{"id":20991,"date":"2011-12-10T18:30:02","date_gmt":"2011-12-10T23:30:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/?guid=15cc98b6d0f767e14234cc56704d6216"},"modified":"2011-12-10T18:30:02","modified_gmt":"2011-12-10T23:30:02","slug":"oral-cinema","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/2011\/12\/10\/oral-cinema\/","title":{"rendered":"Oral Cinema"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>By Joshy Joseph<br \/>\nThe moment you are struck with an idea, the search for an &lsquo;adda&rsquo; also starts somewhere within you, although the gestation period can vary from person to person. While I&nbsp; was in my village, Kadamakudy, which happens to be an island in the backwaters of Kochi, the village poet Josekuttan was my lone patient listener.&nbsp; When I look back, I realize that I was not being fair to him whenever his turn came.&nbsp; I played the role of my later years&rsquo; comrade and critic Vidyarthy Chatterjee in the formative years back in the backwaters.&nbsp; I was a judgmental listener.<\/p>\n<p>The nearby cinema theatre &lsquo;Sri Durga&rsquo; was one and half&nbsp; hours away by a&nbsp; country boat ride.&nbsp; Once in a while my mother with her&nbsp; gossip gang of friends used to take me along with my younger sisters&nbsp; for a first show .&nbsp; At around 4 &lsquo;O&rsquo; clock we had to start from Kadamakudy with packed&nbsp; eatables and drinking water etc.&nbsp; The&nbsp; person who used to row&nbsp; the country boat was known as &lsquo;pottan&rsquo; in the village.&nbsp; He was deaf and&nbsp; semi-dump.&nbsp; He&nbsp; couldn&rsquo;t speak but used to make some&nbsp; sounds and was still able to communicate well with my mother .&nbsp; He was always available for the hard work of rowing for almost&nbsp; three hours to and fro, for a free film ticket and&nbsp; some refreshments&nbsp; .<\/p>\n<p>My mother was a dramatic narrator of stories.&nbsp; While we row back at night in the lit up backdrop of the Chinese nets which&nbsp; would be going up and coming down with a creak sound&nbsp; in the&nbsp; saline waters and with each rowing of boatman the saline water glows&nbsp; making&nbsp; glaaw-glaaaw sounds.&nbsp; My mother&nbsp; with her attentive&nbsp; audience would be re-telling the story of cinema which all of us had seen just half an hour ago.&nbsp; This&nbsp; narrative sessions are embedded in my memory like&nbsp; carvings in a cave,&nbsp; although I have&nbsp; no distinct memory&nbsp; of the original experience of viewing the cinema .&nbsp; In the midst of&nbsp; this post-screening&nbsp; oral cinema sessions, unexpected interventions of &lsquo;pottan&rsquo; with a laughter&nbsp; or an exaggerated facial or hand gesture, stopping&nbsp; his mechanical action of rowing for a while, slowed down the movement&nbsp; of the country boat momentarily.&nbsp; But it added a multi-dimensional&nbsp;&nbsp; performative&nbsp; edge to this unique&nbsp; experience of oral cinema.&nbsp; My mother would improvise and interpret even pottan&rsquo;s interventions with enviable creative energy.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Yes sir, the moment you are struck with an idea, and the moment you feel that compulsion of trying your idea on someone else,&nbsp; the&nbsp; definite signs of birth pain of a cinema happens. Later, you might have expanded the original spark into a hardbound or spiral&nbsp; bound script, but still with each incident of knocking at the doors of an actor or&nbsp; producer, you might have to still practice some form of oral cinema. Some&nbsp; may call it, &lsquo;one liner&rsquo;, or&nbsp; &lsquo;the thread&rsquo; or &lsquo;story line&rsquo;.&nbsp; My friend&nbsp; M. Ravi Kumar, who is a gifted Tamil writer was the executive producer of a Kamal Hassan film- ABHAY &ndash; which was shot bilingually both in Tamil and Hindi.&nbsp; I had accompanied&nbsp; Ravi&nbsp; with a show reel of this Kamal Hassan film, to en-number&nbsp; of distributors&rsquo; meetings .&nbsp; They will be treating you with a cup of tea or soft drinks&nbsp; and speaking with a Gujarathi or Punjabi accented&nbsp; Hindi. Ravi first hypes&nbsp; his film&nbsp; with its special features .&nbsp; Then he plays the DVD.&nbsp;&nbsp; The dance sequences with Manisha Koirala are titillating.&nbsp; The action scenes are terrific. The technique used is trendy and heady.&nbsp; The distributor agrees with Ravi on everything .&nbsp; Now comes the&nbsp; monetary part.&nbsp; The accented Hindi suddenly comes out with an observation &ndash; &ldquo;Ravi Sir, everything is fine.&nbsp; But Kamal Hasanji is not tall enough for Hindi cinema. !&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>Poor Ravi was stuck. He could have argued out on any aspects of cinema and convinced&nbsp; the distributors .&nbsp; But what&nbsp; can he do about the height of an actor ! The end result of these comments were obvious.&nbsp; It&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; brought down the height of the prices on the negotiating table.<\/p>\n<p>Another city .&nbsp; Another aura.&nbsp; Catherine breillat is a popular and controversial figure in both modern French literature and cinema .&nbsp; She deals with&nbsp; sexuality&nbsp; in both her writings and cinema without&nbsp; any hang ups.&nbsp; As Vidyarthy Chatterjee is an authority&nbsp; on Latin&nbsp; American and European cinemas, I rang him up to get the correct spelling of&nbsp; Catherine&rsquo;s surname .&nbsp; The conversation didn&rsquo;t&nbsp; end there.&nbsp; He said&nbsp; that Catherine shoots her own novels into films.&nbsp; The rest of the story is known to me as I had seen her important works, some years ago at Kolkata Film Festival.&nbsp; Ansu Sur was the Director of the festival then.<\/p>\n<p>At the packed Rabindra Sadan auditorium, Ansu Sur introduced&nbsp; Catherine to the audience. The mike was handed over to Catherine.&nbsp; Since you are going to see the film, I should not speak before&nbsp; it and as the film is being&nbsp; screened , I&nbsp; should not speak and&nbsp; disturb you, and once the screening is over, I need&nbsp; not&nbsp; speak at all!&nbsp; This is how another French director introduced&nbsp; his film.&nbsp; But Catherine is Catherine .&nbsp; She spoke at length.&nbsp; She did not tell the story.&nbsp; She did not try to explain the sub-conscious or sub-text.&nbsp; She spoke about her&nbsp; way&nbsp; of making films. Her&nbsp; cast is unconventional.&nbsp; She deals&nbsp; with sexuality as it is done in pornographic films.&nbsp; She uses experienced&nbsp; porn-stars.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Ansu Sur was wriggling a bhadralok&nbsp; wriggle .&nbsp; Such things are not discussed at a forum like this.&nbsp; He gave her a sign of &lsquo;time out&rsquo;,&nbsp; which did not work. Catherine kept on telling the Rabindra Sadan mob&nbsp; about&nbsp; the stark realities of the medium of cinema&nbsp; which most of us tuck under the carpet.&nbsp; How difficult it is for an actor to be natural and aroused for an intimate scene in front of the camera.&nbsp; A male actor turns off when the camera turns on.&nbsp; So she uses&nbsp;&nbsp; porn-actors, who could behave naturally and keep it up too! The audience were with Catherine&nbsp; for her baring of soul without any inhibitions.&nbsp; She added that, the best cinematographer in the world wouldn&rsquo;t&nbsp; be able to&nbsp; lit up a scene, if the actor doesn&rsquo;t glow from within.&nbsp; I have never experienced such testing times for a festival programmer. I could understand the festival director&rsquo;s discomfort but enjoyed it more,&nbsp; as an action\/reaction shot, live on the stage.&nbsp; Oral cinema became full blown oral, on that day in Kolkata.<\/p>\n<p>But&nbsp; oral&nbsp; tradition is not all about trivia. When a fellow film-maker becomes vocal about his feelings on a work of art and puts it down in some form, somewhere, it attains an inspirational level for any debate on cinema.&nbsp; It happens in literature without an effort all the time.&nbsp; In cinema these are rarities.&nbsp; At the best cinema could be an external expression of an internal&nbsp; universe and at the worst it is just external and external only. It takes birth in the market .&nbsp; And the market only knows sales talk. In yesteryears&rsquo; Bengali cinema, existed universal artistes, not&nbsp; just Globalised Manufacturers .&nbsp; Let me quote : &ldquo;No one before&nbsp; Ritwik had made&nbsp; a film of this kind.&nbsp; Apparently, it is a dull picture.&nbsp; The Hero is a driver and the heroine, we can say, is a Car.&nbsp; The boldness was in the attempt to impose something human on the vehicle which could be termed&nbsp; as a kind of anthropomorphism.&nbsp; I do not say that this attempt&nbsp; to humanize the&nbsp; car clicked successfully in all the sequences.&nbsp; But having in mind the Bengali audience, it is simply amazing&nbsp; that Ritwik had the courage to make such an experiment&nbsp; .&nbsp; Besides, in &lsquo;Ajantrik&rsquo;&nbsp; what I think really worth noticing, apart from the subject matter, are the cinematic qualities that make a film really meaningful.&nbsp; Let me give some examples.&nbsp; There are some particular shots where nothing special is happening and there is very little subject matter.&nbsp; Yet, in a particular context the shot reaches a lyrical depth and a bold dimension&nbsp; which is possible only for a very powerful director, such as Ritwik, to create.&nbsp; A lot of things have been done with the motor-car.&nbsp; Just the car, quietly standing on the edge of a lake in the evening.&nbsp; The angle, the composition, is so striking that the car seems&nbsp; to be talking to us.&nbsp; Then, in another scene, we see only the bonnet of the car.&nbsp; On the bonnet is the cap.&nbsp; Bimal removes the cap, pours water into it and then gives two or three turns&nbsp; to the cap with his hand and in order to close it properly he gives three gentle strokes with his rough hand.&nbsp; And that is all. We see against the background of the sky the front of the bonnet and Bimal&rsquo;s hand.&nbsp; This is something wonderful.&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thus spoke Satyajit Ray<\/p>\n<p>Yes, cinema starts with a spark,&nbsp; organically grows into cinema and finally gets seen.&nbsp; The circle of oral cinema hits you very badly, in &lsquo;Meet the Press&rsquo; programmes of film festivals, where you have&nbsp; to narrate your own cinema orally and on the basis of your oral rendering, questions are asked.&nbsp; Thereby&nbsp; cinema&nbsp; returns to just an idea again ! What an idea, Sirji.<br \/>\nIs&nbsp; cinema oral or temporal ?<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"syndicated-attribution\">Read more \/ Original news source: <a href=\"http:\/\/kanglaonline.com\/2011\/12\/oral-cinema\/\">http:\/\/kanglaonline.com\/2011\/12\/oral-cinema\/<\/a><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Joshy Joseph The moment you are struck with an idea, the search for an&#8230; <a href=\"http:\/\/kanglaonline.com\/2011\/12\/oral-cinema\/\">more <span>&#187;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[6,4],"tags":[630,330],"class_list":["post-20991","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-kanglaonline","category-news","tag-human-rights","tag-kanglaonline-2"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/20991","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=20991"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/20991\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=20991"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=20991"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.manipur.org\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=20991"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}