| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 22, Dated june 07, 2008 |
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| CULTURE & SOCIETY |
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profile |
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Kiss Kiss,
Bang Bang, But Slowly
Sriram Raghavan’s
better-known films may be urgent tales of murder, avarice and lust but
he continues to prefer a leisurely route to filmmaking, finds NISHA
SUSAN
IT’S
ODD THAT 44-year-old Sriram Raghavan’s better-known movies have been tales
of wickedness that could not wait, people who snatched and were burnt.
Raghavan’s best stories about himself are about lost opportunities and
of waiting; but in noir — the last bastion of the morality tale — he cuts
a stylish swathe. His 2007 film Johnny Gaddar did not do well at the box-office
but the vivid, energetic heist film boosted his cachet instantly, with
a rare acknowledgement that ‘the market knows not what it does.’ His current
projects include a fantasy starring Aishwarya Rai and John Abraham whose
working title is Dreamgirl and a spy thriller called Agent Vinod with
Saif Ali Khan in the eponymous role. But this high standing has been a
long time coming.
“A long while ago I read Ira Levin’s A Kiss
before Dying and thought I wanted to turn it
into a movie. So I worked for a year on the
script. In the meanwhile, the original Hollywood
adaptation was remade badly with
Matt Dillon and Sean Young. Then I took the
script to Tinu Anand who had been encouraging
me to make a movie. He took one look
at the script and said, ‘But Abbas-Mustan is
making this right now.’ That was Baazigar.”
Raghavan grew up in Pune, the son of a
botanist father and a movie-loving mother. A
third-generation Tamilian in Maharashtra, he
thinks of South India in terms of the new auteur
films that he must catch up with at festivals.
Barely out of his teens he went to
Mumbai to work in Stardust. “They threw me
out after three months. I was a terrible film
journalist. I had a terrible stammer that made
me tense all the time. When they asked me to
leave I was relieved. I then joined a trade
guide and was very happy. When I met
Mukul Anand, I told him I wanted to make
movies and worked with him for a little
while. He told me that it would take me six or
seven years to make a film if I continued as
an assistant. I went to FTII thinking that
would be a quicker route. It took me 17
years,” says a hugely amused Raghavan.
Raghavan’s good friend and batchmate Raju Hirani shared his love for cinema and
edited his diploma film The Eight Column Affair.
A love story set in an newspaper, it won
a National Award in 1987. But in FTII it was
Raghavan’s shyness that was legendary. “He
had an adorable stammer. He would call at
the hostel about some protest or the other
and you just knew that was the best and only
excuse he could think of to call a girl,” says a
woman filmmaker who was his junior at FTII.
The shyness and stammer are both long
gone but one would have to be a monster of
brashness to probe Raghavan’s love life. From
behind a veil of politeness he looks out curiously
at you and plies you with tea. Perhaps
you will tell him a story that intrigues or you
will recommend a good book. Do you cry in
movies, he wants to know. He does. “Usually I
can just wipe the tears away but during Taare
Zameen Par, the tears were spilling off my
face,” he says calmly. It is probably with this benign
air that Raghavan once made television
shows for ISRO, preaching good health practices
for children in rural Uttar Pradesh.
IT IS certainly with the same detachment
that he wrote and directed a film in 2003
which transformed Saif Ali Khan’s persona
of the amiable fool in love. In Ek Hasina
Thi, Raghavan tapped into Khan’s now alltoo-
apparent air of sexually-charged ruthlessness,
a role that preceded Khan’s Cyrus
(Being Cyrus) and Langda Tyagi (Omkara). In
Johnny Gaddar, he gave Neil Nitin Mukesh’s
well-cut features the sharpness of an ice-pick.
Raghavan has a separate fan following for his
short film on Raman Raghav, the serial killer
who terrified Mumbai in the 1960s. His love of
noir is something of a family hobby. His
brother Sridhar Raghavan has made a career of
writing cops-and-robbers shows for television
and cinema (including 2005 hit Bluffmaster.)
There have never been
too many FTII trained directors in Bollywood. When Raghavan went to FTII,
that particular patch of Pune badlands housed cineastes who would have
picked any Hungarian film over Hindi cinema. “Not just the bad Hindi cinema
of that decade but any Hindi movie. But I loved Hindi films.” Johnny Gaddar
is littered with clues of this love affair, from the title that pays tribute
to Johnny Tera Naam to the short clip from Parwana that two characters
watch at different points in the film. His flat is equally littered with
cinema memorabilia. In a corner rests a framed collage of thumbnail posters
of all of Dharmendra’s movies, a replica of a gift that Dharmendra was
given by the crew of Johnny Gaddar.
“If I had realised
there were so many movie references in Johnny I would have been worried.
Afterwards I saw that a reviewer had counted all the references. I just
thought it would be fun to see a young Amitabh on screen. The Parwana
clip had not been there in the original script but when we started thinking
about it, we loved the
idea. We paid an extra 20 lakhs for it, but I was sure that five years
down the line, if I watched the film I’d think it is too bad to have not
included it. That’s what I mean by not having a bound script. It does
not mean not having a script at all!” Raghavan says, slightly horrified
at the idea of not being immaculately prepared. In March this year, Dreamgirl
was scheduled to begin production. But, unhappy with the “final thirty
per cent of the film”, he delayed it. In the process, he has had to wait
for his stars to give him a fresh set of dates.
Raghavan has a crossword fanatic’s attitude to his work. “With
each film you learn how to crack something new. This new one is not a
thriller. I have never shot a conversation with two people just talking
casually before.” He is visibly nervous but simultaneously looking forward
to the idea of shooting full-fledged songs for Dreamgirl. He feels that
with a main character who is a musician he cannot avoid songs in the script,
something he did entirely in Hasina. Johnny Gaddar had a limited but very
memorable soundtrack that Raghavan had picked track by track. “I have
no issues with songs. If you look at Guide the movie would not have made
any sense without its 7 songs. I think one song is actually four whole
scenes together. I just have to take the plunge, lose my inhibitions and
figure out of a way of doing it inventively.”
Like everyone else in Bollywood he bemoans the lack of
scriptwriters, “People go and bind their terrible scripts. You feel like
saying why bind this? Why didn’t you just use a clip? And now anyone who
has a decent script wants to direct. My brother is one of the few people
who says “It’s a pain, why can’t I just sit in the comfort of my own home
without dealing with other people?” Raghavan believes firmly in collaboration.
Pinned prominently on a corkboard in his living room is veteran set designer
Sabu Cyril’s sharp, acerbic comments on Raghavan’s next script. Some are
comments on the character and turns in plot but one simply exhorts, “Keep
it simple!”
He is watching the molten state of Bollywood’s finances
with great interest. “There’s almost too much money. No one is worried
about the budget. Forget the actors, there is too much money for movies,
too much fees for directors. Also, the single producer as a breed is dying
out. He might have had terrible ideas for movies but he was still a man
gripped by a vision. Now when you go to a corporate producer what you
meet is a conference room. They are willing and smart but not necessarily
people who know movies. What they are deciding on is the director’s clout
to make a successful movie.”
He agrees that it’s a good time to make movies. “We still don’t
have enough actors to choose from but there is finally an audience for
odd movies. No subject is taboo anymore. But movies like No Smoking needs
a certain approach, maybe a DVD release. If they run in halls when people
are not expecting something unusual they get tagged as a flop. No Smoking
got jacked by its economics not its content. What we need to learn is
to get people into the hall in the first few days.” •
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