What does it mean to truly own your art today?
That question doesn’t come up often, especially in an era where creators sign over their rights almost automatically. Because we’ve been trained to believe one thing: reach matters more than control. Visibility is everything. Get it on a platform, and you’ve made it.
But Himesh Reshammiya did something different.
He made Badass Ravikumar, a film bursting with swagger, music, and unapologetic masala. The kind of film that gets people talking. And once it released, the offers came in. Streamers wanted it. Of course they did. But there was a catch.
They wanted all of it.
Not just the right to stream the film, but the digital keys to its afterlife. No posting clips on Himesh’s YouTube, no owning the narrative, no personal platform promotions. Just complete control.
And that’s where he drew the line.
This isn’t about ego. It’s about ecosystem. Because when you hand over a film to OTT, you don’t just give them a product, you give them the power to decide how it lives on. How it’s marketed. When it’s surfaced. Whether it becomes a hit or disappears into a library of thumbnails.
Have we stopped to ask: why are we okay with that?
Maybe because we thought there was no other way.
But Himesh’s decision offers something radical: proof that there is another way. That you can say no. That you can choose autonomy over access. That the creator doesn’t have to be the last one in the chain.
It’s not a mass movement yet, but it’s a signal.
A reminder that building your own audience, your own platforms, your own rhythm, it’s possible. And maybe even necessary, if you want to own your voice long after the opening weekend ends.
Badass Ravikumar might not be on OTT yet. But it’s already done something bigger than numbers.
It’s started a conversation.
And that’s as badass as it gets.