Renu Saluja
was undoubtedly one of the best film editors
Indian Cinema has ever seen.
Ironically when Renu applied to the Film
and Television Institute of India, Pune
(FTII), editing was only her second choice.
She had applied for direction and did not
get through the direction interview. But
she did pass the editing interview and was
persuaded by her parents to go ahead with
it. To quote Renu...
"It all happened by chance and
editing really got into my system. After
some time I didn't want to be a director
at all."
Once out of the FTII with a Diploma in
Cinema with specialization in Film Editing
in 1976, Renu's early work was in parallel
cinema with her FTII Colleagues - Vidhu
Vinod Chopra, Saeed Mirza, Kundan Shah,
Ashok Ahuja etc. Speaking of her early days
Renu recalled...
"The world over, editors are women.
It's only in India that filmmaking is dominated
by men, even editing...To me being a woman
worked as an advantage. The idea of a woman
editor was quite novel. I probably got a
lot of work in the beginning because I was
a woman and I was okay with my work...Secondly
I was working with my classmates who were
making their first films also. We were all
making our mistakes together. So there was
no question of proving my credentials."
The first offer that Renu got from outside
her protected circle of 'FTII' filmmakers
was Govind Nihalani's Ardh Satya (1983).
After Ardh Satya, her career really
took off.
Parinda
was perhaps the first mainstream film that
Renu edited. Unlike the smaller films which
were made in one schedule and thus she used
to get the whole film in front of her before
she commenced editing, Parinda was shot
over a period of three years depending on
star dates, availability of locations etc.
Speaking of adjusting to this style of working,
Renu used to say...
"When I put them (the scenes)
together, the final product changes a lot.
So I have to improve what I worked on some
time ago and bring it to match the whole
film. It gets complicated!"
It
was Renu more than anyone else who in recent
times has underlined the importance of the
editor in filmmaking. But then her contribution
to a film has always been more than just
an editor. She would quite often attend
shootings of her films giving suggestions
that would help at the editing stage. A
favourite example that Renu always used
to talk about is from Parinda,
the scene where Anil Kapoor kills Kamal
Chopra. Vinod Chopra had conceived the killing
as a single shot but Renu, attending the
shooting, got cinematographer Binod Pradhan
to take various dramatic shots of heavy
machinery around the two characters much
to Vinod's annoyance who yelled at her for
wasting precious shooting time. At the edit
stage it was thought that the single shot
of the killing was just not working. Renu
cleverly intercut the killing with shots
of the machinery she ahd takenn thus heightening
the scene and giving it a totally new dimension.
The scene was one of the highlights of Parinda.
In fact, special mention must be made of
Renu's partnership with Vinod Chopra to
whom she was also married to for a while.
A partnership that began at the FTII itself
wherein she edited his diploma film, Murder
at Monkey Hill (1976), she subsequently
edited all his work from his Oscar
Nominated Short An Encounter with Faces
(1980) to all his feature films right
from Saza-e-Maut (1981)
to Mission Kashmir
(2000) were she was both Associate Director
and Editing Superviser.
Renu actually used to feel embarrassed
if complimented about her editing in a film.
If a film is well edited, you are supposed
to be totally engrossed with the narrative
flow and not supposed to notice the editing,
she would always say. But at the same time,
she would take care to point out that editing
is a highly specialized job and is like
the final script for a film.
In the 1990s Renu struck a balance between
mainstream cinema as well as parallel cinema
and the new crop of 'different indie films'
that has cropped up following the success
of Hyderabad Blues (1998) which
she also edited. Some of the well-known
films that Renu has edited include Jaane
Bhi Do Yaaron (1983), Kabhi Haan
Kabhi Naa (1993), Bandit Queen
(1995), Pardes (1997), Rockford
(1999) and Hey Ram (2000)
and she had just completed work on Nagesh
Kukunoor's Bollywood
Calling (2001) when she passed away
way too prematurely in 2000 due to cancer
of the stomach.
Renu was a four time National Award Winner
for Best Editor for Parinda (1989),
Dharavi (1991), Sardar (1993)
and Godmother (1999) besides winning
Filmfare Awards for Parinda and
1942: A Love Story (1993).
Perhaps the best person to sum up Renu
would be Renu herself. Once when asked to
describe herself, she had laughingly said...
"I'm a Film Editor and I think,
a damn good one!"
She was...
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