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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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Posts By sudhishkamath

That Four Letter Word: FAQS-3

April 20, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

Your movie is seven years in the making. What have been your stumbling blocks.

Money. We always knew it can create, we didn’t know it can also corrupt. We had a producer in Sashi who was willing to invest about 17 lakhs in the film. That was a lot of money for us. Until one day, Levis came and said: “Take ten from me. I want to be part of this film too.” And then, we decided to exploit the potential of in-film promos. We tried more sponsors first through our own company, then gave up and tied up with Ogilvy to get sponsors. That took us a year and a half before deals got finalized. Then we shot a promo. And tried some more to get sponsors. That didn’t work, so we had to make Sashi spend all the money. We spent about 11 lakhs making the film. We shot almost 95 per cent of it. Just another five per cent was left and life began playing games with us. One of our cast members didn’t have dates because she was now an RJ and said she couldn’t spare “even half a day” because her boss was strict. Another guy broke his knee and was advised bed rest for six months. In that period, Sashi’s daughter was diagnosed with tumour and the rest of the cast got busy with their respective careers. Cary and Usha became Southern Spice VJs. Ranvir was away, first in the middle of action, thanks to the Pooja Bhat episode, and then out of action due to an accident and then busy again in life with Lakshya. Getting common dates became a hassle. Mid of last year, one and a half years after we last shot the film, we guys got finally together and decided something had to be done. Sashi said he will give us the last instalment of five lakhs to complete the film. There was no way we couldn’t shoot parts of the film replacing two of our cast members, so we decided that it was easier to shoot the whole film again. Abbas volunteered to be Executive Producer, it was a shot in the arm for the team. In the last months, we did our best to get sponsors, but it is always difficult to get people to part with their money in the last quarter of a year. So all we have now are promises from different corporates, not a penny in hand. How long can we wait? Usha had been postponing her visit to see her sister in America for the last six months, she got a visa some five months ago. She finally had booked her ticket for mid April after we assured her we will finish by March. So two weeks ago, we took the call to go ahead and finish it, no matter what. With or without money. People have been doing it. One of my one-time assistant director Pradeep had got together with his friend Vijay last November for a cup of tea. They wrote a script by November 17, auditioned people and started shooting by November 24 and finished shoot by December 17 and editing by January 7 this year!! With no money at all, sheer will-power!!!
Pradeep and Vijay, today, are my inspiration.
I did this scriptwriting workshop at SRM mid last year and at the end of it, as a part of my motivational exercise told them to write a feature length script in 30 days and if they did, I would personally ensure that the director will provide them with the camera and the editing set-up for the shoot. Early February this year, I got a call from their director. They had a film on them. A completed one. They, today, are my inspiration.
Money corrupts a project. Will-power gives it the boost. Today we don’t have any money. But we have the will, we have people, we have the spirit. What more do we need, huh?
Having said that, thank you Mom!! For letting me steal money from your account to do the movie.

With so many difficulties, many would have given up. But you *REALLY* persevere. Why?

Ah, no way. Why would we even think of giving up on something that means the world to us. That’s like quitting life. Plus, if you’ve spent five and a half years on something, you surely don’t want that much of work to go down the drain, do you? It’s just that that kept us going. This film has changed our lives. We owe it to this film and give it some life now.

Dealing with high profile stars has its own difficulties. Why don’t you use fresh faces? After all, movies like Hyderabad Blues and Kaadhal really didn’t have big stars.

Well, like I said, the film wasn’t written for stars. The film found these stars. Every artiste wants a script he/she can relate to. I guess that worked for our film. Every person involved is in the film, not because he/she is a star but because they believe in the script and they can so relate to it. And hey, it helps to have stars because I know hundreds of filmmakers in the country who have not found distributors because we have such a dim-witted system that believes in names to sell a film. I know many completed films which haven’t found buyers because they didn’t have stars. Even Hyderabad Blues had to wait for four years after it was made before it hit the screen and Kaadhal had Boys Bharat who was a name. With the clutter of so many promos, these days we only decide to watch films if we know some face behind the film. Sudhish is hardly a face, Abbas is, Cary is, Usha today is … it’s these faces you see in the promos that actually help you make up your mind if you want to see the film or not. And no, though we fought like mad dogs on the project, we never had any major problems because we always knew that each of us wanted the film to be good.
Even if Abbas isn’t a part of the film now, he will always remain a part of our family, as one of those responsible for seeing the film through.

DVD cover of the short film I made with Abbas years ago
Ellipsis was shot in two nights in the middle of a cyclone

You movie is one of the first ventures to be shot fully in digital format. What difficulties do you face with it?

There were very few difficulties as such. Though it would have been easier for us had we not shot using sync sound (location sound). Sync sound is something very few have attempted… something only what a Kamal Hasan has tried before here in the South. Farhan did it too for Dil Chahta Hai. And it’s the toughest thing when you are shooting in real locations. If you shut everyone up on the set, even the most real locations look like a set. If you don’t, it turns too noisy that you can hardly hear the lines. Then there’s the sound of the blast of the AC, other ambience noise … like traffic for example, which require you to go in for more and more retakes. This time, we’d rather go in for dubbing. Other than that, video has its limitations. There is the inherent danger of the film looking like a TV serial, because all said and done, the canvas is smaller when you shoot on video. But the advantages of shooting on video really more than make up for the difficulties. If not for video, most of us wouldn’t have ever made a movie!

Does your movie have music?

Yes, we have this American rap/hiphop/fusion band called Karmacy that has recorded a title track for us. And they are giving us another two songs. Asif Ali, our music director sat with Cary and recorded about 20 scratch songs, we’ve shortlisted quite a few of them. This time around, Asif has done another ten songs, mostly instrumental. It’s about young people. There’s got to be music.

What lessons have you learnt in filmmaking?

Oh plenty. First as a scriptwriter, I learnt how much I should NOT write. As a director, I learnt how much I should NOT take from the script. A director does not just take a script and translate it to film, he adds value and character to the film. He eliminates words and replaces them with visuals. He takes 95 per cent of the text and puts it in context and uses it as subtext. I learnt that there is no limit to how much you can add to a script. A script is basically made up of a page a minute, it probably packs ten ideas a page and is probably made up of, say, a thousand ideas which tell a story. A director needs to take each of these thousand ideas and express each of these using another ten, twenty, thirty, forty, hundred or more ideas depending on the importance and the magnitude of the idea, keeping the desired impact in mind. The lessons are many. The biggest lesson is that there are many more to be learnt. And you won’t learn till you’ve made the mistakes. I’ve made a million mistakes. I’d like to believe I’ve learnt a million lessons.

Want know more?

That Four Letter Word: FAQS-2

April 20, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

We hear that you were able to rope in a very decent line up of stars. Film actor Abbas, ex-Channel [V] VJ Ranvir, SS Music VJ Cary Edwards, Usha (VJ & model), Suchitra (Radio Mirchi Rj). How did you meet the actors?

Well, first TFLW was this small film we wanted to make without any money. It wasn’t a script written after we put the cast together. One day on my job, during an interview with VJs Ranvir and Purab, I learnt Ranvir wanted to be an actor. I told him ‘Every VJ wants to be an actor.’ He didn’t take that comment lightly. After we were done with the interview, he told me that it has nothing to do with a VJ. Every body in this world either wants to make a movie/be an actor or cut an album/be a singer or write a book/be a writer. “I don’t know you but I can bet you want to be a writer,” he said. I smiled back and said: “No, I’d be the movie guy.” “Oh, so you want to make a movie,” he asked. “No, I’m making my movie,” I said. He got all curious then, so though I was least interested in telling him what it was all about, I just gave him a polite two line description of what the movie was about and he immediately asked: Can I audition? Man, I couldn’t believe that! He was a VJ, someone I had great respect for. When I studied in Manipal, he had come to our campus for a shoot. He was so funny and not even in my wildest dreams did I think that HE would want to be in MY movie? For icing, there was Purab, who joined Ranvir and said: “Me too. Can I audition too?” Purab, then got busy with ‘Supari,’ so he passed on the script to Cary, who had just about quit Channel [V] after hosting the much acclaimed Virtual [V] for three years. I still remember that we didn’t have money, so the first time I ever spoke to him was through SMS. My message to him was: “Hi Cary, no STD, only SMS. This low budget film. You still interested? Welcome to the film.”
There was Cyrus Sahukar too who was once a part of the film after he expressed interest but he backed out last minute, saying he didn’t have leave. We just had another two weeks to shoot. And I could only think of Abbas, with whom I had shot a short experimental film called ‘Ellipsis’ a few months earlier. I called him, he said: Give me two minutes, I’ll check if I have dates. Two minutes later, he calls back to say we have. “When can we meet,” he asks. “Now?” “Cool,’ he says. Thirty minutes later, at 8.30 p.m., I meet him at his wife’s boutique on North Boag Road. I narrate the script and we end up talking till 2.30 in the morning. I’ve never seen anyone more excited than him. He could so relate to the character he was playing. And then, he told me something that happened four months before that. He had invited me to the premiere of his Hindi film, ‘Ansh,’ and it turned out to be quite bad. Interval break, he asks us to come out and asks us for our honest opinion. “Bad man … it’s very bad,” I say softly. But I wasn’t telling him anything new. He knew it was bad. He almost broke down: “Why does this happen to me? I make the same mistakes in choosing films,” he said with near moist eyes. “Let’s go for a drive,” I suggested because the last thing we wanted to see was him breaking down outside his own movie preview. A friend stayed next street, so we took him there and showed him the trailer we had just shot for the film, just to warm up. At that point of time, Cyrus was still part of our film and I had my whole cast. “I really wanted to ask you if I can be part of your film that day,” Abbas recalled. “I didn’t want to take advantage of our friendship. But I think it’s destiny. God wanted me to be a part of this film.”
To this moment, Abbas has displayed the same amount of unflinching commitment, passion and enthusiasm to the film. Which is why these days I never say ‘my film,’ I always refer to it as ‘our film.’
Oh, and Ranvir almost never made it to the film because he was busy with his play ‘Blue Mug’ and he asked us to postpone shoot by a month. Cary had waited a year waiting for the film to take off by then and so we told him we can’t wait any longer. Ranvir was already upset with us for an earlier goof-up. When we shot in Pune, he drove down all by himself from Bombay and couldn’t find us because he had the wrong phone number with him and we couldn’t reach him. He was left stranded there before we reached him 36 hours later. He was so angry, he swore he wouldn’t be a part of it. By now, he had cooled down but he was still upset that we couldn’t wait for him in spite of him having done so much for the film. “I was a part of the film even before Cary joined,” he reminded us. But Ranvir had a regular job, Cary did not. So we told him we had to shoot no matter what. “Well, no bad feelings then,” he said, wishing us luck.
There was no one else who could have done that role but Ranvir. And the next alternative we could think of was Cyrus Broacha. How do we get Cyrus Broacha, we wondered aloud sitting at Qwikys when a guy walked up to us and said: “I’ve been observing you guys for the past few weeks. I’ve always wanted to help with your film. I have Broacha’s number,” he said. We christened him ‘Angel.’ Ever since that day, Angel was part of our dream. He quit his job, worked with us on the film and went back to Pune to take up a low paying job saying we inspired him to chase his dreams.
Anyway, so we called Cyrus Broacha and said: “For us, sending you the script and asking you to do our film is like asking Amitabh Bachchan if he wants to work with us.” He laughed and said: “I’m not Amitabh Bachchan. Send me the script.” We did just that and he went incommunicado while we made friends with his Mom over a coupla weeks. Initially she was hostile, then seeing that we had no intention of giving up, finally became friends and tipped us on what time we can catch him at home. Cyrus first said he liked the script and wanted to change the lines a bit. We were game. Then he asked: “When are you looking at shooting this film?” Next month, we said. “Oh, I hate to sound like Amitabh Bachchan but I have two foreign tours lined up next month. One is the UNAIDS conference in Barcelona where Bill Clinton will interview me and talk about sex” (he wasn’t exaggerating too much, it was all over the papers that he was interviewing Clinton) and there was the Nickelodeon Chotta VJ hunt in the Middle East.
So he took off, became incommunicado again. We got so desperate we tried calling five star hotels in Spain through the internet phone at Iway to reach him. No luck, people who picked up the phone didn’t even understand English.
So we scheduled his scenes for the last four days and started shoot. Ten days into the shoot, we reach him … this is two nights before we have scheduled his scenes. And he now tells us his boss Natasha didn’t want him to shoot a movie. We then call Natasha who tells us that she didn’t have a problem, in fact, she didn’t even know about the film. “Maybe he doesn’t want to do it,” she said.
So that’s how Broacha pulled a Bakra on us.
And we were all so pissed off that we cancelled shoot that evening and went for ‘Bend it like Beckham.’ In the interval, Cary asked: “Why don’t you ask Ranvir what he’s doing day after tomorrow?” “He will kill me,” I said. “That’s not too bad. But what if he agrees … we have everything to gain,” he said.
Thank you Cary, for suggesting that.
Because the phone conversation, went like this:
“Hi Ranvir, this is an SOS. We need you to bail us out.”
“Why, what happened?”
“Broacha was supposed to do your role and he backed out last minute. We know we are being really selfish but we didn’t know who else to ask.”
“What dates do you need?”
“Four days from day after tomorrow.”
“Okay, I’m free on these days. Because I just quit Channel [V] yesterday. But I’ll come only for four days. And you were going to pay me 5K a day, now make it 10K. Send me the ticket and keep the cheque ready, I’m coming.”
Ranvir, we would have paid you a lakh a day if we had the money! We jumped at his offer. Done!
So Ranvir was in again and we got our Zebra back.
That was the last time around.
This time, it was a rollercoaster because we had to change our cast halfway and resume shoot in 48 hours. And all that we did for years to get our actors, we fit into the most tense 48 hours of my life. That is something I will save for the book I’m writing on the movie.


You are a full time reporter in The Hindu. How do you manage to juggle between your full time job and the movie.

Well, the movie has been part of me for these seven years. I go to sleep with it, wake up with it, have breakfast with it, take it with me to office, make it wait while I meet different people and key in my story and then come back home with it. A movie happens in your head. It didn’t really take time away from what my work required of me, except for the 20 days when we had to do the shooting. Or let’s just say that my job isn’t really a job. It’s like life. Everyday, I meet different people, get to know them and write them in my diary using a little journalese and hey, you read it in the papers. Most of my stories are conversational, they talk to people. I didn’t find a style in it, it was what came naturally to me. And I’m glad it worked. I don’t see myself as a journalist or even a writer, nor do I even claim to be.

I dream and films are just about living out that dream … you share it with a few people, shoot it for the camera and share it with more people. It is really that simple, leave the jargon and the work out of it.

Finding the money to shoot that dream is what is 90 per cent of the “work,” the rest of it is what we love to do anyway.

Want know more?

When Kiruba interviewed the director: Part 1

April 20, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

Thank you all for enquiring and it’s time for an update.

We’re nearly done dubbing for the movie, but for a little patchwork here and there. We should be done by the middle of the next month. Unless things go wrong drastically again!

Till then, here’s an interview Kiruba did with me one year ago. I’ve edited it all over again because we went through a few cast changes after that.

The movie and my life has changed quite a bit.

Sudhish, you practically live, breathe and dream TFLW. Take us to the birth of the film.

Interesting choice of words there, Kiruba. Live, breathe and dream. Hmmm… EXACTLY the words that the film tries to explore. Yes, TFLW is about living, breathing and chasing your dream. Which is why it has to do with each one of us. Which is why it is a story of every gang of friends. Which is why it is a universally relevant theme. Which is why I found the idea interesting enough to pursue in the first place. But yes, the film was conceived when my best friend Murugan and me caught up with life, during one of his annual trips to India. While discussing our lives, we found a common thread that has to do with everybody’s life. Actually, I started a blog to record the birth of the film. So you can find the details there. (http://thatfourletterword.blogspot.com). But briefly, here’s how it started. It occurred to us that everybody in our age group had the same things to worry about: What next? What are we going to do with the rest of our lives? What determines our dreams, goals and the means to reach them? What is the price we need to pay? These are things we wanted to explore through two diametrically different attitudes in life. One way to live is to go by your heart, it has to do with living the moment, going with the flow… Carpe Diem. And the other way to live is to use your head: you plan, stick to it and know where you are going with total focus. But most of us are somewhere caught between the heart and the mind … confused about which one is right. I, for one, didn’t like Science in school, did Commerce in College, and then Masters in Science, ironically in Communications, always wanted to do advertising, but took up a job in journalism to start working on a film, just to tell someone who much I liked her. How confused can one get? TFLW is about these people … these people we know so well. Ourselves.


Did you learn filmmaking formally?

I did, we had a whole semester dedicated to it when I did my Masters, but it didn’t help much. Because, one thing about filmmaking and sex… till you have actually done it, you really don’t know how know how it REALLY feels like. Man, I sound like Siddhu, don’t I? He he! But yeah, I learnt filmmaking through the grind, on the job, while making TFLW. TFLW taught me filmmaking. I didn’t make TFLW. TFLW made me!


Who are the main people behind this venture?

Now, I don’t know where to start. Okay, first Murugan, because he wrote it with me. He was in it from Day one, or night one rather and still continues to be. That was seven years ago. And we wrote the movie over email and it took us a year and a half to develop the script. My family, my Mom and Day especially, and then, Sashi Chimala, my producer and my guide all the way. If there’s one man who has his heart in the right place, that’s him. His little daughter has been bravely fighting brain tumour for two years now and our prayers are with him. And she needs yours too, so pray for her. Though he’s not actively involved in the project now, he will always remain a part of it. Next, my cast … every single one of them. The sacrifices and the emotional investment they have made probably outweigh what me, Murugan and Sashi together have, over the years.

Abbas, who’s not a part of the film anymore, but who we are indebted to forever, for being there, without being paid, supporting us for two years of his life. Unfortunately, the only way we can sort out our differences is when I finish my film and show him what I envisioned.

Cary stayed without a job for a year, waiting for TFLW, before we shot something. Similarly, Usha too, completed her second round of six months waiting for TFLW, before she shot and got another job that paid.

I have the most amazing cast, Aashil Nair, who risked losing his job at IBM to step in for Abbas in 48 hours, Paloma Rao and Praveen Bharadwaj who almost let us take them for granted unconditionally, always showing up on time, Sunil from ‘Evam’, for giving me the most amazing Zebra, a role I thought no body could do after Ranvir Shorey. Thank you for proving me wrong. I guarantee people will love you, whether they like the movie or not.

Archana, my production manager and angel incarnate, she was like the Atlas, carrying the weight of the production department, just by herself. Well, I could go on… my inspiration and film editor, my ‘nanban’ Vijay Prabakaran, who made his own film in less than two months, with no money at all, my associate director and bundle of energy Swathi Raghuraman for working round the clock, my art directors Anuradha and Preethi, for the unconditional support, all those hours of toil and believing in the film more than I have (which might tempt me to forgive them for giving The Last Samurai, my old bike, a coat or orange and blue), my music director Asif Bhai for staying on patiently giving us 30 plus tracks when we needed only half a dozen, thank you Sindhu, my really sound engineer, Preethi Narayanan, my art director from the first film, for the super professional work you churned out even before your NID experience, my soul-brother and assistant director Abhishek who has believed it is his film more than mine (lol!), my script reviewer for four years Ghirijah Jeyaraj, Ranvir who pledged his unconditional support from the moment he heard about the plot, Pradyumna Singh Chauhan who did this just to support a friend’s dream despite his broken knee that took away one year of his life, Shanky Mahendra, who did the camerawork on the previous, our cinematographer Jai for stepping in at short notice … oh, there are just too many to mention. My professor Rakesh Katarey and filmmaker Hariharan, who I consider my guru.
I’ve had like ten assistant directors till date… Thank you
Deesh Mariwala teaching me basics of production, Sravan and Bharani for being super resourceful, Rohit Rueben for working harder than everyone else the first time around, Krishna Ramkumar, Pradeep Kalipurayath (who came a full circle in the last five years, he started as an AD and returned to the movie as a cinematographer), Shalini Venugopal, Kumkum Jagadeesh, Avinash, Livingston, Shyam Balasubramaniam! And please remind me if I left anyone out, better late than never. And yes, I’m gonna suck at Oscar acceptance speeches… He he!

Want know more?

That Four Letter Word: FAQS-1

April 20, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

Thank you for enquiring and bombing me with the same question everytime and everywhere you meet me.

We’re nearly done dubbing for the movie, but for a little patchwork here and there. We should be done by the middle of the next month. Will next update in the second week of May.

Till then, here’s an interview Kiruba did with me one year ago. I’ve edited it all over again because we went through a few cast changes after that. The movie and my life has changed quite a bit.

Sudhish, you practically live, breathe and dream TFLW. Take us to the birth of the film.

Interesting choice of words there, Kiruba. Live, breathe and dream. Hmmm… EXACTLY the words that the film tries to explore. Yes, TFLW is about living, breathing and chasing your dream. Which is why it has to do with each one of us. Which is why it is a story of every gang of friends. Which is why it is a universally relevant theme. Which is why I found the idea interesting enough to pursue in the first place. But yes, the film was conceived when my best friend Murugan and me caught up with life, during one of his annual trips to India. While discussing our lives, we found a common thread that has to do with everybody’s life. Actually, I started a blog to record the birth of the film. So you can find the details there. (http://thatfourletterword.blogspot.com). But briefly, here’s how it started. It occurred to us that everybody in our age group had the same things to worry about: What next? What are we going to do with the rest of our lives? What determines our dreams, goals and the means to reach them? What is the price we need to pay? These are things we wanted to explore through two diametrically different attitudes in life. One way to live is to go by your heart, it has to do with living the moment, going with the flow… Carpe Diem. And the other way to live is to use your head: you plan, stick to it and know where you are going with total focus. But most of us are somewhere caught between the heart and the mind … confused about which one is right. I, for one, didn’t like Science in school, did Commerce in College, and then Masters in Science, ironically in Communications, always wanted to do advertising, but took up a job in journalism to start working on a film, just to tell someone who much I liked her. How confused can one get? TFLW is about these people … these people we know so well. Ourselves.


Did you learn filmmaking formally?

I did, we had a whole semester dedicated to it when I did my Masters, but it didn’t help much. Because, one thing about filmmaking and sex… till you have actually done it, you really don’t know how know how it REALLY feels like. Man, I sound like Siddhu, don’t I? He he! But yeah, I learnt filmmaking through the grind, on the job, while making TFLW. TFLW taught me filmmaking. I didn’t make TFLW. TFLW made me!


Who are the main people behind this venture?

Now, I don’t know where to start. Okay, first Murugan, because he wrote it with me. He was in it from Day one, or night one rather and still continues to be. That was seven years ago. And we wrote the movie over email and it took us a year and a half to develop the script. My family, my Mom and Day especially, and then, Sashi Chimala, my producer and my guide all the way. If there’s one man who has his heart in the right place, that’s him. His little daughter has been bravely fighting brain tumour for two years now and our prayers are with him. And she needs yours too, so pray for her. Though he’s not actively involved in the project now, he will always remain a part of it. Next, my cast … every single one of them. The sacrifices and the emotional investment they have made probably outweigh what me, Murugan and Sashi together have, over the years.

Abbas, who’s not a part of the film anymore, but who we are indebted to forever, for being there, without being paid, supporting us for two years of his life. Unfortunately, the only way we can sort out our differences is when I finish my film and show him what I envisioned.

Cary stayed without a job for a year, waiting for TFLW, before we shot something. Similarly, Usha too, completed her second round of six months waiting for TFLW, before she shot and got another job that paid.

I have the most amazing cast, Aashil Nair, who risked losing his job at IBM to step in for Abbas in 48 hours, Paloma Rao and Praveen Bharadwaj who almost let us take them for granted unconditionally, always showing up on time, Sunil from ‘Evam’, for giving me the most amazing Zebra, a role I thought no body could do after Ranvir Shorey. Thank you for proving me wrong. I guarantee people will love you, whether they like the movie or not.

Archana, my production manager and angel incarnate, she was like the Atlas, carrying the weight of the production department, just by herself. Well, I could go on… my inspiration and film editor, my ‘nanban’ Vijay Prabakaran, who made his own film in less than two months, with no money at all, my associate director and bundle of energy Swathi Raghuraman for working round the clock, my art directors Anuradha and Preethi, for the unconditional support, all those hours of toil and believing in the film more than I have (which might tempt me to forgive them for giving The Last Samurai, my old bike, a coat or orange and blue), my music director Asif Bhai for staying on patiently giving us 30 plus tracks when we needed only half a dozen, thank you Sindhu, my really sound engineer, Preethi Narayanan, my art director from the first film, for the super professional work you churned out even before your NID experience, my soul-brother and assistant director Abhishek who has believed it is his film more than mine (lol!), my script reviewer for four years Ghirijah Jeyaraj, Ranvir who pledged his unconditional support from the moment he heard about the plot, Pradyumna Singh Chauhan who did this just to support a friend’s dream despite his broken knee that took away one year of his life, Shanky Mahendra, who did the camerawork on the previous, our cinematographer Jai for stepping in at short notice … oh, there are just too many to mention. My professor Rakesh Katarey and filmmaker Hariharan, who I consider my guru.
I’ve had like ten assistant directors till date… Thank you
Deesh Mariwala teaching me basics of production, Sravan and Bharani for being super resourceful, Rohit Rueben for working harder than everyone else the first time around, Krishna Ramkumar, Pradeep Kalipurayath (who came a full circle in the last five years, he started as an AD and returned to the movie as a cinematographer), Shalini Venugopal, Kumkum Jagadeesh, Avinash, Livingston, Shyam Balasubramaniam! And please remind me if I left anyone out, better late than never. And yes, I’m gonna suck at Oscar acceptance speeches… He he!

Want know more?

Guest post: Politics for sceptics

April 17, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

My buddy China a.k.a. Navin (an arivali doing his Ph. D.) came up with this post after reading a comment in the last post.

Politics for skeptics

When things occur for the first time they are always viewed by skepticism.

Infact, I am a skeptic myself, my approach is no different, can they win?

What difference will they make?

Will they be as committed as they are now?

Why are they contesting in Tamil nadu and mostly in Madras alone?

Why doesn’t their regional website have things for Tamil readers. Why are they not using a big publicity stunt?

Why does their name sound too Hindu-ish or too old fashioned or too Sanskrit-ish…Why does the symbol have to be two axes and fire torch? Is it not violent?

Will the common man understand what they are trying to achieve here?….Why are some non-tamil candidates standing in madras..how do they expect to win if they try this?

(Note to China from Suderman: The contestants are all from the city and almost all of them are Tamil)

To all these questions I found the answers myself.

This elite group of collective thinking people come from the premier institutes of India…if you don’t understand what I am talking about you can watch this video.

I am not an IITian nor do I belong to any top institute from India, but I sincerely support what these guys are upto. If they wanted they could be in top positions anywhere in the world and here I am questioning their ability to be a good politician. What have I done till now other than actually watch the drama that is politics and vote for X, Y or Z on a comparative scale on who I think is less corrupt. It’s like trying to find ‘first among equals’ in corruption. When actually some of the honest and educated people try to start a party, I stand back and question their ability or pass comments like ‘I don’t think they can win’ instead of actually encouraging them or spreading the word to my friends and relatives to make them aware that these people can actually bring about a slow change in the corroding society.

They are hard workers, by hard workers I mean it starts from their childhood, they slogged hard to face a competition that is purely merit based and they achieve that goal by hard work alone. They are trying the same when they are entering politics; they are working harder than they worked before. They are geniuses and it requires perspiration, I have had some of my classmates go into these institutes and I do not have to mention how hard it is. The people I have met from these institutes have always been honest and true to1.to themselves 2. to others. The other trait is that they are quite straight forward. I don’t have to mention the knowledge they possess. I just don’t want to praise their qualities, it speaks for itself.

For the people who are asking what were they doing till now, why are they joining politics now, when they could have contributed long back? Instead of asking rebellious questions, why don’t we actually support them now when they are trying to do it. For the educated people who vote, it is an opportunity to be heard if you vote for them. What I like about them is that they are not throwing stones or criticizing other parties; they promise a society based on knowledge and believe that it can be done. They are not trying to cheat with false promises and most of all they are not blaming anyone for it. They are making people aware of the inaction that goes on and they are starting it with a crowd which can actually understand their philosophy. That’s one reason I believe they are contesting in cities for now. They have actually given their strategy in a transparent manner in their website.

And they have achieved quite a few milestones in a short amount of time even though they are not actors or enjoy an already famous or familiar face. The stronghold they have is their education and I don’t think any present politician can match that. They have entrepreneurship qualities and if they can make a company earn millions they can for sure make the society earn much more.

Quoting from their website ‘This state of affairs is somehow deeply ingrained in the minds of the people and has resulted in a state of collective hopelessness. The most honest efforts are viewed with suspicion because people have lost the ability to comprehend the possibility of the existence of good will.’

To most people it looks like they are calling you hopeless and then asking for your vote, very few actually think that they are pointing out the simple truth that is in the very existence of the society. I have seen bloggers dig out this meaning to make their page popular or simply to oppose them. The questions they have are -“Aren’t we biased because most of these people are from IIT, what if they are from some XYZ college will they have such hype in the media”. The answer is no, they will not. But that does not mean that they lose their credibility. If an XYZ college alumini starts such a movement I would support that too, but they have not. The media projections of them that they could be working in US or Europe earning a millions of dollars but they chose to be politicians also creates a negating effect here, where many people believe that if they lose they can easily go back to what they were doing. If they really wanted to do what they were doing they would not contest at all. They are contesting to bring about a change. Well, ‘Everyone promises that’ – is the second argument, but why don’t we question it when they actually do not deliver it, we had a long history of corrupt governments and we never question them and in a dumb manner we vote for the lesser thief the next time or a famous actor, or do the dumbest thing of all – not vote at all – which in turn favors the existing corrupt parties. They win because only 15 percent of the population voted. If only the educated people voted this time I am sure by any logic they will find the Lok Paritran better than other candidates.

The other question is how sure are you that these people will not turn out to be corrupt later on? The answer is – that also has a non-zero probability, but it lies close to zero, where as if I compare the other parties I estimate a probability of one and it’s not just close to one – it is one.

To all the people who question their popularity or the people who just think they will not win. You can make a small difference and even the small difference that you make contributes. You can vote. You can influence other people to vote. They have already taken the step of standing in the elections, which by itself is huge, if at all you cannot help do not spoil the chances by your expert pre-analysis- by giving a statement like “do they have the money or matter” or “they cannot win”. It’s like telling a kid that he will fail in his exams because he is honest.

If you can, please do forward these links to your friends and family and let them decide, if you truly believe that it can be achieved then you can also try convincing them to vote.

The website.

The plan.

Media Links:

http://www.hinduonnet.com/2006/03/03/stories/2006030315510300.htm

http://www.hindu.com/2006/03/04/stories/2006030419340400.htm

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1016236

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1444561.cms

http://www.ibnlive.com/article.php?id=5107&section_id=3

I do not have any associations with Lok Paritran other than that I am just a silent supporter. These are just my views on them and do not reflect anyone else’s. I am not even a member of Lok Paritran. I am just an admirer of their spirit and I hope they win.

If you are a strong believer in that it can be done then some strategic points would be getting some printouts of their plans, try to make some copies of it and make your colleagues/friends/relatives and college mates aware of it or at least talk to them about it. When Educated Indians speak of politics they speak of corruption and lack of facilities and blame it on their political leaders and use the phrase- “nothing can be done here to change it” – If we are not encouraging the change, how will we even change.

Its not about winning or losing, it’s about doing the right thing to the best of your knowledge. If not this time there is always a next time, but why not do it this time?

Vote for change. Vote for Lok Paritran!

April 15, 2006 · by sudhishkamath


If you don’t encourage the first man to try something new, how will you give the second man the courage?

So here goes, my interview with the guys from Lok Paritran. These guys are contesting in about 10 constituencies in the city, out of which they have released a list of eight. Read story for more.

Since they are not contesting in Villivakkam, my vote will go to Captain. 🙂

Road Trip: A day with Captain Vijayakanth!

April 11, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

After winding up dubbing for That Four Letter Word around 2 a.m. and getting home around three, the last thing you want to do is to take off to the heartland of Tamil Nadu to get a feel of the election mood. More so, when you’ve been asked to follow Captain on his election trail from Chidambaram to Vriddhachalam just as summer peaks.

Suderman left home sleepless at 4 a.m. for an adventure that covered over 600 kilometers in 15 hours, spending six hours and 127 kilometres with Captain’s convoy, stopping every few kilometres on battered roads and coming face-to-face with Captain’s fan base in the remotest of villages.

Meanwhile, I have uploaded the pictures: Watch the slideshow here and click on the pic to read the captions.

Here goes the account of what happened:

A few kilometers outside Chidambaram, people have come out of their huts and lined up along the road. They know that Captain Vijayakanth would pass that way. Soon enough, a little boy bursts a cracker. Another has a wardrobe malfunction, he hastily fastens his button-less trouser as the convoy approaches.

There’s a sense of urgency as the first car in the convoy, asks people to clear the road. “We don’t have permission to stop here. Please forgive us but you can see Captain from there,” says the speaker from the Tempo Traveller, the third vehicle in the convoy. Seated next to him, Captain waves.

Captain’s convoy has six vehicles in all, including the security bus, the CB-CID personnel following him and his private multi-utility vehicle. Only two cars for party workers. “We have told party workers not to join the convoy. We don’t want to flout election rules. We told them that if they follow, we will not stop the police from seizing the vehicles,” says Captain’s aide.

A few metres away, there’s a huge group of people who plead him to stop. Captain gets out and tells them they don’t have permission to stop, apologises and makes a quick one-line request with folded hands: “I promise you change, help me.”

10.20. After a long stretch of battered roads, he stops at his first stop for the day, Kumarachi.

Within seconds, hundreds of people surround his convoy as Captain emerges from the top of the vehicle. “This is my first time here and what good roads you have,” he says in sarcasm as the crowd cheers. “I heard that the roads have been this way for 15 years. This road, a short-cut connecting Chidambaram to Trichy has been like this for years and you keep voting for the same people?” he adds. “It’s been 20 years since MGR died. Both these parties remember his name every election and you blindly vote for them?”

“Keep the relief aside and think for a moment. Do you have roads? Do you get good ration rice? Do you get water? I have not been idle since September. I’ve been talking to people to understand your problems. Your problems can be solved with inter-linking of local water-bodies. You have five classrooms and two teachers. How is this ‘Porkaalam’?” he said criticising the ruling government, as a party worker goes around with a Dictaphone asking them if that speech is reason enough to vote.

“Why would you now vote for Captain when you’ve been voting for the big two parties all these years,” he asks. “For change,” answers the youth.

As he winds up campaign, a woman asks him to name her baby. “It’s not my job to name babies,” he says. They insist. Embarrassed at the moment, he names her Vijayalakshmi and gets into the vehicle.

As his convoy heads to the next stop, a funeral by the roadside is temporarily suspended as the mourners desert their chairs to rush to the road to get a glimpse of Captain.

Next is a Muslim dominated neighbourhood. Captain emerges out with the Muslim cap and says it felt like home-coming. “If I wanted to make money, I would traded suitcases for alliances. Please vote for my brave decision to go alone … We will not discriminate on the basis of caste or religion,” he says during his stop at Lalpettai, his second pit-stop after Yelleri. “I don’t have to tell you about the other two parties. Watch Sun TV and Jaya TV and you will know what they have been doing,”

At the Kattumannarkoil stop, he’s thronged by hundreds again. “I’m coming here alone without any alliances. The DMK and AIADMK have money power. I’ve come here hoping to win on people power. Don’t let me down,” he pleads. “They say I beg to the people. I say I should and must beg only to the people and not with political parties,” he adds as the crowds cheer again.

As he passes Palayamkottai, he sees huge groups of children in uniform along the road. Captain stops for a moment to enquire. “Do you know me,” he asks. The kids nod. “Desiya Murpokku Dravidar Kazhagam,” a girl says out loud. “Not bad, you are in tune with politics. Don’t think about all that. Let all that be, study well now.”

“Why are you out in the sun? Have you all eaten?” The kids are thrilled at the gesture.

Outside the Srimushnam temple, he’s mobbed by hundreds, perched on rooftops and trees.

“I’m dark. You are dark. I stand under the same sun as you do,” he says as the crowd roars. Not once does Captain make any personal attack or even name political leaders. He prefers to criticize government and parties. “The DMK says they will give you rice for two rupees. They were in power the last term. Why couldn’t they give it then? I don’t want to lure you with such false promises. I’m not saying I’m going to bring the Himalayas here. I promise good basic amenities. I will get my symbol only on April 20. But I believe that even if get it only a day before the elections, you will remember it,” continues Captain.

As the convoy makes its way into his constituency Vriddhachalam, there are crackers (which Captain pulls up his party cadres for, asking them not to waste money on them) and fan-fare with a band playing and the town has come alive with people taking to the roads just to get a glimpse of the man. Suddenly there over a dozen cars added to the convoy. The roads are clogged with people and vehicles.

“I’ve come here to release my election manifesto in front of the temple, to the public. It will speak for itself. I will spend at five or six days here to talk to you. They asked me why I didn’t contest from Madurai and chose Vriddhachalam. It’s because I believe you are my own people, just like my people in Madurai.”

@Elizabethtown!

April 9, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

And lovin’ it here!
Yes people, I have a new favourite from Cameron Crowe. Thank you Darshan.
P.S: Strictly for Crowe fans only. I loved every bit of it. 😀

Updated: He says, she says

April 6, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

Yeah, Men are lazy to update blogs. But what do you call women who don’t even maintain them?

This is just to let our regulars know that our He Says She Says column has been updated online. Should a man dance or be content doing the chance pe dance? Should a man use pick up lines? Or does she really need to be picked up?

Review: Zathura

April 6, 2006 · by sudhishkamath

When kids smoke up

Cast: Jonah Bobo, Josh Hutcherson, Dax Shepard, Kristen Stewart, Tim Robbins
Director: Jon Favreau
Genre: Space adventure
Storyline: Siblings find themselves inside a Space adventure game called Zathura, as their house ejects out to space and the only way they can return is by completing the game.
Bottomline: Kids on drugs could conjure up bizarre fantasies.

Seems like Hollywood has conducted some sort of a focus-group experiment.

That goes something like this.

Take 100 kids, comprising of siblings at war and best friends, a good mix of guys and girls. Lock them all in a room and let hash in through the air conditioner. For best effects, put well-read imaginative kids into that room.

Once they’ve smoked up enough, ask them to describe their fantasies. Have a screenwriter talk to them and get them to describe where they went and what they saw. Get a visual effects guy to talk to them and find out what the creatures they saw, looked like. If that isn’t bizarre enough, put them on pot too.

What happened after, went something like this.

Almost all kids reported going to some strange place, finding funny-looking friends and monsters on a munch-fest, and soon enough learnt that they were the chosen ones, to slay monsters and save the world. In no time, they found they could do horse-riding, mountain-climbing, sword-fighting and were suddenly strong enough to lead the fight against evil.

The focus group experiment lead to the following movies.

The kids who were J.R.R.Tolkien fans helped Peter Jackson make ‘The Lord of the Rings.’
Kids who were J.K.Rowling addicts helped in the making of the Harry Potter series, as the experiments with pot continue for the forthcoming films in the franchise.

Kids who grew up on C.S.Lewis came up with the script for ‘The Chronicles of Narnia,’ after they tried escaping the room through the cupboard, only to find that the impact of the air-conditioner was strongest there. Strong enough for them to see the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

Those who didn’t read enough, recycled an old film (Jumanji) with what they remembered from Star Trek and came up with ‘Zathura,’ with a little help from the gaming addicts, who came up with the plot points derived from a computer game. (Trivia: Zathura is based on a book written by Chris Van Allsburg, the author of ‘Jumanji’)

Seriously, what is with Hollywood?

How many more movies can children take of kids turning superheroes after realising they are the chosen ones and leading a war against evil?

This one, particularly, features a boom mike in the lead, in every other scene. Given that the boom mike has more screen time than any of the actors in the film, this movie certainly was made by a crew where at least one person was drugged.

Apart from the visual effects, which offer nothing new whatsoever, there is no reason why anyone would want to watch Zathura.

Unless they are kids from that focus group who came up with this plot.

Tim Robbins has a guest role, so don’t let that mislead you. The kids in the lead, nine-year old Jonah Bobo and 14-year old Josh Hutcherson, are not the best of actors but they suffice for a movie like ‘Zathura,’ providing the right amount of the cute and the wicked. There are a couple of moments (with Jonah Bobo specially) to make you go ‘Awwww’ but not enough for you to shell out money.

Verdict: Really little kids might like it (they like anything with special effects), but they can catch it on video or TV later after exams.

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