill for, and a real chance of seeing it made.
If anything, the opportunity raises the standard you should hold yourself to, because a genuinely good regional film travels far beyond its region now. Audiences find strong, specific stories across languages, and streaming has widened that reach enormously. The narrow local film, made with real craft, can reach further than a generic big-budget one. So do not treat regional as small. Treat it as the door that is actually open, and walk through it with your best work.
Build for it, patiently
Two practical closers. First, learn the specific industry you want to write for. Watch its recent films, understand what gets made and for whom, and figure out who the producers are and what they can afford. Craft resources like No Film School and The Script Lab teach the universal craft, but the local knowledge is on you, and it is knowledge you already half possess by living here.
Second, this is still a long game, not a loophole. The pond is smaller, not empty, and a career here is still built script by script over years. That means the daily discipline matters as much as it does anywhere, the unglamorous habit of showing up to the page whether or not anyone is watching, which I wrote about in the discipline of a daily writing practice. Regional cinema is the opportunity. It is not the easy button. But for a writer starting from Gujarat with no connections and a head full of true, specific stories, it is the most honest and reachable road I know. It is the one I am walking myself.