Vijay Anand
was without doubt one of the greatest directors
that Hindi cinema has seen. And while his
films shone with their technical virtuosity
and marvelous sense of storytelling, his
incredible talent as a filmmaker comes through
even more forcefully in his picturisation
of songs. It
can be said that Vijay Anand was arguably
the greatest picturiser of songs in the
history of Hindi, no make that Indian Cinema.
His use of creating unusual situations and
sets (the unending number of windows through
which Dev Anand
romances Hema
Malini - Pal Bhar ke Liye Koi Humein
Pyaar Karle from Johnny Mera Naam
(1970)), using long complicated takes
involving both character and camera movement
(Tere Mere Sapne Ab Ek Rang Hai from
Guide (1965)
- entire song in just 3 shots), incredible
use of foreground and background of the
frame (O Mere Sona re (Teesri Manzil
(1966)), dynamic framing with a camera
almost always on the move (Aaj Phir Jeene
ki Tamanna hai (Guide)) and making the
most of tightly enclosed spaces (Dil
ka Bhanwar Kare Pukar - Tere
Ghar ke Saamne (1963) on a set
of the inside of the Qutub but what a picturisation!)
all played a great part in the magic of
the songs in his films.
Known
as Goldie, the younger sibling of Filmmaker
Chetan Anand and star Dev Anand, Vijay Anand
was born in Gurdaspur, Punjab. He did his
BA from Bombay University and while still
not 20 wrote the script for the Dev Anand
starrer Taxi Driver (1954), directed
by Chetan Anand. The film, inspired by the
film noir movement of Hollywood, was one
of the biggest hits of Navketan playing
a big part in giving Dev Anand his well-known
stylish screen persona. Nau Do Gyarah
released in 1957 saw Vijay Anand make his
directorial debut in Bollywood.
Nau Do Gyarah, a combination of
the urban thrillers that Bollywood was churning
out in the 1950s with the road film (certain
elements borrowed from Capra's It Happened
One Night (1934)), was a promising debut
for the young Goldie. While no classic,
it still remains one of the most enjoyable
and likeable Hindi film fares of the 1950s.
Early evidence of Goldie's filmic craft
and song picturising ability however can
be glimpsed through use of the foreground
and background in Kali ke Roop Mein Chali
Ho Dhoop Mein Kahan or using a constricted
space (a room and a toilet!) in the romantic
ditty Aaja Panchhi Akela Hai. Other
Musical hits of the film include Hum
Hain Rahi Pyaar Ke, Aankhon Mein
Kya Ji and Kya Ho Phir Jo Din Rangeela
Ho. Nau Do Gyarah also boasts
of a technical flourish when two men are
fighting it out in a room and the vamp outside
is dancing to the strains of See Le Zubaan,
Goldie cuts to a series of hands of the
various characters outside the room to highlight
their tension!
Goldie
followed up Nau Do Gyarah with the story
of a black marketer and his redemption -
Kaala Bazaar (1960). The film is
still known for its amazing picturisation
of Rhim Jhim ke Tarane Leke Aayi Barsat
with Dev Anand and Waheeda
Rehman braving the Bombay monsoons under
a single umbrella while he supers their
earlier scenes over them walking! Tere
Ghar ke Saamne (1963) with Dev Anand
and Nutan remains
one of the most likeable romantic comedies
the Hindi screen has seen. Barring the Qutub
Minar song, Goldie also astounded audiences
with his visualization of the title song
wherein Dev Anand imagines a miniature Nutan
inside his drink and sings to her! The song
has an unforgettable moment when Anand's
assistant Rashid Khan puts an ice cube into
the glass causing Nutan to shiver which
Dev Anand gallantly takes out! In between
there was Hum Dono (1961) directorially
credited to Navketan's publicist Amarjeet,
but every frame of the film seems to be
Goldie's style.
Perhaps
Goldie's real triumph as a filmmaker came
with Guide
(1965). Initially he was dead against
directing this film causing Anand to approach
elder brother Chetan Anand who was busy
with his own film, Haqeeqat (1964)
and then Raj Khosla
but things didn't work out here either.
Vijay Anand was approached again and this
time he took on the film albeit reluctantly.
Ironic because Guide today is regarded
as perhaps the best film that Vijay Anand
has made and rightly so. Based on RK. Narayan's
novel The Guide, the film is immortalized
by the director's bold, unconventional strokes;
who would have dared to show a man and woman
living together outside the sanctity of
a marriage way back in the 1960s? And that
too in a milieu as traditional as that of
Hindi cinema which doesn't allow nonconformist
relationships even today! In fact, it is
one of the earliest efforts in Indian Cinema
to actually show its two leading characters
as frail human beings who could make mistakes
in life, sin and yet be unapologetic about
it.
Guide
released to great critical acclaim and was
a big commercial success as well even though
RK Narayan was most unhappy with the final
film as he felt it deviated too much from
his novel. One of the major changes that
Vijay Anand did was to change the setting
of the film from Malgudi to Udaipur and
while this did give the film an exotic,
grand visual look, admittedly perhaps this
took away from the ambiance of the small
town of Narayan's novel. The ending too
of the film was significantly different
from that of the novel. But then Vijay Anand
has always maintained that he was never
interested in merely copying any work of
art from one medium to another unless there
was scope for value addition and to be fair
to him, he has made Guide into a rich and
unforgettable cinematic experience. Guide
more than reinforces his reputation as Indian
Cinema's premier song picturizer. Special
mention must be made of Aaj Phir Jeene
ki Tamanna Hai (The famous low angle
tracking shot of Waheeda dancing along the
ledge of the temple continues to amaze one
even today) and Tere Mere Sapne,
which he canned in just 4 shots with complex
character and camera movements - truly a
great filmmaker at the height of his craft.
With Guide, Vijay Anand became the
Hindi Film Industry's big hope. Here was
a filmmaker who could make intellectually
stimulating films that could be profitable
money earners as well! Following Guide,
Vijay Anand went from success to success
with films like Teesri
Manzil (1966), Jewel
Thief (1967), Johnny Mera Naam (1970)
and Tere Mere Sapne (1971). All the
above named films show Goldie at his creative
best as a filmmaker. Teesri Manzil
might be a Nasir
Hussain script
but it is Vijay Anand who infused the necessary
technical pizzaz raising the film several
notches. Jewel Thief (the picturisation
of Hothon pe Aisi Baat being one
of the greatest in the history of Hindi
cinema as Vyjayantimala
dances like never before) and Johnny
Mera Naam still occupy a pride of place
on filmgoers hearts as far as thrillers
go but perhaps Goldie's most satisfying
film of this period was Tere Mere Sapne.
Based on AJ Cronin's The Citadel,
the film looks at an idealist doctor losing
his values to money before realizing his
mistake at the end. The film is one of the
most sensitive and maturely directed film
by Vijay Anand, particularly the scenes
between the husband and wife who leaves
him when she sees he is no longer the same
man she married.
Sadly
however Vijay Anand's career took a curious
turn following Tere Mere Sapne. His
subsequent films like Blackmail (1973)
and Chhupa Rustom (1973) while having
the odd Vijay Anand sparkle (the Pal
Pal Dil ke Paas song in Blackmail)
were major disappointments. At this time
he was going through personal upheavals
as he married his niece and even turned
to Godman Rajneesh. He did return to directing
films with multi-starrers like Ram Balram
(1980) and Rajput (1982) but
found himself stifled with the dictates
of the star system. He still made the odd
film - Hum Rahe Na Hum (1984) and
Main Tere Liye (1988) but the magic
was missing.
Vijay
Anand also acted in various films - Agra
Road (1957), Haqeeqat
(1964), Chhupa Rustom (1973),
Kora Kagaz(1974) and Main Tulsi
Tere Aangan ki (1978) but though some
of the films were successes, particularly
the last two named, he failed to make the
same impact he did when he was behind the
camera. In the early 1990s, he was seen
in the television serial Tehqiqaat
playing Sam the Detective and was in the
process of making a film with brother Dev
Anand - Jaana Nahin Dil se Door when
he passed away.
Vijay
Anand died in Mumbai on February 23, 2004
due to a heart attack. It was one of the
rare times that even the emotionally controlled
Dev Anand wept openly. And it indeed is
a sad reflection of the times we live in
today that the news of his death was but
a scroll of text on the News channels while
a leading lady's wedding crockery got far
more coverage. However in the eyes of the
true cineaste, filmmakers like Goldie Saab
don't die. They merely become immortal.
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