| |
|
Starring:
Anil Pande
Script Writer and Cameraman : Ramchandra
PN
Editor: Pankaj Rishi Kumar
Sound Advisors: Mohandas, Resul P &
Sateesh PM
Produced and Directed by: Ramchandra PN
5
minutes. Mini DV, English/Hindi
|
|
Synopsis
Ramchand
Yavathmal Tiruchanapalli Azamghad's bride hunting
methods are unique and unconventional. Circulating
photographs and matching horoscopes are passé.
Instead, he opens up his heart. That is, he
shows and analyses his recent ECG heart test
report to prospective brides. He calls for applications
from interested parties and expects the responding
girls to send in their own ECG reports, so that
he can carefully study and select one among
them as his bride. The only condition - her
heart test report should match his! Ramchand
Yavathmal Tiruchanapalli Azamghad makes his
appeal in front of the camera. The analysis
of his ECG report includes the dismissal of
all his heart problems to a host of external
factors like the pollution levels in the fast
paced city that he belongs to, the stress levels
that arise from issues like inflation and the
anxieties that arise out of the threat of nuclear
war that his country might engage itself in.
If not for these issues his heart is perfect,
or so he claims.
Heart Troubles of Ramchand Yavathmal Tiruchnapalli
Azamghar might tickle you and bring smiles
on your face. Or it might even slightly scratch
you - is the social, political and natural environment
in which we live, safe enough for us?
A
colleague of mine was discussing about the possibilities
of sourcing and creating a data base of various
kinds of footage for an organization for which
she works. We were discussing about footages
from unconventional and non-professional sources
when I suddenly remembered that I had a VHS
cassette that had footage pertaining to an ECG
test that was done on me a few years back. A
desire to creatively use this unconventional
source of footage resulted in this short film.
The film was shot in my house with my PD 150,
available lights and in three hours. Soon I
landed up in Pankaj Rishi Kumar's door steps
with a request for editing the film. He obliged.
Actor and neighbor Anil Pande's raw energy,
Pankaj's creative inputs as well as some technical
help from some of my sound recording colleagues
have contributed immensely in the making of
this no / low cost film.
There are two ways to confront an imposed limitation.
Either one can sit back cribbing about it or
one can find different possibilities within
those limitations. Creating solutions to limiting
situations is fun. As is the case with most
of us, most of the times the scale of our ideas
outsmarts the resources that we have. This time
I was determined not to let that happen. The
recourses I had with me during the making of
this video was almost nil. So, I took stock
of what was available for me. First, I decided
that I would shoot the video in my own house
So, there would only be one location in the
film. There was an actor who was pestering me
for a role in my projects (even if it were a
documentary!) for the past one year... Well,
I decided that the film would have one actor.
I promised him a copy of the film and he agreed.
I could not hire a cameraman or any lights
So I 'rattofied' the relevant portions of the
manual of my PD 150
I also decided that
I would avoid situations like an indoor-outdoor
exposure or any camera movement - a pan or a
tilt or even a zoom. My frame would be static.
My image size would not change within a shot.
As far as the sound department goes, there was
no question of hiring an external mike
Therefore I choose that the camera would not
be too far away from the actor. The camera mike
would clearly catch what the actor says and
there would be less of external noise. At the
most I would go as far as a mid long shot. All
these factors made me choose the format of the
film. It would be that of a mock audio-visual
classified advertisement, with the actor speaking
directly into the camera. It worked fine not
to establish the location because when you are
making an appeal into the camera the location
becomes unimportant.
The original script was eight minutes long and
I had laced it with humor. Originally I had
planned the whole shoot in a single take. Again,
the idea was that it might reduce the edit time.
A couple of hours after I wrote the first draft,
I realized that I could not possibly have one
person talking into a static camera without
a cut for that long, even if the actor was a
brilliant one. Would it hold the attention of
the audience for that long? I had to have inserts.
For one, I had the VHS footage of my ECG test.
I viewed the tape again and then rewrote the
script in accordance with what was there in
it. But still the script misbehaved and refused
to get shortened! I left it at that, taking
recourse to the all important dialogue, "Editing
mein dhek lengen".
It
pays to be ruthless at the editing stage. Both
Pankaj and I drastically reduced the length
of the monologue. To give the film some more
visual layering, we thought of some more inserts
such as relevant news clippings and matrimonial
advertisements which could be easily got and
shot from the net. I then hunted for some heart
related cartoons on googles search engine and
shot them through my PC monitor moving my mouse
scroll button up and down. The heart shaped
cartoons in the jpg files increased and decreased
in size, I had managed some animated illustration
too!!! Adding a few heartbeat sounds loaned
from my sound recording colleague Sateesh PM
really pepped up the film. We manipulated these
heartbeat sounds, played with its speed and
created a sound pattern through out the video.
Inspite of the precaution taken during shooting
stage, the sound track had to be cleaned up.
Friend and sound recordist Mohan Das guided
us in this aspect. A few sub-titles were added
and finally a compact five minute video was
created.
Despite the creative challenges posed by the
short fiction film, the format has never been
a favorite with Indian film and video makers.
Over the years, there have been a few short
fiction films made in 35mm, in 16mm and even
in the DV format. I doubt if many people have
seen them. Yours truly had made a 16mm short
film called The Hot Shot twelve years
back. Apart from a screening each in Dakha and
New Delhi and two in Mumbai, no one heard about
it. It's in the attic. I recently saw the print
on a Steinbeck and observed that the colour
had faded off a bit. It had acquired a pinkish
tint, which reminded me of the print of an Isthavan
Zabo's film that we saw at the film institute.
That too had a pinkish tint. I took solace in
the fact that I was in good company!!
Jokes apart, Indian television is just not interested
in short fiction film. The possibility of a
slot for short fiction films during any part
of the day / night seems remote in any private
channels (Are the CEOs and commissioning editors
listening?) here even though Cox Channel 4 and
PBS in the United States have had such great
success with their weekly series The Short
List wherein they screen short films from
all over the world. In fact the programme is
a multiple Emmy Award Winner.
Coming
back to the short filmmaker's problems in India,
there is a non refundable fee that runs in thousands
even for a submission to government run channels.
Many of us would make another short video /
film with that amount. It would be great if
a short fiction film of five to ten minutes
in length could be screened in cinema theaters,
before the main film. Imagine the kind of boost
the short fiction film movement will receive
in India if this were to happen. But Films Division,
the only organization in India which can show
such short films by law, is not interested.
It concentrates only on what it considers as
documentaries.
Film
Festivals - a couple of them in India and a
large number of them abroad - might be an option.
Again, with the kind of amount one needs to
spend on the entrance fees of some of these
festivals along with the courier charges that
are needed to send these films, one could make
many low / no cost short film!!!
Heart
Troubles of Ramchand Yavathmal Tiruchnapalli
Azamghar" has been lucky enough to
be selected in the competition section in MONFILMFEST
- the 1st Monferrato Film Festival that is to
be held in Sept 2003, Vignale, Italy. But I
certainly do not have the resources to send
it to say, 10 festivals. And if you don't submit
to at least ten festivals, the chances of it
being noticed becomes less probable, leave alone
recovering costs.
Just as I have been cribbing for the whole of
the above few paragraphs, we have for long been
blaming other than ourselves for the sorry state
of affairs of the short fiction film in India.
Those of us who have made short fiction films
over the years, we should be asking ourselves
- what have we done to build an audience for
our own short fiction films? If the short film
that I had shot twelve years back is struck
in the attic for the past so many years, it
is because I did not make an effort to get it
marketed or screened. I do not want Heart
Troubles of Ramchand Yavathmal Tiruchnapalli
Azamghar suffer the same fate. In fact no
film done with passion should suffer that fate.
It is high time we put our acts together. As
it would be difficult and non-viable for an
organization / individual to organize screenings
only for one particular short film of five to
ten minutes in length, an alternative would
be that the filmmakers could pool in their contacts,
resources and efforts to collectively screen
their films as a package of shot fiction films.
There have been attempts in the past to work
out such a thing. They need to be continued.
Who knows maybe later on we can even take it
up from there and collectively market these
films under some common theme. Can that be considered
as a possibility? If yes, are there any takers
for such a thing?
Ramchandra
PN is an alumnus of the Film and Television
Institute of India (FTII), Pune. He has directed
several documentaries on both film and video
and has also directed various serials for television
- both fiction and non-fiction.
|