Award-winning filmmaker, writer and director Richie Mehta discusses what inspired him to create the new wildlife crime drama, Poacher.

By Graeme Green

Published: Sunday, 25 February 2024 at 08:00 AM


Poacher director Richie Mehta talks to Graeme Green about his love of elephants, how he first learnt about the ivory trade in India, and what he hopes people will take away from watching Poacher, Amazon’s new wildlife crime drama.

What drew you to the story of the 2015 poaching case? 

What originally drew me was I was directing a documentary in 2015 titled India In A Day. In that film, people all over India were meant to shoot footage of their own lives on their phones on one particular day (Oct 10, 2015), upload it via Google to me, and I would take it and assemble it into a feature length documentary that profiles a day in the life of the country. One of the pieces of footage I received was of an ivory raid in Delhi. I was confused – did this happen today? I called the NGO that submitted it to me – the Wildlife Trust of India. They told me that they executed the largest ivory bust in Indian history on that day, after a nine-month investigation around the biggest wildlife smuggling ring in the country, and figured they would send me this footage, since it was my shoot day. I was flabbergasted. 

I always loved elephants and cared deeply for wildlife conservation, but passively, from afar. And I knew that Google would never let me show this, as it was a crime scene. I told the person at WTI that I couldn’t use this footage for this documentary, but if she gave me a few years, I would come back and try to understand the entire case, the issues it addresses, and do a full piece on it. Poacher is that piece. 

After my series Delhi Crime, I began to research this, and as I did, its importance increased day by day. I realised that this wasn’t just about saving elephants from getting assassinated, but it addressed dozens of issues ranging from our relationship to all other life on Earth, to Indigenous peoples and how they are integrated (or segregated) in society, to what the law of the jungle truly are (both the natural and asphalt one), and how they are ingrained in us. I realized that this story concerns everything that I hold dear.