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    Reviews

    “A cerebral joyride”
    Karan Johar, filmmaker on REDIFF

    “Among the most charming and creative Indian independent films”
    J Hurtado, TWITCH

    ★★★★✩
    “You don’t really need a big star cast… you don’t even need a big budget to get the techniques of filmmaking bang on…”
    Allen O Brien, TIMES OF INDIA

    ★★★★✩
    “An outstanding experience that doesn’t come by too often out of Indian cinema!”
    Shakti Salgaokar, DNA

    ★★★
    “This film can reach out the young, urban, upwardly mobile, but lonely, disconnected souls living anywhere in the world, not just India.”
    Namrata Joshi, OUTLOOK

    “I was blown away!”
    Aseem Chhabra, MUMBAI MIRROR

    “Good Night Good Morning is brilliant!”
    Rohit Vats, IBN-LIVE

    ★★★✩✩
    “Watch it because it’s a smart film.”
    Shubha Shetty Saha, MIDDAY

    ★★★✩✩
    “A small gem of a movie.”
    Sonia Chopra, SIFY

    ★★★✩✩
    “A charming flirtation to watch.”
    Shalini Langer, INDIAN EXPRESS

    “Interesting, intelligent & innovative”
    Pragya Tiwari, TEHELKA

    “Beyond good. Original, engrossing and entertaining”
    Roshni Mulchandani, BOLLYSPICE

    * * * * *
    Synopsis

    ‘Good Night Good Morning’ is a black and white, split-screen, conversation film about two strangers sharing an all-night phone call on New Year's night.

    Writer-Director Sudhish Kamath attempts to discover good old-fashioned romance in a technology-driven mobile world as the boy Turiya, driving from New York to Philadelphia with buddies, calls the enigmatic girl staying alone in her hotel room, after a brief encounter at the bar earlier in the night.

    The boy has his baggage of an eight-year-old failed relationship and the girl has her own demons to fight. Scarred by unpleasant memories, she prefers to travel on New Year's Eve.

    Anonymity could be comforting and such a situation could lead to an almost romance as two strangers go through the eight stages of a relationship – The Icebreaker, The Honeymoon, The Reality Check, The Break-up, The Patch-up, The Confiding, The Great Friendship, The Killing Confusion - all over one phone conversation.

    As they get closer to each other over the phone, they find themselves miles apart geographically when the film ends and it is time for her to board her flight. Will they just let it be a night they would cherish for the rest of their lives or do they want more?

    Good Night | Good Morning, starring Manu Narayan (Bombay Dreams, The Love Guru, Quarter Life Crisis) and Seema Rahmani (Loins of Punjab, Sins and Missed Call) also features New York based theatre actor Vasanth Santosham (Bhopal: A Prayer for Rain), screenwriter and film critic Raja Sen and adman Abhishek D Shah.

    Shot in black and white as a tribute to the era of talkies of the fifties, the film set to a jazzy score by musicians from UK (Jazz composer Ray Guntrip and singer Tina May collaborated for the song ‘Out of the Blue), the US (Manu Narayan and his creative partner Radovan scored two songs for the film – All That’s Beautiful Must Die and Fire while Gregory Generet provided his versions of two popular jazz standards – Once You’ve Been In Love and Moon Dance) and India (Sudeep and Jerry came up with a new live version of Strangers in the Night) was met with rave reviews from leading film critics.

    The film was released under the PVR Director’s Rare banner on January 20, 2012.

    Festivals & Screenings

    Mumbai Film Festival (MAMI), Mumbai 2010 World Premiere
    South Asian Intl Film Festival, New York, 2010 Intl Premiere
    Goa Film Alliance-IFFI, Goa, 2010 Spl Screening
    Chennai Intl Film Festival, Chennai, 2010 Official Selection
    Habitat Film Festival, New Delhi, 2011 Official Selection
    Transilvania Intl Film Festival, Cluj, 2011 Official Selection, 3.97/5 Audience Barometer
    International Film Festival, Delhi, 2011 Official Selection
    Noordelijk Film Festival, Netherlands, 2011 Official Selection, 7.11/10 Audience Barometer
    Mumbai Film Mart, Mumbai 2011, Market Screening
    Film Bazaar, IFFI-Goa, 2011, Market Screening
    Saarang Film Festival, IIT-Madras, 2012, Official Selection, 7.7/10 Audience Barometer

    Theatrical Release, January 20, 2012 through PVR

    Mumbai
    Delhi
    Gurgaon
    Ahmedabad
    Bangalore
    Chennai
    Hyderabad (January 27)

    * * * * *

    More information: IMDB | Facebook | Youtube | Wikipedia | Website

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Archive For March, 2011

Dongala Muta: The Curious Case of Ram Gopal Varma

March 19, 2011 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Action

Director: Ram Gopal Varma

Cast: Ravi Teja, Charmi, Lakshmi Manchu, Prakash Raj

Storyline: A couple check-in at a suspicious resort that seems to have been taken over by thieves and now, they can’t leave.

Bottomline: Shot in just five days, this is RGV’s silliest and most amateur film till date.

Like Benjamin Button, Ram Gopal Varma seems to be aging in reverse as a filmmaker. The proof lies in the fact that his most polished and refined films are the ones he made at the beginning of his career and the most amateur, the ones he has made over the last few years.

From the reinvention of the angry young man (the nice guy in college who graduated in inhumanities, as the posters of Shiva told us back then) to staging action-set-pieces (Kshana Kshanam and similar films) to effortlessly shifting gear to musicals and romance (with Rangeela and Naach) and then to gangsters (Satya, Company and Sarkar) and ghosts (Bhooth) to low-brow exploitation films (Phoonk, Agyaat and now, Dongala Muta), RGV sure has straddled many worlds but what’s alarming is the depletion of his filmmaking aesthetic over the years. You know how young filmmakers would go to any extent to just make that debut film?

Even if it means keeping the entire story to a single location, asking friends to help out, being unable to afford quality technicians, resorting to digital hand-held cameras and hurrying up the shoot because every single day of shoot means extra money.

Dongala Muta, shot in five days, with five Canon 5D cameras and no director of photography, begins looking unbelievably homemade with goons in bright costumes looking absolutely silly, thanks to the handycam feel that instantly disconnects you from the larger than life proceedings. That kidnapping sequence looks like it’s from a low budget ‘sweded’ film someone shot as an April Fool prank to make fun of his friends for their acting ambitions, after watching Michel Gondry’s Be Kind Rewind.

Thanks to the silly dialogue, the exaggerated close-ups, the lack of a plot, the space constraints and the video-feel, the entire film looks like a spoof shot today for tomorrow’s cultural fest, especially if you really don’t know who the actors are. The lack of a cinematographer hurts the film further as unflattering voyeuristic close-ups of the leading ladies from the ground level assault your senses every few minutes and make you wonder if those jeans have something to do with the mystery or the resolution.

Reminiscent of RGV’s Daud in its inanely silly sensibility and of Kaun with its space limitations (if Kaun was entirely indoors and just three characters, this one works with the entire resort), this experiment does not prove anything apart from convincing producers that they cannot possibly make a movie with no money and in five days. If they do, it would look like this. Bad. Even if it has Ravi Teja in it and a Brahmanandam comedy track.

It does not inspire and convince film students either that they can make a movie with just a camera because they know that the reason people went to watch the film is because it’s an RGV film with a star-studded cast. Which student will ever be able to convince Ravi Teja to do a film?

But yes, it does prove one thing. If a filmmaker as talented as RGV comes up with a film like this, they surely can do better. If the idea of a film is to entertain, irrespective of merit, then the film works as one big inside joke. It’s so bad that it’s good.

Rumour has it that RGV is shooting his next film using a mobile phone. It may just be a short. Maybe it is good news that RGV is reverse-aging like Benjamin Button. For he may soon enroll in a film school. At least, he’ll learn the basics.

Interview: Sreekar Prasad – The FilmSmith [Uncut]

March 19, 2011 · by sudhishkamath

At the rate he has been walking up to collect a national award for Best Editing every few years, Sreekar Prasad probably has a photo album called Presidents of India with a caption: Same award, different President.

For those who are still keeping count, eight now. From five different Presidents between 1988 (for Raakh) and 2010 (Special Jury award for his work in Kutty Srank, Kaminey and Pazhassi Raja).

Not that he thinks about his date with the President at office every time he sits in a dark room playing God to another man’s fantasy. But surprisingly, for someone who makes all the big decisions, this editor is a simple, unassuming movie buff without even a wee bit of arrogance and a saint-like peacefulness and temperament.

He just finished with different language versions of Santosh Sivan’s Urumi and Bhavna Talwar’s Happi and is currently halfway through Bijoy Nambiar’s Shaitan for Anurag Kashyap’s banner when he agrees to sit down for an interview at his studio in Virugambakkam.

Q: With cinema changing, even dimensionally of late, how important is formal training for an Editor and how did you cope with all that’s been happening?
A: To know the basics, it would be good to go to a school. Some people learn it practically. I never went to FTII. Since my family was in the studio business, I had the opportunity to actually watch what was happening. From there, I got interested in the process of storytelling. Basically, we are looking at storytelling with the material we have. That’s the limitation the editor has. He has access to a certain material, which may not be what the director promised to give him before the film… because there are so many variables in between the first draft and the final take. Through that footage, you’re trying to tell the director’s story. I also try to look at it slightly differently from the director to see if I can tell it more crisply without repeating myself and take a look at the performances. Because finally, editing is intertwined with getting the good performances, getting the right moments and making the story flow in a certain pattern, with a certain pacing depending on the story, the subject and sensibility.

Q: How exactly does one learn on the job?
A: I had done my graduation in Literature and that helped me get into stories, myth and mythology, the role of drama, the hero journey, etc. First, I worked with my father A. Sanjivi who was an editor and then with other editors and in different languages. Sometimes in a Hindi film, sometimes in a Malayalam film, sometimes in a Tamil film. So it kept me balanced because I am not tied to one approach or one sensibility or one culture. From the people I meeting, my experiences are changing. When I’m working with somebody from Assam, whose approach to filmmaking is different from here… they are making films for 25 lakhs where as here are we are making films for 25 crore. All these experiences make you aware of so many things.

Q: So which film turned out to be the biggest lesson of your career?
A: When I was apprenticing, I was working on a different kind of cinema – the regular Tamil and Telugu blockbuster variety. Then I got an offer to edit a film called Raakh made by youngsters (Aamir Khan’s early film directed by Aditya Bhattacharya). It was an eye-opener to me because I was not exposed to that kind of cinema till then. I learnt that cinema is not just about song and dance, it’s also able to bring out the inner turmoil of a character and how you can accentuate it with the visual tone. In most of the films around the country, there was no scope for actors to emote in between the lines. How much footage do I keep for the moment where the character is not speaking? It comes with instinct and you feeling for the character. I can keep eight seconds or 16 seconds of a close up and still make a point. That’s a judgment you need to take for which you need to understand the character.

Q: Did working with Mani Ratnam change your style? Where does your role begin?
A: I would just adapt to the director. I’ve been lucky that for most of my projects in the last ten years, I’ve been involved right from the script discussions. So all the feedback that I would probably give after shooting, in futility, I give in advance by reading the script. Once you have a good rapport, you get a sense of what will work or what will be an impediment as you read the script.
Be it Mani Ratnam or Raam or Vishnuvardhan, I have always been kept in the loop from the script level. The major contribution that comes from the editor is how to tell the story in a way that it flows from A to B to C to D in a way that it does not deviate or distract from the story you are telling. One thing should lead to the other.

Q: In the last two decades, we have had many experiments with non-linear structure.
A: Conventionally, everything here is linear. If anyone wants to do something else, the counter argument is don’t do anything that will tax the audience. I don’t agree with that. But you need to keep in mind your target audience depending on what kind of cinema you are getting into. With the advent of more English films and TV, where we are exposed to lot of information at high speeds and the audience has started seeing a lot of things in between. The exposure has pushed a huge section of people at a more intelligent level, to read between the lines, to get non linear structure and it’s great that people have started experimenting.

Q: How do you resolve Director-editor conflict?
A: I have had less trouble than many people would have had. It’s a question of give and take. I truly believe that the director’s vision is what I’m trying to get on screen. So I don’t see any reason to supersede our arrangement of working together. And if both of them are looking at the betterment of the product, each to his capacity, we can always argue and evaluate both the options with the advent of technology. It’s become much more easier to put together different versions and compare.

Q: Can you illustrate this with an example?
A: The first film I worked with Mani Ratnam was Alai Payuthey. He had already planned for a non linear structure. Basically, at the heart of it, it was a love story. The difficulty for us at that time was to not let the narration overshadow the emotional content of the love story and still have a different sort of a narrative going. So then there was a lot of brainstorming to see how many times we can go back in time and come back to present… In the end, we tried to keep it as simple as possible.

Q: So, the single most important quality for an editor is?
A: Patience, to assimilate a lot of information. Over the years, I’ve developed a system where I do the first cut without the director so that I can get my own input into it. I need to watch all the takes, even the not good takes. Because certain set of actors who are new, they tend to be very good in the beginning and as the takes go on, you can see a drop in their energy levels. So what I do first, I go through all the takes, get all the best moments out of it and then play around with it. We also need to cover up certain things. You can’t expect all actors to be doing a great job, especially the junior actors. So I camouflage him by having the lines over the other person and still drive the scene around. There are always butterflies in your stomach the first time you are seeing the rushes because you want to do something, come up with a certain style of narration. It’s probably a good idea not to cut sometimes. Just because you have the luxury of having other angles, you tend to use it. But if it works undisturbed, you should keep it as it is.

Q: You mean the best cut sometimes is not to cut.
A: Yes. You should always ask why should I cut? The editor’s job is not just to cut and paste. If I cut, I should make a point there. The cut should move it forward. It’s sad that people associate editing with cutting a maximum number of times. Because someone has done it on a music video. But you have to know how it will play out on a big screen. Three minutes with 100 cuts on a TV maybe watchable but on the big screen, it could just be tiring with so much information. You need breathers, you need the ups and the downs.
There will be situations where you need to pack in a lot of information, when you want to pack in intrigue but this trend of cutting so much has to do with people not used to working with a bigger screen. We are used to working on Steenbeck and then watching reel by reel. On an AVID, when you watch on a small screen, the judgement is different. A wide shot of 2-3 seconds may satisfy on a small screen but may not be enough for the big screen.

Q: Every other person’s role in a film except yours is limited to the call sheet. George Lucas said: “A movie is never finished only abandoned”. How do you decide when you’re done? How much work do you put into it on an average?
A: Depends on the scale of the film, it takes me four to six weeks for a smaller film and it would be spread over five to six months for a bigger film that has lots of shoot and reshoots. There is no end to it. What I believe is that the first time you start doing something, you develop a gut feeling about it. That’s when I am most objective about it. After a certain point, like everyone else associated with the film, I could lose objectivity. But wherever we can afford the time, we leave a gap of two weeks so that we chisel it more and look at it with fresh pair of eyes. The deadline of the release is what we work with. Never have I ever felt it is perfect. It’s an ongoing process. It just comes together at some point.

Q: What have been the most challenging films of your career?
A: Vanaprastham. It had so many philosophical layers and a kathakkali backdrop. Kathakkali is a programme that goes on and on, so where do you cut it? So it had to be shot like that. The performance was probably ten minutes but when it is all put together, the kathakkali takes predominance over the actual narrative. So we had to make it concise and make it a part of the story. Then comes the question of whether we are intruding into the creative sphere of kathakali because there would be criticism on how it is wrong to interrupt a performance. So we had to have one or two experts on kathakali to see if we can cut it appropriately for film and then we interwove it with the story.
Another film we did a lot of work was Firaaq. It was a multiple narrative story and after it was shot, we realised it wasn’t getting a climactic moment to end. So then we had to rearrange the second portion of the film and shift a connecting incident to the end. It worked for us because the way it was written there was nothing happening in the end. The other challenging was to keep five stories running parallel and not get bogged down by one story.

The Academy and the movie buff

March 12, 2011 · by sudhishkamath

Do you judge people by their taste and choice of films? You ought to, especially if they are in charge of judging themselves, critics included. Just who are these people who, year after year, give away the most prestigious of all awards to a film that neither the movie buffs loved most nor the one that critics loved the most. Take a look:

Clearly, the Academy voters have a mind of their own.

It has been widely reported that their average age is 57, they comprise of more men than women and over 20 per cent of them are actors. Many of them own real estate on Mulholland Drive but are uncomfortable seeing their own face in the movies.

So what kind of films do they like? Since the selection process requires them to watch the films on DVD at home, we hear that they tend to prefer the family friendly films over the ones that are dark in theme, feature graphic nudity or extreme violence or the ones that mess with your head.

No surprise then, that harmless underdog films like Slumdog Millionaire (2009), The King’s Speech (2011) and A Beautiful Mind (2001) have beaten films that have actually required some amount of thought and intellect – like Mulholland Dr. (2001), Black Swan (2011) or Inception (2011).

In fact, Mulholland Dr. was not even nominated for a Best Picture Oscar (it got David Lynch a nod for Best Director though) because it took Hollywood head-on and frustrated the intellectually challenged with its abstract narrative. Ten years later, nothing has changed.

David Lynch, this year, was replaced by two auteurs who continued to defy convention – Darren Aronofsky and Christopher Nolan – and it’s their turn to be ignored. Nolan was not even nominated for Best Director. Like Lynch, both Aronofsky and Nolan have refused to explain their films.

The beauty is that all three films — Mulholland Dr., Black Swan and Inception — challenge your perception of fantasy and reality as the filmmakers blend the real with the surreal to explore the subconscious of the dreamer/creator/artist. All three films are about what they lose to get what they want. They mark the death of love and innocence in the pursuit of that seemingly impossible dream.

If Lynch’s heroine marked the cold-blooded murder of an artist/actor after her seduction into stardom (with all three actors playing different dimensions of the same person — the aspiring actor who dies, the starlet responsible for the murder and the failed actor of the future haunted by guilt), Aronofsky’s heroine sees the death of innocence as a necessary incidental sacrifice. (There’s a lesbian scene here as well to signify the seduction — only that the seduction is an integral part of the coming of age and transformation from a frail girl living her mother’s dreams to a self-loving woman haunted by the destiny of the one she has replaced. Interestingly, all three women, like in Mulholland Dr., are dimensions of the artist’s past, present and future.) Nolan’s hero, meanwhile, is stuck in a limbo of the future, and haunted in the present by the death of love and innocence after creating the perfect world in the past. As Vanilla Sky, another film in the same genre tells us: The sweet is never as sweet without the sour. This year, The Social Network, David Fincher’s dark tale of modern-day ambition and flexible morality, was not politically correct either. Obviously, the elderly do not take kindly to such darkness.

Since most nominated films are a mix of the most popular films of the year (like The Lord of the Rings or Avatar or Inception) at one end of the spectrum and the indie hits from Sundance at the other (like Winter’s Bone or The Kids Are All Right or Juno or Little Miss Sunshine or Precious) with some safe critically acclaimed politically correct films pitched somewhere in the middle.

Obviously, they don’t want to seem dumb enough to always vote for the most popular film and are too prudish to vote for the extreme content of the indie film. What they are left with is the safe territory: Films that do not offend anyone and are seen as underdogs in the competition featuring protagonists fighting the odds – The Hurt Locker (2010), Crash (2005), Slumdog Millionaire (2009), Million Dollar Baby (2004), A Beautiful Mind (2001) or The King’s Speech (2011); Films that honour previously ignored filmmakers – The Departed (2006), No Country for Old Men (2007), Gladiator (2000) and The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King (2003) and the occasional sure-fire crowd pleasers – Chicago (2002) or Titanic (1997).

So, Messrs. Fincher, Nolan and Aronofsky, I am glad you didn’t play it safe to appeal to out of work, prudish old folk watching an upbeat film with family when they ought to be picking films that push the boundaries, films that are not scared to embrace darkness in their search of perfection, in their pursuit of beauty and as the quote from Black Swan goes: “Perfection is not just about control. It’s also about letting go. Surprise yourself so that you can surprise your audience. Transcendence.”

You gentlemen have managed just that.

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