V.
Shantaram had an illustrious career as a
filmmaker for almost six decades. He was
one of the early filmmakers to realize the
efficacy of the film medium as an instrument
of social change and used it successfully
to advocate humanism on one hand and expose
bigotry and injustice on the other.
Born
Rajaram Vankudre Shantaram in Kolhapur,
he hardly had any education. He worked in
the railways as a teenager and started his
career in the theatre as a curtain puller
with the Gandharva Natak Mandali. He joined
Baburao
Painter's Maharashtra Film Company and
learnt the intricacies of film-making from
Painter including acting (he played the
young farmer who finally revolts in Painter's
Savkari Pash (1925)) eventually directing
his first film in 1927, Netaji Palkar.
In
1929 along with four other partners V.G.
Damle, K.R. Dhaiber, S. Fatelal, S.B. Kulkarni
he formed the Prabhat Film Company. Shantaram's first really
significant film at Prabhat was Ayodhyacha
Raja (1932).
In
1933, Prabhat moved to Pune. Initially Shantaram
followed Painter's formula of mythologicals
and historicals. However after returning
from Germany his outlook changed as he made
Amrit Manthan (1934).
The
film, set in the Buddhist era was a strong
plea against the custom of human sacrifice
and used several techniques from German
Expressionist Cinema. The film's most famous
shot was the tight close up of the priest's
right eye!
Amar
Jyoti (1936) was an interesting feminist
film about a woman who rebels against injustice
by becoming a Pirate Queen. It was a rare
Prabhat film with stunts and action.
After
this Shantaram went on to direct three of
his most famous films at Prabhat. Kunku/ Duniya na
Mane (1937) was the story of a young
woman refusing to accept her marriage to
a much older man. Shantaram pares down his
narrative to bare essentials and keeps his
treatment starkly realistic. The background
music is eschewed, retaining only natural
sounds - effects and voices in his sound
track. Even the songs used in the film are
done so with a source shown for the music.
The major food for thought in Kunku
however concerns the film's ending. It appears
from the film that the girl is now finally
free since the old man kills himself to
liberate her. But what it doesn't say is
what happens to the girl now that she is
a widow in Hindu Society - a punishment
far worse. This takes away from otherwise
well meaning and hard hitting, brave film.
Manoos/
Aadmi (1939) a love story of a policeman
and a prostitute is arguably regarded as
Shantaram's finest film. It might well be
so for Manoos is significant not
only in terms of thematic content but also
as a work of motion picture art, as well
as for its technical innovations and artistic
integrity particularly in the use of physical
spaces to represent mental states of the
characters. However like in Kunku
what really disturbs one in Manoos
is the film's ending. By refusing a better
life for herself and going back to where
she came from, the whore feels she is not
fit for a normal life - Once a whore, always
a whore. Thus the film ends up with a situation,
which is a kind of status quo without any
solution in sight and an outlook that is
far from revolutionary.
Shejari/
Padosi (1941) was a plea for communal
harmony. It's interesting that in the Hindi
version Mazhar Khan, a Muslim plays the
Hindu and Gajanan Jagirdar, a Hindu played
the Muslim in the film.
After
his classic trilogy Shantaram left Prabhat.
He started Rajkamal Studios in 1942. Earlier,
Shantaram took over as Chief Producer of
the Film Advisory Board (FAB) and did even
make a few films for the FAB but when Gandhiji
gave the call of 'Do or Die' in 1942, he
resigned and Ezra Mir took over.
Shakuntala
(1943) was Rajkamal's first film. Shantaram
married its heroine Jayshree even as he
remained married to his first wife. The
best of their films together was Dr.
Kotnis ki Amar Kahanai (1946).
The
film based on K.A. Abbas's short novel And
One Did Not Come Back was an impressive
Anti-Japanese War effort film. It is remarkable
for its powerful Nationalistic rhetoric
culminating in the hero's dying speech describing
what his wife will see when she goes 'home.'
The film was shown at the Canadian National Exhibition in
Toronto in 1947.
Amar
Bhoopali (1951), the musical biopic
of Honaji Bala popularized the musical dance
form of the Lavani. The film and its classic
song Ghanshyam Sundara Shirdara became
cult classics in Marathi Cinema.
Dahej
(1950) on the evils of dowry had its
strong moments and his dance epic Jhanak
Jhanak Payal Baaje (1955), his first
film in colour was a box-office smash. It's
heroine Sandhya became his third wife! Admittedly
a little garish and loud with saturated
colours, the film propagating the argument
that India must preserve her artistic traditions
and not be swayed by the West, was however
lapped up by audiences.
Do
Aankhein Barah Haath (1957) saw Shantaram
returning to social concerns again. The
film looked at a jailor (Shantaram) and
his efforts to reintegrate hardened criminals
back into society. Shantaram's characteristic
neo-expressionist imagery is much in evidence
in the film and the film is the closest
Shantaram came to matching his famous trilogy
at Prabhat. The film won many National and
International Awards including the Silver
Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and the
Samuel Goldwyn Award for Best Foreign Film,
besides the President's Gold Medal as the
Best Feature of 1957 in India.
Though
critics like Baburao Patel dismissed Navrang
(1959) as 'mental masturbation of a
senile soul,' the film, looking at an artiste
who glamorizes his wife in his fantasies
to make her his muse, was a success at the
box office.
He
launched his daughter from Jayshree, Rajshree,
as a heroine with Geet Gaya Patharon
ne (1964) but among his later films
Pinjra (1972), a bi-lingual in Hindi
and Marathi stands out.
The
film, based on Sternberg's The Blue Angel
(1930), is set in the Marathi genre
of the Tamasha musical and was known for
its popular music.
Shantaram
also served as Chairperson of the Children's
Film Society in the late 1970s. His last
film Jhanjaar (1986) was a misfire
and flopped badly at the box-office.
|