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'It requires a lot of courage': Deepa Mehta on the immigrant story at the centre of her first film

The journey that took Mehta from directing her 1991 debut feature "Sam & Me" to being the acclaimed filmmaker she is today wasn't always an easy one.

The stakes were high for the budding filmmaker as she released her 1991 debut 'Sam & Me'

“It requires a lot of courage”: Deepa Mehta’s debut film on rebuilding after leaving your country

7 years ago
Duration 1:35
In 1991 filmmaker Deepa Mehta spoke about the fears of directing her first feature film and how personal experience fueled her.

This Saturday on CBC Arts' film talk show The Filmmakers, we'll be bringing you Deepa Mehta's 2005 movie Water — but as she tells CBC TV host Valerie Pringle in this archive clip from 1991, the journey that took her from directing her debut feature Sam & Me to being the acclaimed filmmaker she is today wasn't always an easy one.

Sam & Me offered audiences their first glimpse at Mehta's powerful storytelling, and the stakes were high for her. "Really what scared me was that it was such a personal film," she told Pringle. "And it was such a personal vision that if it bombed, I would be totally responsible for it."

Thankfully, the movie resonated — largely because of the unique perspective it shared on the immigrant experience. "It's a story about cultural differences, prejudices, laughter — what happens to immigrants, really. I don't think we've ever seen a film like this. How do people reconstruct their lives when they leave their own country? It requires a lot of courage, and fortitude, I think."

Watch more of Deepa Mehta on The Filmmakers this Saturday at 10:00 p.m. (10:30 NT) on CBC Television, or stream it at cbc.ca/watch. After the episode, stick around to see this week's feature presentation, her 2005 film Water.