Sunday, September 22, 2013

Writers in Tamil cinema.. Bollywood about tamil cinema

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/the-evolving-role-of-writers-in-tamil-cinema/390045-55.html

In My Years with Boss at Gemini Studios, Ashokamitran recounts a poet’s visit. “He was a tall man, very English, very serious and of course very unknown to all of us. Battling with half a dozen pedestal fans on the shooting stage, The Boss [film producer and publisher SS Vasan] read out a long speech. It was obvious he knew little about the poet.”

“Then the poet spoke. He couldn’t have addressed a more dazed and silent audience… The whole thing lasted about an hour; then the poet left and we all dispersed in utter bafflement... What is an English poet doing in a film studio that makes Tamil films for the simplest sort of people?”

Ashokamitran learns that the poet is Stephen Spender; and the mystery of his appearance is solved when Ashokamitran picks up a book called The God that Failed; it was about disillusionment with communism. The truth, then, dawned: Literature didn’t explain Spender’s presence in the studio, politics did.

“Tamil cinema is more about fantasy than realism. It embraces certain types of writers. Writers like Kalki and Sujatha, both of whom wrote for mainstream magazines, and were immensely popular. I don’t know if the more literary writers kept themselves away from Tamil cinema, but Tamil cinema kept them away. But, that’s not to say cinema never had a brush with literature. That happened, and produced very interesting results,” says Mohan V Raman, actor and film historian.

The history of Tamil cinema started about three years after that of Hindi cinema. In 1916, R Nataraja Mudaliyr, a businessman from Vellore, set up India Film Company. His first film, Keechaka Vadham, drew from a story in the Mahabharata, and set a trend for early Tamil films: They retold familiar stories from mythology or lives of saints. There was no role for writers.

In the very early days, the business of cinema was looked down upon. And writers were no different. “Instead of trying to understand this new art form and comprehend its characteristics, the writers spent their time and space deriding it. There was no attempt at understanding the nature of this new medium, and its potential, nor to develop an appreciation for it,” wrote S Theodore Baskaran, in an essay titled ‘Encountering a new art’ (Tamil Cinema: The Cultural Politics of India’s Other Film Industry). It was mostly seen as a medium for the illiterate.

It was left to political activists of the Dravidian movement to make the best use of this medium, to entwine Tamil cinema and Tamil politics. (By this time, cinema had transitioned to talkies, and songs were giving way to dialogues.) CN Annadurai and M Karunanidhi were the stars of this era. The monologue Karunanidhi wrote for Parasakthi found new life in the delivery of Sivaji Ganesan. Although the literary merits of Annadurai and Karunanidhi are suspect, they will be remembered for their political writing in party magazines and newspapers. Annadurai was Tamil Nadu’s chief minister from 1967 till his death in 1969, and Karunanidhi was CM five times, starting 1969, competing first with MG Ramachandran, and then with J Jayalalithaa, both of whom were products of the meeting of cinema and politics.

Tamil cinema, since then, can be seen as a battle to fill the two slots occupied by MGR and Sivaji Ganesan. (The slots passed on to Rajinikanth and Kamal Haasan. It is yet to be seen who inherits them.) “The dominance of stars meant stories had to be written with them in mind. So, typically directors do everything from story to screenplay to dialogues. This leaves little scope for writers,” says Raman.

Some tried to make a dent. Jayakanthan, who made his name in the Tamil literary scene, made a few movies based on his own works, including Unnaipol Oruvan, Sila Nerangalil Sila Manithargal, and Oru Nadigai Nadagam Parkiral. But he is largely an exception.

Perhaps, Sujatha had the most successful stint a writer ever had in Tamil cinema. He established himself as a writer while working for Bharat Electronics (he headed a team that designed India’s electronic voting machines). Perhaps no other writer had a sustained readership over several decades and generations. His association with cinema is a long one: His novels have been made into films, he has written dialogues for a number of films and has authored a book on screenplay writing.

His early columns on cinema (mostly published in a small magazine called Kanaiyazhi) reflect his personal standards for a good movie. These standards are high. He is damning about most Tamil movies of the time, contrasting them with global examples (he recognises the genius of Satyajit Ray from his very first movie). Yet, the movies he got involved in eventually hardly matched his earlier standards, even when the screenplays were clever and the dialogues sparkling. Directors, constrained by the commercial need to make a film widely appealing, ruled over him. He gave the directors a free hand to change screenplays as they wished. He co-wrote Rajinikanth’s last two big super hits, Sivaji and Enthiran.

A decade ago, alongside the well-trodden paths that movies such as Sivaji and Enthiran would eventually take, young directors started paving a different road. Starting with Cheran’s Autograph, there has been a stream of films that can be best described as realistic cinema, with a strong story line, and realistic characters. Many have been commercial successes too.

The new set of directors—Ameer, Bala and Vasantha Balan—are opening gates for literary writers such as Nanjil Nadan, S Ramakrishnan and Jeyamohan. Jeyamohan is best known for his novel Vishnupuram (Ashokamitran called it the biggest effort in 100 years of Tamil literature). He has worked with Bala for Naan Kadavul, an adaptation of his novel Ezham Ulagam (Seventh World), with Vasantha Balan for Angadi Theru, and with Mani Ratnam for Kadal. It’s this stream of movies—the ones that push the boundaries of mainstream cinema—that promises to offer a bigger space for writers.

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 http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-12-26/news-interviews/30558322_1_yellow-boots-anurag-kashyap-film

Anurag Kashyap states that Tamil movies and Marathi movies are far ahead of times.. with great writers and directors.

Anurag Kashyap opines that Tamil directors are the most rooted in India...
He might have cut his teeth running down the dingy alleyways of Mumbai's mean streets, learning the nitty-gritty of filmmaking. But when it came to developing a cinematic vocabulary of his own, Anurag Kashyap had to only gaze southwards.

The celebrated filmmaker of Dev D and That Girl in Yellow Boots, hailed as a poster boy of the Indian New Wave Cinema, made absolutely no bones about how instrumental Tamil films have been in shaping his evolution as a director.

So much so that the opening credits of his forthcoming film, Gangs of Wasseypur, pays homage to the 'Madurai Triumvirate of Bala, Ameer and Sasikumar.' The amicable auteur beamed with cheer as he opened up about his fixation with Kollywood films.

"Chennai is the birthplace of a new language in cinema. The audiences here are the most evolved moviegoers to be found anywhere in India. I remember the first time I saw Bala's film Sethu, starring Vikram. I knew something had been set off in me as I watched the movie unfold. My obsession with films from this region continued with Kaadhal Kondein, Paruthiveeran and Subramaniapuram among others. No one has filmed Banaras the way it's been captured in Naan Kadavul," says Anurag, who has lived in those parts during his formative years.

He adds, "These films have formed an indelible impression on my mind and they inspired me to go back to my roots." The director's ravenous appetite for films comes forth as he confesses to watching Azhagar Samiyin Kuthirai and Kalavani without English subtitles.

Ask him about the one Tamil film that took his breath away and pat comes his answer, "No two ways about it - Aaranya Kaandam (AK). I was literally blown away by what Kumararaja did with his film. It's become such a rage in Mumbai's film circuit. Bejoy Nambiar, the director of Shaitan was inspired by the feature and we used to have marathons of viewing AK in our office. The staff would be rolling on the floors laughing at the scalpelsharp one-liners and dialogues while I'd be prodding them to tell me the meaning of the lines. I even have an uncut version of the film."

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