incoherent? ramblings of a soul caged in the shackles of nine-to-five. world viewed through the pin hole. a peek into the soul through a pin-hole... a release for the zillion letters tearing to gush out like the silent waters in the dam about to be broken... thats a lot of stuff...
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Black and white ray
When there was the forest
Nature has unique ways of reaching out to our deepest
corners. I remember a trip to the forest with my first team. That was more than
10 years back. It is a trip that none of us will ever forget. an affair of only
3 days which clings on to our consciousness even today after so many seasons
have gone by. And every now and then all of us have that urge. That wish, to
relive the experiences of those three days. In fact we had three more trips
with the same team subsequently. I have travelled out with most of my
subsequent teams. However that experience was never matched.
A complete description of the trip will take a full
blog in itself. let’s just say that in a continuous indulgence in camaraderie, alcohol
in all forms, marijuana, simpleton villagers, the beauty of nature and more
importantly indulging in the process of self-discovery as a team (without
knowing about it) for three days we ended up experiencing something unique and
rare. Something which could perhaps happen only once in our lives. Because once
one had experienced such a process of self-discovery the same cannot be
repeated again.
Gautam Ghose made Abar Aranya. He should never have. Perhaps
he never had an experience like ours. The experience of the characters in ADR
could never be replicated or surpassed.
Aranyer Din Ratri (Days and Nights in the Forest- ADR)
is a movie which will remain in our senses for years to come. Often passed off
as "a coming of age" or "boys to men" men movie by critics
of this country who are more often than not nothing but imbeciles, this movie
is one which actually talks about self-discovery. Four young men from the urban
Kolkata- men who were the youth of that age. Men full of urban confidence. And
men who learnt a thing or two about themselves, about love, life, and the world
at large.
There was Ashim the suave urban well to do executive
with the car, the Ashim who sneaks indulgence in female company while his self-consciousness
in that same company holds him back. There was Sanjoy- the most unlikely labor
executive one can find. Hari the cricketer who thinks more through his
genitilia than brain. And walks around with this sense of male bravado and
chauvinism which gets punctured all so easily. The jester in the group- Shekhar
is the most balanced and practical of all. But also the least interesting
beyond a point.
Then there are the women. Three of them. The sharp
wise and yet vulnerable Aparna whose independence of thought and sharpness
defeats the vanity and sense of intellectual superiority which Ashim has. Sanjoy
gets attracted to Jaya who is perhaps much more than what she seems to be. And
the cricketer Hari gets his carnal uprising from the santhal girl Dhuli. Played
by Simi in black. maaan! I would do anything for such a santhal girl! Bomb all
the intellectuality and the cerebralism in the world....
And finally the forest. Vast dispassionate and distant
in one moment and the all-embracing all-encompassing reality in the next. I
have always believed that humanity comes close to itself in front of the
grandness of nature. Ray has always shared this belief. The scene of realization
of loss in Apur Sansar when Apu lets go of his manuscript in the mountains. So
many of the scenes from kanchen jungha. But most definitively in ADR. The
premise of the film rests on the forest. The story would not have held had the
forest not been there. Yes- like many other films the forest does not become a
character. But it is there constantly in the background giving the canvas for
the lead characters to paint their own stories. The stories of these characters
intertwining and colliding to teach each other change each other and make each
other realize the entity within themselves. All the while the forest looks on.
There is a certain point in which one shifts from
being a boy to being a man. I believe it happens in a moment. The realization
is instant. After that flex point has gone we all keep revisiting our boyhood
by indulging in similar activities and creating similar atmosphere in our
lives. However deep inside we know that life has moved on. This film in many
ways is about that moment for the four friends. Yes that way it is a
"coming of age" movie. But it is so different from the genre! It is
actually a study of the human condition in that stage of the life. Not a
narration of events like most other "coming of age" cinema. The real
win of the movie however lies in the sheer effortlessness of the achievement. The
film manages to shed as much light on the human condition as most, without
seeming to even try.
There are many times when this movie keeps coming back
to haunt me, the four friends, the women, they all represent those moments which
I have left by the road in my life so far. Those moments where things could
have been and did not. So many moments lost. But so many gained... if keeps
coming back to me to remind me of a different time, a different me. It is when
the man looks back at the boy and smiles that indulgent smile of knowing it.
ADR is one of the most personal films for me.
Bad company
There was a movie made in the early seventies- 71 to
be accurate. And the scenes of the movie keep haunting me today more than four
decades later. Ray movies seldom shock. They always haunt. Subtle insights and
messages which get hooked to our consciousness keep following us for long after
we have seen the movie. Even today I keep thinking of Barun Chanda's Shyamal
and his reactions during his interactions with the labor officer. The visible
discomfort and yet the dependence. The relation between the suave and
sophisticated genteel and the slimy, scheming and dirty. An intercourse of
mutual convenience where no partner is there for the love or enjoyment, but for
a different need. Also the reflection on the fakeness of the upper middleclass
morality. One deft stroke from the artist and a picture so vibrant and so
clear. Many of his contemporaries who criticized him for not taking up social
real issues needed to note. The difference between the cinema of ray and others
was perhaps the difference between art and propaganda. In a few scenes
brilliantly underplayed to perfection by Barun chanda, the fakeness and
spinelessness of bourgeois was communicated with a hint of a smile without any
loud sloganism.
Shyamal, the perfect man of the seventies. Shyamal-
someone with whom I can relate to a lot. Shyamal the man who was once someone
else. An idealist student. Shyamal who now looks back to those days with
superficial humor. Humor of a man at unease. A man who has chosen the easy way
out. A man who keeps telling the world that he has no regrets while deep inside
he is not so sure. But then it does not matter. The pay is good. The flat in Shakespeare
sarani even better. With a trophy wife who is more glamorous than she is
intelligent the circle is complete. That is Shyamal the perfect man. Tutul
comes in. Tutul the ravishing, seductive and yet so imperfect alter-ego. Tutul
whose passion reminds Shyamal of what he once was?
Then there was the next promotion and the small slip
up which could blow up into something so big. Then came the compromise. And the
final departure. The final dip into the murkiness of the corporate. The hated
IR fellow suddenly becomes the partner of convenience. Immoral harm caused to
poor factory-workers to cover up managerial misses. The completion of the act
of conversion of Shyamal the ethical idealist into Shyamal the successful
corporate citizen comes about. In almost a matter of fact manner. Tutul the
alter-ego is there. She understands. But then how does it matter?
The legendary staircase scene in the end of the movie
is a sharp reminder to all of us of our potential lives. The deed done,
promotion secured, Shyamal walks into the apartment complex. The Shyamal whose
last strand with the original self has been detached. The electricity of the
apartment is down. The lift is not working. Shyamal has to walk up to his
apartment on the seventh floor. It’s a long climb. Every step takes away a bit
of his energy. This tiring life in the race where every milestone takes away a
part of our being. And yet we keep running in the race. We have given it the
apt name of "rat race". But we keep forgetting that the rats who are
running are us.
Seemabadha remains one of my favourite movies. It talks
about my class, my people. It talks about what I am today and what my peers
are. It was made 41 years back. Every time I make a new compromise the facial
expressions of Shyamal flashes by. When he finally walks into the house only to
remember that the fan will not work. Seemabadha means limited. The English name
of the movie was company limited. Perhaps it actually shows how the company
limited us as humans...
The naughty wife
Every day we are inundated with the films on
extramarital affairs. The heroines and the heroes keep engaging and questioning
the boundaries of modern middleclass morality. for most film directors this
becomes a premise for skin show- still a sure shot way for selling a product
even after the internet porn psunami.be it Diane lane in unfaithful or mallika
sherawat, skin sells. There has been artsy stuff too- and many of them around
this topic.
When ray made Charulata- the story of a wife
developing interest in her brother-in-law, the contemporary expectation would
have been another sound melodrama. The hints on the relationship in the novel
were very subtle and readers and critics of the time chose to almost ignore the
same especially given that cheating is a bad word and attributing it to a
Tagore creation was almost a taboo. Ray’s Charulata (from Nashtaneer by Tagore)
made those hints a little less subtle and more direct. So even though they
remained only hints, the populist newspaper critics of the time did not take
very kindly to the movie. They also went on to say that most of the movie's
first part was almost Greek to the viewer as there is hardly any dialogue or
words exchanged. And that Charu looked more like a nymph burning in her desire
than a lonely housewife looking for company. The critics were obviously not
very pleased.
The fact was that the critics were simply not ready
for the kind of cinema ray was making. And ray was not ready for taking the
garbage they were throwing. I have firmly believed that criticism needs to be
objective and topical. However most films critics that I look around rarely do
that. There is a dire need to be clear in your head when you are critiquing
art. Like I can say that a certain character in a movie has confusing behavior
and hence I suspect that the characterization is weak. But I cannot say that
the story has weak characterization without qualifying my statement. Unfortunately
most critics (I strongly believe critics are wannabe artists who have this wet
dream of being a great artist) lose their objectivity while criticizing.
Ray had written an article defending his movie. It was
also an article where he brought out how a director converts a written
story/novel into a film script and then a movie. Many times we keep hearing
people say "not as good as the novel". Well comparing a film to a novel
itself is height of stupidity. Novel is a written text. There the writer can
write a thousand pages to describe one character. In a film how do you
communicate a "character"? There is huge scope of visual imagery in a
book- in the head of a reader. We imagine how a certain character will look
like because in a book as there we are free to imagine. In a movie there is no
such scope for the viewer. Similar handicaps exist in describing situations. I
can describe the site of an old western gun battle in 10 pages. But the film
gets 1-2 seconds to present the same to the viewer. Ray was the first person to
talk about this. And to share his methods of dealing with these handicaps. Ever
since, this article has become one of the film making bibles of our times, the
world over. Do read it if you are interested in cinema.
History has agreed again and again that Charulata was
one the most accomplished films of ray. More than the content, more than the
performances, more than anything else, perhaps the biggest achievement of Charulata
was that it played a significant role in developing the grammar of film making.
More specifically, the grammar of literature to cinema. my attraction and need
of watching the movie multiple times over the years was exactly this- learning
the craft of film making- the craft and language of making a piece of
literature into film. Frankly this work has not been the one that I have
related to very closely on an emotional level. However I like thousands of
other film enthusiasts have learned so much. Small moments which taught a lot.
The famous looking glass scene. The effortless
communication of a situation where someone creative, intelligent and playfully
young is forced into a life in a void. The looking glass became such a potent
communicator. The character which the glass caught, the mild amusements and
interest in variety. The single moment when her husband Bhupati informs her of
the arrival of Amal- Charu who was observing Bhupati through the glasses takes
it away in one jerk and simultaneously the camera does a sudden zoom out. The significance
of impact of this news to Charu is communicated. Unlike the writer the film
director did not have or need to use pages of back ground narration to
communicate this?
400 blows, battleship Potemkin, breathless... in my
view Charulata belongs up there along with these classics. Classics which in
more way than one the way cinema is being made in today's time.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
The Ray Years (Part One)
Build up
The issue
on serious cinema is that it is serious. A penchant for serious cinema is
hardly developed in the prime of youth especially during the teenage. My
teenage cinema obsession started with soft porn in the shady allies of Kolkata.
That was the natural instinct of the youth growing up in a non-internet era and
without the resources to watch VCDs at home.
I always
thought and still think that porn is therapeutic. And preventive. Especially
for people not that close to companionship of other sexes. A lot of sexual
crime perhaps could have been prevented if everyone subscribed to this view. But
anyways at the age of 14-15 I was not thinking much. There was a lot more to do
than think.
The shady
seats in the broken halls in the shady corners of the city were the most sought
after places for rowdy school-boys like me. On display used to be non-English European
movies which were high on skin content. Sometime porn clips were inserted into
otherwise clean movies. With police looking the other way in return for some
tips the soft porn industry in the city was booming. And our sex education was
happening on an accelerated albeit twisted route.
Somewhere
in the middle of all this I never realized how the structure of good cinema had
crept into my being. Through the window or a hidden corner somewhere. I started
having judgments and started to understand my choices and preferences of the
kind of cinema I wanted to watch. I remember an incident where I had a heated
argument on the triangular freak show called Sayan when someone claimed that it
was a more “mature" love-story than dil hai ki manta nahin. Both were
bollywood potboilers. But one was a freak show which people today will laugh
at. The other was a lift from one of the most engaging love-stories of all
times. The very fact that I had a point of view was surprising. The fact that
it was a year or 2 after watching Maine pyar kiya 7 times was shocking.
The east European
cinema in the garb of soft porn had helped....
Something
happened....
(Ray’s death and
implications)
Something
happened....
My life
in bliss of academics, experimentation with dark elements and porn cinema was
going along well enough as my higher secondary exams approached. A broken
relationship and some bizarre experiences had shaken a bit of my equilibrium of
existence. But overall it was a healthy existence in isolation with life
rolling on towards the finite direction of engineering/medical entrance and
college admissions. The HS exams went on as expected. And then something
happened....
They say
that when a big event happens the repercussions of the same is experienced by
so many small common people which never gets noticed or accounted for. When Ray
was holding his Oscar and communicating through the screen in the Oscar night I
was sitting in front of TV with the realization of the hugeness of this person
dawning on me for the first time. Till then he was this person who was a big
filmmaker as per people around and everyone used to go gaga over his movies. I
loved his Feluda and the GooGaBaBa series more. Had not seen much else.
Then this
whole Oscar thing (Oscars till then was the biggest thing in movies for me)
really gave me the perspective.
Ray died
shortly after this. By then my exams were over. And for the first time I was
free in life without any homework or any assignment to complete. The initial
days of continuous TV watching exposed me to the world of ray with a 24/7
coverage of him, his life and his work. Kolkata and Bengal was like a melting
pot flowing over with emotion in losing their last horseman of the famed Bengali
renaissance. The last flag bearer of the great modern cultural upsurge for
which Bengal was known for. And here I was sitting in front of the TV absorbing
all of it and realizing how big the man was.
In the
coming weeks my life was all about ray's interviews, others talking about ray
and most importantly the cinema of ray. While I ran around and started
collecting every piece of document available on the man in magazines,
newspapers and subsequently books, the most things which hit me about him was
his cinema. DD Kolkata screened each and every piece of cinema which ray had
made. Every day at 5pm. every day at 5pm my world around stopped. My world
inside the world of ray came alive for those few hours. The world of apu, the
world of Feluda, the world of arati, the world of bishwambhar roy, the world of
paresh babu.....and so many others...
A few
years later I had the fortune of watching a movie which was about a boy and an
old man losing themselves in the joys of cinema in a rundown theatre somewhere
in Italy. For me those days the 5pm appointments with the television were no
less. It was that time of day everyday where life ahead of me was unfolding. Regardless
of what profession I chose it was getting firmly cemented somewhere inside my
being that cinema was going to be playing a very critical role in my life. As I
had said in the beginning- when big events happen the repercussions travel far
beyond the imagination of those events and people.
*
* *
I am not
here to write an autobiography. So I will end my indulgence into personal
history here and now. I thought it was important to mention the impact which
the person whose cinema I want to talk about had on my life and how. So that
that and now we continue.
It’s
funny. Who am I to talk about cinema of ray? Why should I have the audacity of
actually writing about one of the greatest film makers the world has seen? Do I
know or appreciate cinema better than him or even close to him? The answer to
all these questions and doubts is obviously negative. after months of uncertainty
and lack of clarity I have reconciled to the fact as mentioned in an earlier
post- I write as a fan, a dreamy kid whose wonder world of fairy tales is woven
around in the world of 35mm. ray for me has been and will always be the
life-starter. In many ways I started living after ray happened. He happened
through his death. Ironic...
Cinema
of ray
The last
few movies of ray talked about a world from which beauty was getting alienated.
Shakha proshakha was about the disjointed family, ganashatru on Ibsen’s enemy
of the people, and the final bow of the great man- Agantuk all dealt with the
theme of social alienation. However the man started with a completely different
approach to the world.
*
* *
The trilogy
Pather
panchali was not the first film which I saw of ray. In fact it was also not the
first of the apu trilogy which I saw. Yet, when I ended up seeing pather
panchali I was both shaken and stirred like the martini in the hand of Mr. Bond.
After having seen many complicated "intelligent" forms of
story-telling on screen the sheer straight-forwardness of ray in telling the
original story of human-kind was enlightening. The characters in pather
panchali could have been nova rich for all we cared. The story was really not
about their struggle or their poverty. The story more was about the fact that
life in any condition has its share of laughter, joy, sorrow, love and hatred. And
that it ends. And that the same is not in our hands. And there is no point
over-dramatizing the various facets of our lives.
Just like
the scene where sarbajaya reveals durga's death to harihar and pierces our
heart without the use of a single dialogue, in the same way durga and apu's
discovery of the train for the first time brings out an unexpected thrill
without any hi-tech complex plot-point. And the fact is that is the way life
goes. A train of simple events which take a lifetime to complete. Before we
make our passing. Dignity comes from accepting the same and making the best
that we have. The beautiful trilogy of apu talks about a simple life of a
simple man with simple dreams. And yet it makes such an engaging story.
The most
endearing quality of Bibhutibhushan's literature has been his celebration of
the common man heroism. The common place thrill. His description of his first
night in the jungle in aranyak was magical as it was like a kid seeing a
fairytale for the first time. Bibhutibhusan throughout has been that kid.
Discovering gems in everyday life. Gems of happiness, sadness, hatred love and
so many other tapestries of human emotions and experiences.
There has
been a section of critics who have criticized PP and other Ray films for show
of poverty. They have thereby shown their ignorance and stupidity. For all anyone
cares the characters of the trilogy could have been from middle or
upper-middleclass, the reality of their lives would not have changed much. The
story of apu was anything but poverty. It was the story of little nuggets of
courage and heroism in adversity. And as I said- the fact the life keeps
flowing in its own pace and direction and we humans just play our roles.
My favorite
of the trilogy is aparajito. It is the least celebrated work in the trilogy,
but it affected me the most. Perhaps because of the age I saw it. Aparajito was
apu's adolescence and journey into adulthood. The boy who loses his sister as a
kid and his father before he can grow up. the boy who has the courage to move
to the big city and then the boy who is torn between his urge to move on in
life and his love and longing for his mother who has no strength left to go
along. The final scene of the movie is liberating as well as devastating. The
young soul torn between his need to grieve the loss of the last and the closest
of his family and the realization that he is finally free. The cruelness of our
options in life plays out in matter of fact simplicity and hypnotizes us into
reflection of our own world and our choices.
Till date
aparijito remains the ultimate growing up film for me. Urges of youth, the
heartbreak of age all are too real and yet so serene.
Labels:
aparajito,
apu trilogy,
pather panchali,
satyajit ray
Sunday, August 12, 2012
The early days...hazy impressions
Baby steps
Movies in the growing up years were taboo. I remember once
going to see the sick melodrama- ankhiyon ke jharokey with the neighbors...and
getting grounded for 2 days by my father. Films were not good and Hindi cinema
was pure evil. So even if there was a little scope in Bengali uttam-suchitra
classic and the odd Ray masterpiece any mention of Hindi cinema was bad news
for us.
However that does not mean that father was anti-cinema. In
fact on the contrary he has taken me to see more movies in my life time than
anyone else. Obviously after a point I didn’t need anyone to take me to
movies...the early memories of wild life classics trickle into the memory-
wilderness family, touch the sky, etc. all movies based on the wild life. Then
there were the soccer movies. The name of Giants of Brazil is distinctly
etched. I remember the collective joy of my father and myself at the exploits
of the greats- Garincha, Pele, Taustao... Only last year we did a redux on this
very laptop when we watched a downloaded version of the movie after close to 3
decades....
The first true English feature film which my dad took me to
was Omar Mukhtar- the Lion of the Desert. A neighborhood "dada" whom I
was an ardent follower of highly recommended the movie to me. Obviously my
father was not impressed at all. All my pleadings and anger fell to deaf years
as he dismissed the movie and my plea, further fanning my anger. Then in the
evening in the same sarcastic way in which he was talking to me in the morning
he told me to get dressed up and then non-chalantly took me to the movie
theater to watch the movie.
Till date Lion of the Desert remains one of my closest to
heart movies. I have seen the film later on as an adult. It is perhaps one of
the best anti-colonial movies that has come out of Hollywood. Till this day
Anthony Quinn for me is Omar Mukhtar. Before being zorba the Greek, or Abu Tayi
in Lawrence of Arabia, or Cl Stavrov in Guns of Navarone. Quinn lived and
breathed his role as the Libyan freedom fighter with a level of energy rarely
seen. Then there was Oliver Reed as the Italian general torn between his
admiration for the Lion and his orders to execute him. Orders from Mussolini
played ruthlessly by Rod Stieger. Beside or beyond the power-house performances
which etch the movie what really attracted me to it and dug deep into my
conscience was the honesty with which the story was told. The honesty and
simplicity. As they say, the greatest things in life are also the simplest. The
greatness of the movie lay in its simplicity of narration. The film in more
ways than one embodies what freedom means. To a group of thundering and
wandering Bedouins who are fighting enslavement by the white man. There was one
quote in the movie which I remembered. Thanks to the net I managed to dig up the
exact dialogue:
[Omar Mukhtar protects two surviving Italian soldiers]
Omar Mukhtar: We do not kill *prisoners*!
Arab Warrior: *They* do it to *us*!
Omar Mukhtar: "They" are not our *teachers!*
Here in lies the simplicity of the movie. Which perhaps was
critical in portraying the simple souls of the desert nomads for whom freedom
was a way of life. Long after the rise and fall of Omar Mukhtar, the Second
World War, Mussolini, and Gaddafi and ravaged this nation for his own psychopathic
pleasures. I sincerely hope that with the killing of Gaddafi the Libyans will
rediscover their souls, their simplicity and their unique ways of life which
was protect by Omar Mukhtar to his death.
Needless to say the very first movie which left an impact on
me was Lion of the Desert. For the movie that it was. But also for the fact
that it was the first real movie which I watched with my father in the theater.
Only me and my dad....
Magic of DD
The first knock on the door on everything which has happened
to the lives of us who grew up in the eighties was always put by our good
friend the doordarshan. the first serial(hum log), the first mega
serial(buniyaad/ramayan/mahabharat), the first exposure to news as a magazine
(the world this week), the first world cup- seeing maradona take on the whole
world.... and yes- the 1983 win... with half the match wiped out due to link
failure. "Sorry for the interruption"....the half hour of Md- Rafi
concert when everyone had assumed the India would be trounced. and then the
link coming back and the TV screen showing west indies 6 wickets down....those
were the days of real magic...
My first exposure to world cinema also came in from DD.
those were the days when DD had started screening world cinema in late nights. These
movies were uncensored and had frontal nudity and sex in most of them. These
were great movies made by world masters. This was my days of entry into adolescence.
Days when late night movies were banned. For obvious reasons.
I had gone to visit my granny. With my elder cousin- a big
influence in my life. When granny went to sleep early in the night with the
small portable TV at our disposal, it was sheer bliss for us brothers. He in
his late teens and me just stepping in. in days before the net, nudity was a
rare commodity. Sex was extinct. One full late-night movie at our disposal with
no one to snoop in was god-sent.
With bated expectation we waited. A Russian movie came up. Before the credits
it showed a shot of an old woman walking on to a deserted main road. The
background audio announced in Russian which we read in the subtitles-
The old lady is waiting for his son to come back. But we
know that the son will never come back as he has been killed in the war. But
this is not the story of his death. This is the story of his life.
The credits came on and announced the name of the movie- the
ballad of a soldier. By then both me and my brother had realized that this
movie will not be what we were waiting for. But perhaps it would be something
which is worth waiting for.
I saw ballad of a soldier as a kid. You will perhaps not
believe, but every scene of the movie was etched in my mind when I was
compelled to hunt down its DVD in a video shop in Canada more than 20 years
later. It is a film which has stayed with me for the last quarter of a century.
The ballad is a simple tale. And again that’s where it got
me. And millions of others who have watched it and elevated it to being one of
the best movies to have come out of Russia. It is the simple story of the
journey of a soldier who is coming back from the front which he has earned
through his bravery. It is the simple tale of two teenagers who fall in love
against circumstances. And knowing fully well that this love is momentary and
without a future. A story of a young man's journey through war ravaged country
and war ravaged cities and citizens. A teenagers growing up to the harsh
realities of life and the beauty of love at the same time. It is the story of
an epic journey which Alyosha and Shura undertake over a period of a few days.
The ballad was a simple straight forward tale. Overly
sentimental at times. But for a nation coming out of the deadliest war that civilization
has seen and getting into one of the deadliest and most oppressing periods
which civilization has seen this was a message, a story straight from the
heart.
Released in 1959 the film till today remains as fresh as its
appeal on humanism even today. In the maze of "smart" movies which
has overtaken our times this movie any time provides the whiff of fresh air. See
Ballad of a soldier. Ignore the sentimentalism a bit. You will not regret...
more info:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/ballad_of_a_soldier/
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0081059/
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Trying to make a list
The recent list of greatest movies has come out. It has proudly announced that Citizen Kane is no longer the best movie in the world. Vertigo is the new greatest movie of the world. The result and the announcement has sent shock waves through the fraternity which takes these lists with a lot of seriousness.
By plain logic, I would want to believe that a movie will continue to be the best till a new movie comes and raises the benchmark. The surprising part here is that both Vertigo and Citizen Kane have been around for decades.What suddenly prompted the group to change their opinion after so many years? This leads to a deeper question- what is the basis and logic behind making these lists?
The fact of the matter is there is not much logic behind drawing any generalistic list. It is the personal comfort of individual voters- vote. The weakest method of measuring art. Voting is the tool for measuring objective distributed opinions. Like whether a government will be good for us. Even then its success levels are very low. refer to the re-election of Reagan or Bush Junior. Or the election of Rajiv Gandhi which led to disastrous 5 years for the country. But to make artistic judgement based on vote is silly. Thats why taking Oscars with any amount of seriousness is equally silly. That's why till today the film festivals use the jury/discussion method in addition to voting as its method of selecting excellence. \
The second problem with coming out with a list like this is the premise. Vertigo is the best from which perspective? Is it better than Bicycle Thieves as a movie? or is Ray's Pather Panchali the right movie to make to the list over a Charulata or a Aranyer Dinratri? is Rashomon the best Kurosawa movie? Not THrone of Blood or Kagemusha or Raan?
Frankly the list is that of the most "famous" set which has been around. Or it is an attempt to do so. For that reason the best "first movie" of all seminal directors find a place. The ones with which they announced themselves.
But after all this intellectualization, the question remains - how did a murder mystery manage to become the greatest movie of all times? Over one of the best known portrayals of the human condition?
Not for me by the way. no matter how great Vertigo was and how much i liked it, for me it cannot overtake Citizen Kane for the sheer context of the latter if not anything else. But then that is me. Go ask a noir addict. He is popping champagne. There lies the biggest issue with such lists. The real issue is that films are an experience. And a very intimate one for a film buff. And unlike any other art form it traverses all the areas of human emotion and human experience. For the same reason the sub-genres within the form is as varied as it can be. And precisely for the same reason, bringing out a list like this is sheer stupidity. An exercise in advertisement- of the people who are doing it. Also a show of arrogance of the intellect of the makers of these lists. In fact both the makers as well as the viewers. for this precise reason the first action that anyone takes on seeing such a list is to tick off all the ones which he has seen. And then he goes on to announce to the world on his achievement in movie watching. usually he laces this with a negative comment on the list to show his superiority of intellect...
However all these listing of movies does tempt one's self to indulge in the same exercise. Partly to gratify the ego but mostly to satisfy the urge to talk about ones favourite movies. Movies which have impacted, influenced and contributed so much to building the character of the person whom I know as myself. This urge however is much different from the ones in these much publicised lists. This is much more intimate, more to do with calling out and appreciating the beautiful craft of cinema which has given so much to me as an individual over the years.
For this reason I decided to start talking about some of the movies which left their marks on me. Not a greatest list. Not a all the best accumulation. But expression of appreciation and the reasons why they in my opinion are some of the most beautiful and moving creations which I have seen in my life time.
I hope the handful of people who have the interest and patience to go through these names find it interesting and of some value.
The recent list of greatest movies has come out. It has proudly announced that Citizen Kane is no longer the best movie in the world. Vertigo is the new greatest movie of the world. The result and the announcement has sent shock waves through the fraternity which takes these lists with a lot of seriousness.
By plain logic, I would want to believe that a movie will continue to be the best till a new movie comes and raises the benchmark. The surprising part here is that both Vertigo and Citizen Kane have been around for decades.What suddenly prompted the group to change their opinion after so many years? This leads to a deeper question- what is the basis and logic behind making these lists?
The fact of the matter is there is not much logic behind drawing any generalistic list. It is the personal comfort of individual voters- vote. The weakest method of measuring art. Voting is the tool for measuring objective distributed opinions. Like whether a government will be good for us. Even then its success levels are very low. refer to the re-election of Reagan or Bush Junior. Or the election of Rajiv Gandhi which led to disastrous 5 years for the country. But to make artistic judgement based on vote is silly. Thats why taking Oscars with any amount of seriousness is equally silly. That's why till today the film festivals use the jury/discussion method in addition to voting as its method of selecting excellence. \
The second problem with coming out with a list like this is the premise. Vertigo is the best from which perspective? Is it better than Bicycle Thieves as a movie? or is Ray's Pather Panchali the right movie to make to the list over a Charulata or a Aranyer Dinratri? is Rashomon the best Kurosawa movie? Not THrone of Blood or Kagemusha or Raan?
Frankly the list is that of the most "famous" set which has been around. Or it is an attempt to do so. For that reason the best "first movie" of all seminal directors find a place. The ones with which they announced themselves.
But after all this intellectualization, the question remains - how did a murder mystery manage to become the greatest movie of all times? Over one of the best known portrayals of the human condition?
Not for me by the way. no matter how great Vertigo was and how much i liked it, for me it cannot overtake Citizen Kane for the sheer context of the latter if not anything else. But then that is me. Go ask a noir addict. He is popping champagne. There lies the biggest issue with such lists. The real issue is that films are an experience. And a very intimate one for a film buff. And unlike any other art form it traverses all the areas of human emotion and human experience. For the same reason the sub-genres within the form is as varied as it can be. And precisely for the same reason, bringing out a list like this is sheer stupidity. An exercise in advertisement- of the people who are doing it. Also a show of arrogance of the intellect of the makers of these lists. In fact both the makers as well as the viewers. for this precise reason the first action that anyone takes on seeing such a list is to tick off all the ones which he has seen. And then he goes on to announce to the world on his achievement in movie watching. usually he laces this with a negative comment on the list to show his superiority of intellect...
However all these listing of movies does tempt one's self to indulge in the same exercise. Partly to gratify the ego but mostly to satisfy the urge to talk about ones favourite movies. Movies which have impacted, influenced and contributed so much to building the character of the person whom I know as myself. This urge however is much different from the ones in these much publicised lists. This is much more intimate, more to do with calling out and appreciating the beautiful craft of cinema which has given so much to me as an individual over the years.
For this reason I decided to start talking about some of the movies which left their marks on me. Not a greatest list. Not a all the best accumulation. But expression of appreciation and the reasons why they in my opinion are some of the most beautiful and moving creations which I have seen in my life time.
I hope the handful of people who have the interest and patience to go through these names find it interesting and of some value.
Monday, July 16, 2012
reflections on the kolkata rickshaw...
The rickshaws in Kolkata fascinate. As long as you are not
stepping into one. A lever system based on something as treacherous as a
rolling wheel, pulled by under-nourished, fatigued human being. A master
innovation to capitalize the blurred division between man and and animal in an
impoverished society.
The birth of man was for reasons of indulgence of higher
powers. In the game the complexity level determines the satisfaction of the
player. In the game of life man was the ultimate masterstroke in those terms.
An element which is self generating in terms of adding more and more complexity
to his existence.
Starting from the prehistoric ages till today man has
evolved to a level of such complexity that the prehistoric fellow and the
today's man will consider each other different species of the mammal family.
The key difference is the resource accumulation of today's man over the
centuries. So when the resource bank is equalized, more or less, the difference
between man and the animal blurs. Both the rickshaw puller and the mule live
the same life. Lift the load to survive....
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)