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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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Mumbai Express: Fast-food cinema!

April 16, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

After a meaty ‘Virumaandi’ and a rehashed ‘Vasool Raja,’ Kodambakkam’s master chef returns with cinema of the fast food variety.

Mumbai Express seems to be a film written by a confident Kamal Haasan and shot by Singeetham Srinivasa Rao in express speed. Writing a script in three days can be a good thing and a bad thing. Good because the flow is spontaneous and the imagination too is let loose. Bad because three days isn’t adequate time to flesh out the characters.

But being the genious he is, Kamal surely has done justice to at least 80 per cent of the characters he’s created — the gang of four planning the kidnap is an absolute riot. It’s in the 20 per cent he skipped that the movie falters — the characters of Manisha and the fat kid, to be precise.

What Kamal Haasan as a screenwriter really had to do was to borrow blinkers from the horse he cast in the film and use them to keep his eyes on the core premise — the story of the kidnap that went wrong when planned right and which went right when intended against. Confused? Well, I guess that will make sense when you watch the film.

The human family drama, romantic angle and sentiment crap that unfolds shortly after interval really was out of sync with the rest of the narrative. This is where Express goes off track. Fast forward twenty minutes (including song) and you’re back to the meat of the plot. The run-for-the-money sequences in the film alone could have given ‘Chandramukhi’ a run for its money, but the excess baggage (family drama/sentiment) slows down Express and turns out to be the chain (of events) that stops the train.

After all, adventure is a genre which can really do without irrelevant sentiment. Manisha’s change of heart in the end is so sudden and contrived that Kamal could have just made Manisha fall in love with him much earlier in the film or at least dropped hints of interest. The fat kid who starts off on a promising note, is forgotten in the second half of the film and gets lost in the proceedings. Blame that on the screenwriter.

Having said all that, I remember reading somewhere that ordinary men are written about for their successes, the extra-ordinary are written about even for their failures. Kamal as a screenwriter might have messed up the script just a little, but the performer redeems the film
and the veteran director’s touch is evident throughout, especially in the timing and subtlety with which the actors deliver their punch-lines.

Technically speaking, having shot for my film with the same model of digital camera that Kamal Haasan used in ‘Mumbai Express,’ I for one, can say that the technicians have done a phenomenal job in creating a canvas which only 35mm film is known to provide, on simple digital video. Having said that, lack of exciting song sequences do make the film seem longer than it actually is and is actually the reason if you at any point that the film was looking like a TV serial.

But again, the digital projection at Abhirami was good to the extent that most viewers didn’t even realise that the film was shot on digital video. Those who watched the film at Kasi and Sathyam however seem to have observed pixellated frames, probably caused because of problems encountered by Kamal either in reverse telecine (process of printing video to 35mm film) or possible human error in the projector room caused by zooming into picture area to leave margins out of the canvas.

[My friends who watched the movie in Prarthana drive in (one of the biggest screens in town) say that the projection there was just fine. This is what makes me believe that the pixellation in Kasi/Sathyam was probably a human error!]

Mumbai Express might not be a wholesome unlimited meals, but is surely timepass cinema of the fast-food variety. Get entertained. Instantly. And get hungry within minutes after you walk out!

P.S: After that, you know where to head for filling entertainment, don’t you? Ikkada Choodu audience gaaru… simply Chandramukhi paaru! 😀

Chandramukhi: Return of the king!

April 15, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

All things you loved about Superstar are back.

1. Youthful zest: Superstar looks young yet again! Yay!

2. SPB Intro song: Thank you, Devuda!

3. P-P-Paambu sentiment: Snakes ought to be a part of Superstar comedy, so here it is!

4. Return of the native: Superstar always is the son of the soil. Either, he’s a village simpleton or a highly educated youth back from the States, lured home by the smell of the soil. After a string of films playing simpleton, he’s back to his Rajathi Raja days.

5. Friendship sentiment: Prabhu replaces Sarath Babu as the eternal best friend that Superstar will give his own life for. Superstar is always the nanban, the thozhan, the thalapathy!

6. Englees: Nothing works like Superstar English. How is it?? Super! In this one, Superstar throws some psychoanalytical jargon too! Too much ya!

7. Kick the sidekick comedy: Remember Superstar kicking Chinni Jayanth everytime he said ‘Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaan’ in Raja Chinna Roja? Or him getting Senthil into trouble for wearing his silk shirt? This time, it is Vadivelu’s turn. What surprises me is the level of double meaning dialogues in a Superstar movie, that too uttered by Superstar himself! Hmmm!!

8. Special effects: Ha ha ha ha ha! Superstar surely seems to be obsessed with special effects involving a kite… Here we go again! Kidding actually, here it’s just for a song and it works! Oh, and the Matrix style fight sequences. Now… if they don’t give that kind of build-up for Superstar, who will they give it for! Besides, they are called Special effects cuz Superstar uses these effects!

9. Song Picturisation: Pichitaanga!! Super! Excellently wonderfully beautifully choreographed and shot sequences and awesome songs!

10. Timing, style, flair, charisma, magic.

However, what it does not have:

1. No solid punchlines: Superstar seems to have gone on a peace mission. No attacks on anyone! Disappointing!

2. Subdued style: Very very underplayed this time around. No smoking at all, which is a good thing!

3. Fight in the climax! But hey, we are forgetting that it’s afterall an adaptation of ‘Manichitrathazhu’ which never had a single fight scene!

How it compares to the original:

No comparison. Different genres. Different sensibilities. Those who loved the original need to understand that before running down this simpler, dramatised version. Manichitrathazhu is indeed India’s best made thriller and will remain so. The beauty of that film lies in the narrative that explores with great detail the supernatural and the scientific aspects of a person possessed by the spirit of the dancer who died ages ago. The beauty of this film lies in the fact that P.Vasu actually managed to simply such a complicated fascinating tale and easily comprehensible by the lowest common denominator in the audience, by converting this into a typical Superstar movie with all the masala! No easy task this!

Oh, there’s also this small mood piece I wrote after watching the movie noon show on the first day of release. This story appeared today.

Gotta watch this more than once. As it comes in the ‘Devuda’ song… ‘REPEATU’!

Tripping on movies!

April 12, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

Well, it’s been too much That Four Letter Word in my blog and in my life too.

So, the break that came when we sat digitising 18 hours of footage was a welcome relief. Watched four American teen comedies and the over-rated ‘Manmathan.’

1. Road Trip: Yeah, it’s been on my must-see list for a long time now. Finally watched this laugh-riot. It is wickedly funny with wonderful characters and situations. Yes, there are scenes which would gross you out, but on the whole, it’s a must watch for anyone who digs comedies.

2. Euro Trip: This movie by the producers of Road Trip is a wannabe. All it has are stereotypes, some sick jokes that fall flat, lots of T & A (don’t tell me you don’t know what’s T**s & A**) . The only funny thing in the movie is the song ‘Scotty doesn’t know.’ Had me laughing everytime it appeared in the film. It’s pure soft porn, this movie!

3. Boat Trip: This one’s got Cuba Gooding Jr. It’s a movie about these two guys who plan a trip on a cruise to get laid, only to find out that the travel agent put them on board a gay cruise, just to get even with them, after they piss him off. It’s not all that funny, nor does it have any nudity but it’s just about barely watchable for a romantic comedy, just for Cuba Gooding Jr.

4. Old School: Made by Todd Philips, the director of Road Trip, Old School aint cool at all. It’s got a few funny scenes, crude American teen humour and an excuse of a plot. It’s quite a weird movie actually.

5. Manmadhan: Finally, saw this much hyped movie where Simbu is supposed to have shown his acting and technical prowess. I had my fist clenched from the moment the word Little Super Star Simbu appeared and the first half of the movie was disgustingly repulsive. I don’t think I’m ever gonna buy the premise that women would even talk to rapist-looking boys (like Simbhu in the film) let alone chasing him!

But, to be honest, I did dig the second character he played in the film. Though a little over the top, it’s got to be his role of a lifetime, esp. for that one scene when he catches his girl sleeping with a Dhanush-lookalike! The suspense maintained in the movie was commendable indeed but call it my bias, prejudice or whatever, that don’t impress me much.

Over all, I guess he’s done the best he can and that’s not really awe-inspiring. Here’s a tip Simbhu: why don’t you try dropping off your self-proclaimed ‘Little superstar’ tag till you actually earn it. That will automatically ensure you at least 1o fans instantaneously.

Additions to my home video collection:

1.Punnagai Mannan: Okay, he rehashes Charlie Chaplin and Dirty Dancing, but this Kamal Haasan movie has soul. I soo love the movie. Will watch it for Kamal’s tribute to Chaplin and the first song (Enna Saththam Indha Neram) any number of times!

2. Mouna Raagam: Finally, Yay!! This is probably Mani Ratnam’s finest and most original work till date. He excels in exploring human relationships, esp. man-woman. He showed that in Alai Payuthey too!

3. Vanilla Sky-Open Your Eyes-Captain Correlli’s Mandolin-Blow: I bought this 4-in-1 DVD just cuz it had my favourite movie ‘Vanilla Sky’ and the original Spanish film ‘Abre Los Ojos’ (Open Your Eyes) . From the little I’ve seen of the Spanish one, it’s much simpler and powerful all right but you just can’t miss Cameron Crowe’s light touch to this otherwise serious movie!

4. Dumb and Dumber-Dumb and Dumberer-Bruce Almighty-Grinch-Me,Myself and Irene: Bought this 5-in-1 cuz I love Dumb and Dumber and Bruce Almighty: Two movies that made me think! Ha ha!

5. Collateral-Rain Man-Last Samurai-Eyes Wide Shut: Bought it cuz I STILL haven’t seen Collateral and Rain Man!

6. Casablanca-Roman Holiday-Gone with the Wind-Sound of Music: Bought it for a crash course in classics!

7. Star Wars Collection: Yes, five in one DVD!

8. Silence of the lambs-Hannibal-Red Dragon and Frankenstein: I love at least two outta the four I’ve seen and I’m pretty much sure the other two would be equally good!

9. Oh yeah, and the trip collection I was talking about: Road Trip, Euro Trip, Boat Trip and Old School. Will keep this one just for Road Trip. Awesome!

10. The LOTR collection (but this I bought a coupla months ago.)

Just can’t wait for TFLW to be done.
So many movies, so little time!

A DVD player, some great movies and some good company. What more can you ask from life?

The TFLW Shoot: A collection of short stories – 1

April 8, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

We wrapped up the first schedule of the movie today.

We finished 85 per cent of the shoot in 11 days of shoot!

That’s like a record of sorts cuz I didn’t think we would be able to shoot at that pace and stick to the schedule. But we did.

Only cuz we didn’t have a choice but to wrap up shoot by 8th.

Usha leaves to America on the 18th of this month. And we need to give our editor at least five days to edit her scenes so that she can dub on the 13th and 14th before she leaves for Bangalore on 15th. The last two weeks have been a rollercoaster.

It all started with a rather well-thoughtout decision and a very hard one at that. Getting back my place at the top.

“You fired a star. You’ve arrived as a director finally,” said a friend.

Please… more than firing, for me, it was about losing someone who put in a lot of effort and time in the film. I still feel bad that it happened and ended that way but like they say, it all happens for the good.

So after that fateful night on March 23, we had a huge task on hand. Replacing a star meant losing another who he had brought in and the cinematographer too. And the food sponsorships.

We called a meeting next morning to check who’s in and who’s out. The other star and the cinematographer turned up for the meeting to tell me they had to opt out cuz “I can’t give up on 14 years of friendship for a movie” and “I’m doing this cuz he’s the Executive Producer and would like to be paid at the end of the project. Now that he’s not there, there is no guarantee that this movie will be made.”

This meant that we had to get three out of the four guys who play lead roles in the film because Ranvir said that he had absolutely no dates till May.

Vijay, my friend who made the no-budget film called ‘I just don’t get it,’ said that I could try Aashil from Bangalore for the lead character Sunil. Aashil, had done a small role in the movie ‘Brides Wanted’ and was an excellent actor who would fit the part, said Vijay. So we asked him to send his pics.

Aashil also sent me a Sprite ad he had done. The minute I saw the ad, I knew I had Sunil. He had energy, he looked like the boy next door and he was the same age as the character he had to play!

Problem: He was now working with IBM and his boss was outta town till April 6. He had already given up a job with STAR for doing ‘Brides Wanted.’ He didn’t want to lose another job now. We sent him the script.

Then we made Vijay tell him nice things about the movie. We bullied him into travelling by bus though he was willing to pay the rest of the fare and fly down.

We put him up with a mentally ill girl with a literally psycho (it was given behaviour correction therapy) dog called Frodo. We made him wear all his clothes and didn’t give him a chance to wash them at all, so he ended up carrying and wear dirty clothes, all for the sake of costume continuity. We make him travel by bike, pillion on an Activa with the Assistant director Swathi.

Talking of Swathi, my AD, I couldn’t have asked for a more super efficient soul. A bundle of energy, despite the price she’s had to pay for agreeing to do the film. At last count, the amount of damage the movie has caused her, can be valued at Rs. 51,500 plus fuel.

She had an accident one morning when she was picking up people for the early morning shoot and ran over a median. She lost (I hope not) the mike she borrowed for us.

She also ran production errands half the time and was part-time production manager too since Arch, our production manager, had a more complex production to run at the same time: her in-laws and household chores. Yes, Archana would wake up by five, make breakfast and lunch and land up at the set by seven or eight, all the way from Ambattur and then go back early evening to make dinner since her folks didn’t know she was shooting for a movie. She would also cajole her hubby Vivek into doubling up as driver to chauffer the whole unit around, apart from chipping in as stuntman for the climax scene.

Oh, back to: March 24, the day after we part ways with our star actor who was also Executive Producer.

So we saw Aashil’s ad on 24th evening and convinced him on 25th evening to leave Bangalore the same night by bus. We auditioned this London trained actor called Tejas Sreedhar to play the part of Prashant. He seemed perfect and he agreed to do the role.

So we had the third Prashant for the film after my buddy Pradyumna who did the role three years ago and Kunal, the star’s friend.

We auditioned half a dozen people for Zebra (Ranvir had played Zebra) and finally zeroed in on ‘Evam’ Sunil for the role.

March 25

We had a cast. A friend put us on to Manoj, the assistant cameraman to Saravanan, the guy who had worked on masala action movies ‘Madurae’ and ‘Tirupaachi.’ I was so excited at the prospect and yes, Manoj did have this natural flair for creating energy and pace!

Then I meet ‘Evam’ Sunil who gets all his doubts clarified about Zebra. I get a call from home.

My mom just wanted me to get some money from the ATM and rush home cuz she and Dad were leaving town same evening. Grand-dad was critical in Kochi.

March 26

I haven’t slept and it’s 1 a.m. on what is supposed to be the first day of my shoot, my third attempt in making the film after the second one ended two days ago. I set the alarm to go to bed, had to pick up Aashil at 5 a.m.

I get a call at 3 a.m. It was news from Kochi, my Grand-dad was no more. I pick up Aashil from the Koyambedu bus-stand, bring him home by 5.30 and then call all my relatives in the city to inform them about the death of grand-dad and then leave for shoot, after dropping off Aashil at a friend’s place.

We shoot Scene 55 for the third time with our third Prashant. The scene involves Vishal (Cary) race against another car as Prashant (now played by London-trained dumbfuck actor Tejas Sreedhar) tries to drill some seriousness into the carefree Vishal.

We bring back Swathi’s friends Rishab and Abhinav to play the menacing rivals in the race for the second time in a week, for the same scene we had shot earlier with actor K as Prashant.

We also shoot a scene where Prashant is supposed to teach Sara (Paloma) to drive. And Paloma really didn’t know to drive. Talk about reality filmmaking. Ha ha! A

nyway, with great fear, we let Paloma take the driver’s seat as Tejas sat in the front seat to guide her through her driving. Manoj and me are in the backseat filming the scene. And the way Paloma drove, it was quite an adventure in itself.

March 27

We decide to do the garage scenes at Archana’s factory garage. The art directors Anu and Preethi did a super job in four hours flat to convert the garage into Sunil’s movie production office within the film.

Aashil (who plays Sunil) gives his first shot of typing a script as we wait nervously for T to land up. T had been inaccessible all morning. We had the garage only for a day and there was no way we can erect the same set again cuz the garage was to be occupied soon. Also, we still had not got a bike for Aashil in the film. With no option left, I hand over my Last Samurai to the art directors and ask them to give it a little character. I can’t speak about what they did to my bike.

I will post a picture tomorrow when I’m in a better mood. Well, right now it looks dirty orange with paint scraped off, it looks like a contraption someone stole from a mechanic shop. And I’ve taken a vow not to paint it back till I finish the film.

We got another bike for Aashil, Abhinav’s BULLET! T did not turn up, nor does he pick up 500 of our missed calls. So we shoot the scene without him.

March 28

Cinematographer Manoj had to leave cuz his boss called him. So he put us on to Jai, who had an entirely different style. If Manoj was the Vijay masala action movie cinematographer, Jai was more like PC Sreeram working for Kathir.

But when we shot outside Stella Maris College, it was more like Bowfinger style. We make our actors walk up to the gate and do their acting and shoot from a camera hidden in a car on the opposite side of the road. Meanwhile Tejas is still inaccessible. So we also make a pretty common friend call him and Tejas returns her call promptly.

She gives me the phone and he has a story ready. That his Dad was in the ICU and he doesn’t have dates anymore. We hope his Dad really was in the ICU or he’s gonna take a truckload of curses straight to hell. Losing Tejas at this stage meant looking for one more Prashant and reshooting one whole day’s shoot all over again. For the fourth time.

We had permission to shoot at Sathyam theatre that night and it was the climax scene. We cannot do without a Prashant. So we need to find a Prashant in a few hours. We audition half a dozen theatre actors. All of them are too dramatic. It’s about half past ten in the night and the shoot at Sathyam is scheduled for 1 a.m. and we don’t have a Prashant.

10.30. p.m.

We finally touch base with Praveen, who played Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, after tryin in vain to reach him throughout the day. We ask him to come to Besant Nagar Cozee for an audition. We reach there at 10.45 and there’s a Tsunami warning, they ask us to clear the coast. We go to Swathi’s house with Praveen and make him do a reading. At the end of the first attempt, I shake hands with Cary. He had suggested Praveen after all. We had a Prashant. We found him two hours before our shoot! I hate to think what we would have done if Praveen was as dramatic as the others who auditioned!

March 29

Early morning. 1.00 a.m. Chandrachoodan, who volunteered to help reading blogs, lands up with his colleagues. We have about 30 extras for the climax scene. Enough to fill the frame and cheat it to make you believe its a full house on camera. Finally, good news. We have a cast. And we also have extras!!

It’s a long night as we try and get a sleep deprived Aashil to remember his lines.

March 30

Aashil really gets under the skin of the character. He’s a blast as we shoot a scene outside Coffee? and then one on Broken bridge, where he has a conversation with God. It’s a blast of a scene. This scene will surely work. Watch out for this. We had him standing on the edge of the bridge and he almost fell off. Twice. Shooting hasn’t been more fun.

March 31

We get permission to shoot in Spencer Plaza. We shoot with Aashil and scores of unsuspecting visitors in the mall. We make some of them say ‘Hi Sunil’ on camera to establish that Sunil (Aashil) is a popular guy always found with his handycam. Thanks to Landmark for letting us get some really colourful footage.

April 1

We came back to Sathyam theatre to shoot the rest of the climax early in the morning. This is when Swathi had an accident and ran over the median. Now, we were one car less and after this, we had to use autorickshaws, call taxis and bikes for moving around! VinodJi landed up for shooting another scene at Sathyam theatre and hey, you guys must read about his tryst with stardom.

For the evening, we needed 30 cars for the traffic jam.

Being April 1, a lot of people thought we were joking. So we had only seven cars for the finale. And we had to manage with that! Damn! Add that to the pangs of being a low budget film!

We took permission from the Deputy Commissioner and still had to bribe the beat cops in Anna Nagar to shoot at Anna Nagar Roundtana. This was the most stressful day of shoot and almost all of us lost our cool.

Imagine, the Commissioner was on rounds and he along with his convoy stopped right behind us wondering what the hell was happening, just as I had called Cary to say Action (He was 200 metres away at the signal before the Roundtana one).

What that meant was that Cary would now come driving at 100 km per hour and come crashing into the Commissioner’s convoy if I missed calling him right back to say Cut! I couldn’t reach him but thankfully, he called back to check if it was really ‘Action’.

God saved us that night for sure. We shot two angles of the scene after that and got outta there. We went to my street and shot the rest of the close-ups, recreating the scene right outside my house.

Okay, it’s already been too long a blog. So let me call it a night and continue the rest of it tomorrow! Intermission! 🙂

The TFLW Shoot: A collection of short stories – 1

April 8, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

We wrapped up the first schedule of the movie today.

We finished 85 per cent of the shoot in 11 days of shoot!

That’s like a record of sorts cuz I didn’t think we would be able to shoot at that pace and stick to the schedule. But we did. Only cuz we didn’t have a choice but to wrap up shoot by 8th. Usha leaves to America on the 18th of this month. And we need to give our editor at least five days to edit her scenes so that she can dub on the 13th and 14th before she leaves for Bangalore on 15th.

The last two weeks have been a rollercoaster.

It all started with a rather well-thoughtout decision and a very hard one at that. Getting back my place at the top. “You fired a star. You’ve arrived as a director finally,” said a friend. Please… more than firing, for me, it was about losing someone who put in a lot of effort and time in the film. I still feel bad that it happened and ended that way but like they say, it all happens for the good.

So after that fateful night on March 23, we had a huge task on hand. Replacing a star meant losing another who he had brought in and the cinematographer too. And the food sponsorships. We called a meeting next morning to check who’s in and who’s out. The other star and the cinematographer turned up for the meeting to tell me they had to opt out cuz “I can’t give up on 14 years of friendship for a movie” and “I’m doing this cuz he’s the Executive Producer and would like to be paid at the end of the project. Now that he’s not there, there is no guarantee that this movie will be made.”

This meant that we had to get three out of the four guys who play lead roles in the film because Ranvir said that he had absolutely no dates till May. Vijay, my friend who made the no-budget film called ‘I just don’t get it,’ said that I could try Aashil from Bangalore for the lead character Sunil. Aashil, had done a small role in the movie ‘Brides Wanted’ and was an excellent actor who would fit the part, said Vijay. So we asked him to send his pics. He also sent me a Sprite ad he had done. The minute I saw the ad, I knew I had Sunil. He had energy, he looked like the boy next door and he was the same age as the character he had to play!
Problem: He was now working with IBM and his boss was outta town till April 6. He had already given up a job with STAR for doing ‘Brides Wanted.’ He didn’t want to lose another job now.
We sent him the script.
Then we made Vijay tell him nice things about the movie. We bullied him into travelling by bus though he was willing to pay the rest of the fare and fly down. We put him up with a mental girl with a literally psycho (it was given behaviour correction therapy) dog called Frodo. We made him wear all his clothes and didn’t give him a chance to wash them at all, so he ended up carrying and wear dirty clothes, all for the sake of costume continuity. We make him travel by bike, pillion on an Activa with the Assistant director Swathi.
Talking of Swathi, my AD, I couldn’t have asked for a more super efficient soul. A bundle of energy, despite the price she’s had to pay for agreeing to do the film. At last count, the amount of damage the movie has caused her, can be valued at Rs. 51,500 plus fuel. She had an accident one morning when she was picking up people for the early morning shoot and ran over a median. She lost (I hope not) the mike she borrowed for us. She also ran production errands half the time and was part-time production manager too since Arch, our production manager, had a more complex production to run at the same time: her in-laws and household chores.
Yes, Archana would wake up by five, make breakfast and lunch and land up at the set by seven or eight, all the way from Ambattur and then go back early evening to make dinner since her folks didn’t know she was shooting for a movie. She would also cajole her hubby Vivek into doubling up as driver to chauffer the whole unit around, apart from chipping in as stuntman for the climax scene.
Oh, back to:

March 24
So we saw Aashil’s ad on 24th evening and convinced him on 25th evening to leave Bangalore the same night by bus. We auditioned this London trained actor called T to play the part of Prashant. He seemed perfect and he agreed to do the role. So we had the third Prashant for the film after my buddy Pradyumna who did the role three years ago and K, the star’s friend. We auditioned half a dozen people for Zebra (Ranvir had played Zebra) and finally zeroed in on ‘Evam’ Sunil for the role.

March 25
We had a cast. A friend put us on to Manoj, the assistant cameraman to Saravanan, the guy who had worked on masala action movies ‘Madurae’ and ‘Tirupaachi.’ I was so excited at the prospect and yes, Manoj did have this natural flair for creating energy and pace!
Then I meet ‘Evam’ Sunil who gets all his doubts clarified about Zebra. I get a call from home. My mom just wanted me to get some money from the ATM and rush home cuz she and Dad were leaving town same evening. Grand-dad was critical in Kochi.

March 26
I haven’t slept and it’s 1 a.m. on what is supposed to be the first day of my shoot, my third attempt in making the film after the second one ended two days ago. I set the alarm to go to bed, had to pick up Aashil at 5 a.m.
I get a call at 3 a.m. It was news from Kochi, my Grand-dad was no more.
I pick up Aashil from the Koyambedu bus-stand, bring him home by 5.30 and then call all my relatives in the city to inform them about the death of grand-dad and then leave for shoot, after dropping off Aashil at a friend’s place.

We shoot Scene 55 for the third time with our third Prashant. The scene involves Vishal (Cary) race against another car as Prashant (now played by London-trained T) tries to drill some seriousness into the carefree Vishal. We bring back Swathi’s friends Rishab and Abhinav to play the menacing rivals in the race for the second time in a week, for the same scene we had shot earlier with actor K as Prashant.

We also shoot a scene where Prashant is supposed to teach Sara (Paloma) to drive. And Paloma really didn’t know to drive. Talk about reality filmmaking. Ha ha! Anyway, with great fear, we let Paloma take the driver’s seat as T sat in the front seat to guide her through her driving. Manoj and me are in the backseat filming the scene. And the way Paloma drove, it was quite an adventure in itself.

March 27
We decide to do the garage scenes at Archana’s factory garage. The art directors Anu and Preethi did a super job in four hours flat to convert the garage into Sunil’s movie production office within the film.

Aashil (who plays Sunil) gives his first shot of typing a script as we wait nervously for T to land up. T had been inaccessible all morning. We had the garage only for a day and there was no way we can erect the same set again cuz the garage was to be occupied soon.

Also, we still had not got a bike for Aashil in the film. With no option left, I hand over my Last Samurai to the art directors and ask them to give it a little character. I can’t speak about what they did to my bike. I will post a picture tomorrow when I’m in a better mood. Well, right now it looks dirty orange with paint scraped off, it looks like a contraption someone stole from a mechanic shop. And I’ve taken a vow not to paint it back till I finish the film. We got another bike for Aashil, Abhinav’s BULLET!

T did not turn up, nor does he pick up 500 of our missed calls. So we shoot the scene without him.

March 28
Cinematographer Manoj had to leave cuz his boss called him. So he put us on to Jai, who had an entirely different style. If Manoj was the Vijay masala action movie cinematographer, Jai was more like PC Sreeram working for Kathir.
But when we shot outside Stella Maris College, it was more like Bowfinger style. We make our actors walk up to the gate and do their acting and shoot from a camera hidden in a car on the opposite side of the road.
Meanwhile T is still inaccessible.
So we also make a pretty common friend call him and T returns her call promptly. She gives me the phone and he has a story ready. That his Dad was in the ICU and he doesn’t have dates anymore. We hope his Dad really was in the ICU or he’s gonna take a truckload of curses straight to hell.
Losing T at this stage meant looking for one more Prashant and reshooting one whole day’s shoot all over again. For the fourth time.
We had permission to shoot at Sathyam theatre that night and it was the climax scene. We cannot do without a Prashant. So we need to find a Prashant in a few hours. We audition half a dozen theatre actors. All of them are too dramatic.
It’s about half past ten in the night and the shoot at Sathyam is scheduled for 1 a.m. and we don’t have a Prashant.
10.30. we finally touch base with Praveen, who played Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, after tryin in vain to reach him throughout the day. We ask him to come to Besant Nagar Cozee for an audition.
We reach there at 10.45 and there’s a Tsunami warning, they ask us to clear the coast.
We go to Swathi’s house with Praveen and make him do a reading.
At the end of the first attempt, I shake hands with Cary. He had suggested Praveen after all. We had a Prashant. We found him two hours before our shoot! I hate to think what we would have done if Praveen was as dramatic as the others who auditioned!

March 29
Early morning. 1.00 a.m.
Chandrachoodan, who volunteered to help reading blogs, lands up with his colleagues. We have about 30 extras for the climax scene. Enough to fill the frame and cheat it to make you believe its a full house on camera.
Finally, good news. We have a cast. And we also have extras!!
It’s a long night as we try and get a sleep deprived Aashil to remember his lines.

March 30
Aashil really gets under the skin of the character. He’s a blast as we shoot a scene outside Coffee? and then one on Broken bridge, where he has a conversation with God. It’s a blast of a scene. This scene will surely work. Watch out for this. We had him standing on the edge of the bridge and he almost fell off. Twice. Shooting hasn’t been more fun.

March 31
We get permission to shoot in Spencer Plaza. We shoot with Aashil and scores of unsuspecting visitors in the mall. We make some of them say ‘Hi Sunil’ on camera to establish that Sunil (Aashil) is a popular guy always found with his handycam. Thanks to Landmark for letting us get some really colourful footage.

April 1
We came back to Sathyam theatre to shoot the rest of the climax early in the morning. This is when Swathi had an accident and ran over the median.
Now, we were one car less and after this, we had to use autorickshaws, call taxis and bikes for moving around!
VinodJi landed up for shooting another scene at Sathyam theatre and hey, you guys must read about his tryst with stardom.
For the evening, we needed 30 cars for the traffic jam. Being April 1, a lot of people thought we were joking. So we had only seven cars for the finale. And we had to manage with that! Damn! Add that to the pangs of being a low budget film!
We took permission from the Deputy Commissioner and still had to bribe the beat cops in Anna Nagar to shoot at Anna Nagar Roundtana.
This was the most stressful day of shoot and almost all of us lost our cool. Imagine, the Commissioner was on rounds and he along with his convoy stopped right behind us wondering what the hell was happening, just as I had called Cary to say Action (He was 200 metres away at the signal before the Roundtana one). What that meant was that Cary would now come driving at 100 km per hour and come crashing into the Commissioner’s convoy if I missed calling him right back to say Cut! I couldn’t reach him but thankfully, he called back to check if it was really ‘Action’. God saved us that night for sure.
We shot two angles of the scene after that and got outta there. We went to my street and shot the rest of the close-ups, recreating the scene right outside my house.

Okay, it’s already been too long a blog.
So let me call it a night and continue the rest of it tomorrow!

Intermission! 🙂

Advance Booking!

March 25, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

150 Free tickets available for One O clock show at Sathyam theatre on 29th!

Hang on… 28th night that is. After the 10 O clock night show on Monday night, at 1 a.m., I need a 150 people to fill up Studio 5.

This is just to book you all in advance for the show. What are they showing? Er… nothing, but I can get them to play a movie for you guys.

I’m gonna be shooting, so I want you guys to fill up the frame and give it some EXTRA punch! And yeah, you can watch the shoot too! Aint that exciting?

Well, I know I make a bad Tom Sawyer!

But yeah, I will be very grateful if you can land up! This is one favour I need badly!

Thanks a ton!

Advance Booking

March 24, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

150 Free tickets available for One O clock show at Sathyam theatre on 29th!

Hang on… 28th night that is. After the 10 O clock night show on Monday night, at 1 a.m., I need a 150 people to fill up Studio 5.

This is just to book you all in advance for the show. What are they showing? Er… nothing, but I can get them to play a movie for you guys.

I’m gonna be shooting, so I want you guys to fill up the frame and give it some EXTRA punch! And yeah, you can watch the shoot too! Aint that exciting?

Well, I know I make a bad Tom Sawyer!

Click on the title of this post to see original post with comments.

But yeah, I will be very grateful if you can land up! This is one favour I need badly!

Thanks a ton!

Directors-cut

March 23, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

I did something yesterday.

I made an important decision. It was a tough one. Cuz it involved losing someone who had put in a lot of effort into my film. But I was left with no option but to do it. Told my lead star not to do my film if he didn’t trust me enough to do my job as a director.

I do realise he has a decade’s experience in the Tamil film industry, respect the name he has created for himself and the effort he has put in my film. But what I could not deal with, was (and IS) interference.

I strongly believe that a movie is a director’s baby.

And it is that director who has to take the credit or the blame for a good movie or the bad movie he creates. So that people at least know whose baby it is. A movie becomes a bastard when too many people try to play director.

I have always said it is “our movie.” I still think it is “our movie” but there can only be one director.

I know I’m the “beginner director” and he’s the star.

But I refuse to believe that he’s “doing me a favour.”

So I told him not to do my film if he thinks he’s doing me a favour. And with him went half my crew (who he brought in) and the other lead actor. So that’s how it all ended. I lost my cinematographer, my music director, half the locations and food he had arranged for the shoot. I lost three days of what I shot.

The show, however, has just started.

I am going to re-start my film for the third time.

I auditioned people today, recast my actors and am all set to start shoot again.

Starting day after tomorrow!

Like I said in last post, nothing can stop this film from being made. No matter what, I will complete shoot for this movie before April 10. I gave my word to a lesser star in the film. And I will keep my word. The show … will go on!

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Director’s Cut!

March 23, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

I did something yesterday.

I made an important decision. It was a tough one. Cuz it involved losing someone who had put in a lot of effort into my film. But I was left with no option but to do it. Told my lead star not to do my film if he didn’t trust me enough to do my job as a director.

I do realise he has a decade’s experience in the Tamil film industry, respect the name he has created for himself and the effort he has put in my film. But what I could not deal with, was (and IS) interference.

I strongly believe that a movie is a director’s baby.

And it is that director who has to take the credit or the blame for a good movie or the bad movie he creates. So that people at least know whose baby it is. A movie becomes a bastard when too many people try to play director.

I have always said it is “our movie.” I still think it is “our movie” but there can only be one director.

I know I’m the “beginner director” and he’s the star.

But I refuse to believe that he’s “doing me a favour.”

So I told him not to do my film if he thinks he’s doing me a favour. And with him went half my crew (who he brought in) and the other lead actor. So that’s how it all ended. I lost my cinematographer, my music director, half the locations and food he had arranged for the shoot. I lost three days of what I shot.

The show, however, has just started.

I am going to re-start my film for the third time.

I auditioned people today, recast my actors and am all set to start shoot again.

Starting day after tomorrow!

Like I said in last post, nothing can stop this film from being made. No matter what, I will complete shoot for this movie before April 10. I gave my word to a lesser star in the film. And I will keep my word. The show … will go on!

The bitter-sweet pangs of low budget filmmaking

March 18, 2005 · by sudhishkamath

Ranvir almost dropped out of the film today.

Rahul Bose rejected a special appearance.

We don’t have permissions to shoot our climax scene.

And we don’t have money.

Oh, but first the good news: I’m right at the beginning of my second attempt at making That Four Letter Word, and it was a great evening’s work of shoot at The British Council.

It’s nice and colourful and I’m happy. More than satisfied, in fact. I got the shoot started again, after over two years and eight months!

The first day’s shoot cost me all of Rs.585 bucks: 450 for buying three tapes, another 50 for thermocol, 65 for juice for my technical crew and another 20 for black tape used to mark the margins of the LCD, so that we know what the frame looks like for cinemascope!

Yes, like I said we still don’t have the money to cover even the incidental expenses, so I’m spending out of my pocket. Abbas today asked me what should we do if do not get the money to cover incidental expenses, which could shoot upto 1.5 lakhs!

No sponsor, no producer (well, as good as no producer considering that this is the last thing on his mind right now), nothing, no one! Yet, there’s some sort of energy that’s keeping us going. We’ve made half a dozen presentations, trying to incorporate everything from fruit bars to vodka into the script. And honestly, now I’m tired of chasing sponsors or bugging disinterested producers. I just want to make my film.

So I told Abbas: If we don’t get anyone to give us money, then we don’t owe anything to anyone. We don’t need to give a fuck about answering questions from anyone! We own the film. So we create it and we sell it once it’s done and make some money! And then, repay every single person who has been instrumental in the making of this film — the first time as well as the second!

The good thing about low budget filmmaking is that there’s not too much to lose here.

The very process of creating something we believe in, gives satisfaction that words can only try to describe. There’s a whole lot of feel good, the high of being in an underdog team that almost won the World cup, the spirit and camaraderie of working together to see a common dream come true.

As obstacles, one after another, show us their ugly face, the more resolved we get to deal with things which we have become too familiar with — rejections from sponsors, actors we badly want in our film and other production hassles we can write a thesis on. So now there’s like the known sense of comfort in dealing with them. Obstacles have become like these unreliable people we know. “Okay, it’s him… we know how to deal with him.” Let’s go on without letting him win over. All right, we don’t have this, we don’t have that … but let’s make sure that we don’t have to say again that we don’t have a film!

However much it sounds like a cliche, the show must go on. With or without money. And, nothing … NOTHING… can stop us now!

If we lose one, the others do it! That’s how a team works. And that’s how a battle is fought!

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