Showing posts with label Outlook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Outlook. Show all posts

Sunday, March 10, 2024

Remembering Kumar Shahani, India’s Foremost Avant-Garde Film Director


 For the people of my generation, who grew up in the 1990s, Indian new-wave cinema was a kind of esoteric art and idea. During the early ‘90s in Darbhanga, I still remember seeing a poster of the movie ‘Salim Langde Pe Mat Ro’ and wondering what kind of film it would be.

Truth is, new-wave cinema died in the ‘80s and what we found in the ‘90s, with the opening of the market, was that the genre of Hindi cinema shifted to diaspora and gangster movies. At the same time, with the coming of the internet and YouTube, the movies of parallel cinema, although in bad print, got available online and reached a wider audience.

Interestingly, now, even in Darbhanga, people discuss young filmmakers like Achal Mishra (‘Gamak Ghar’, ‘Dhuin’) and Partha Saurabh (‘Pokhar Ke Dunu Paar’) and their movies. It has got a name — the Darbhanga New Wave. Certainly, the aesthetics of Darbhanga New Wave are influenced by the forefathers of the Indian New Wave cinema of the ‘70s.

Kumar Shahani (1940-2024), who died at the age of 83 in Kolkata recently, was one of India’s foremost avant-garde film directors. When his classic film ‘Maya Darpan’ turned 50 in November 2022, I called him for an interview. He was in Pune and asked me to send questions by email, to which he promptly replied. When the interview was published, I shared the link with him and wrote: “I hope to talk to you at length, when you are back in Delhi.” Alas! It would never happen, but I had the good fortune to interact with him on a few occasions in the past.

If Mani Kaul’s debut film ‘Uski Roti’ and Mrinal Sen’s ‘Bhuvan Shome’ started the New Cinema movement in India, Shahani’s first feature film ‘Maya Darpan [Mirror of Illusions]’, released in 1972, is a classic of parallel cinema. He was known for the formal experimentation in his movies.

Based on famous Hindi writer Nirmal Verma’s eponymous short story, the film depicts the lonely world of the protagonist Taran. But the film goes beyond the story. Taran’s rebellion against feudalism is manifested in dance sequences. Kumar told me that Verma was not happy with it. He said: “Nirmal was conditioned by the films that he had seen. We never saw eye-to-eye on any issue!”

I asked him how he looked back at ‘Maya Darpan’ after 50 years. He replied: “Because of the jubilee of ‘Maya Darpan’, a great deal of interest is being shown around the world in my work, and new queries for future productions from the home of Hollywood have reached me. When ‘Maya Darpan’ was made, the Euro-American response was enthusiastic. It was recognised as a breakthrough in cinematic language — with colour, movement and narrative creating a new musicality, as it were.”

He always struggled to raise finances for his films but never compromised with his style of filmmaking. In his 50-year-long career, besides ‘Maya Darpan’, he only managed to make ‘Tarang’ (1984), ‘Khayal Gatha’ (1989), ‘Kasba’ (1990), ‘Char Adhyay’ (1997), and a few short documentaries. ‘Char Adhyay’, which is based on Rabindranath Tagore’s novel, is about self-determination and violence in pre-independent India. He said to me: “You will find Ritwik (Ghatak) da a lot in this movie.” Although he had Marxist leanings, we found a kind of spiritualism in his movies. He assisted the great French filmmaker Robert Bresson (‘Une Femme Douce’, 1969) when he was in Paris on a fellowship. He was influenced by the concept of Moksha/Nirvana, which we see in Bresson’s films. We don’t find a watertight compartment between ideology and aesthetics in Shahani’s films.

A few years ago, during a conversation about parallel cinema, he told me that we can’t compare popular with parallel because the main purpose of mainstream cinema is to make profits, whereas the kind of movies he and his ilk made was art. He was also critical of shopping Mall cinema culture and viewing a movie there. Like ‘slow reading’, his films ask for ‘slow viewing’. In fact, they ask for a new viewer who is immersed not only in cinema but Indian tradition of music, dance, and painting. His films are an amalgamation of everything that is soaked in the Indian civilisation.

Shahani always discussed his birthplace in Larkana (Pakistan), near Mohenjo-Daro. He considered himself, like Ghatak, a product of the Partition. He said that he had completed a movie based on Gita Govinda — ‘Priye Charuseele’, which is yet to be released. Even during his last days, he was brimming with many ideas.

In 2014, I was at the Indian International Centre (IIC), Delhi to listen to a lecture on Mani Kaul’s films. He was there too. I had a copy of ‘Uncloven Space’, a translation of Kaul’s conversation with Udyan Vajpayee (‘Abhed Aakash’). I had a brief conversation with him about Kaul, Ghatak (his guru at the FTII) and parallel cinema. Later, I asked him to sign the book and write something for my year-old daughter. He did. “Kaithi, hope that you will grow up to be a connoisseur like your father,” he wrote. He had expectations not only from my generation but from the future too!

Friday, August 19, 2022

शहरनामा-झंझारपुर



जिले की चाह लिए एक कस्बा

गाँवों से घिरा झंझारपुर एक कस्बा हैजो शहर होना चाहता है. बिहार के मधुबनी जिले के इस सब डिवीजन के अंदर जिला बनने की ख्वाहिश कई दशक से है. जैसा कि छोटे कस्बों में रहने वालों की चाह होती हैस्कूल से पढ़-लिखकर हर कोई दरभंगा-दिल्ली की रेलगाड़ी पकड़ना चाहता है. अब तो दरभंगा में हवाईअड्डा भी है! क्या यह शहर हैयह सवाल बहुत बाद में हमारे मन में आयाजब हमने शहरों को देखा और वहीं के होकर रह गए. लेकिन हमारे बचपन का तो यही पहला शहर है. यहाँ थाना हैबाजार हैकोर्ट--कॉलेज हैस्टेडियम भी है. हांयहां के बांस टॉकीज’ में ही हमने पहली फिल्म देखी. माँ भी कहती है कि मैथिली की पहली फिल्म कन्यादान’ उन्होंने वर्ष 1972-73 में बांस टॉकीज में ही देखी थी.

जिसके आंगन बहती है नदी

झंझारपुर के आंगन में नदी बहती है. असल में कमला और बलान नदियों के तट पर बसा यह शहर राजनीतिक रूप से काफी महत्वपूर्ण रहा है. यह लोकसभा क्षेत्र भी है जहाँ से चुनकर देवेंद्र यादव जैसे सांसद केंद्र सरकार में मंत्री बने. पर बिहार के राजनीतिक इतिहास में यह पूर्व मुख्यमंत्री जगन्नाथ मिश्र की वजह से जाना जाता हैजो झंझारपुर विधानसभा से चुन कर बिहार के मुख्यमंत्री बनते रहे. लंगड़ा चौक पर बैठ कर राष्ट्रीय जनता दल के नेताप्रोफेसर रामदेव भंडारी को अखबार बांचते हमने देखा और बाद में राज्यसभा में भी. यहीं हमने राजीव गाँधीचंद्रशेखरवी पी सिंह और लालकृष्ण आडवाणी जैसे नेता को देखा-सुना. दादी के मुँह से लाट साहबों से किस्से सुने.  भारत छोड़ो आंदोलन के दौरान वर्ष 1942 में झंझारपुर स्थित थाने को घेरने-जलाने की बात भी मैंने स्वतंत्रता सेनानियों के मुँह से सुनी है. किसी इतिहासकार को इस शहर के राजनीतिक इतिहास को पंक्तिबद्ध करनी चाहिए.

सांस्कृतिक एकता का पुल

बीसवीं सदी की शुरुआत में कमला-बलान नदी पर करीब दो सौ बीस फीट लंबा रेल बिज्र बना कर अंग्रेजों ने झंझारपुर को अन्य शहरों से जोड़ा था. 1970 के दशक की शुरुआत में इस पुल को रेल-सह-सड़क में तब्दील कर दिया गया, जो दशकों तक लोगों के लिए कौतुक का केंद्र बना रहा. ट्रैफिक के कारण और बाढ़ के दिनों में यह अक्सर परेशानी का सबब भी रहा. अब यह पुल इतिहास के पन्नों में है. पिछले दिनों इसी पुल के समांतर रेलवे ने एक ब्रिज तैयार कर दिया. वैसे दस-बारह साल पहले ही राष्ट्रीय राजमार्ग 57 ने इस ‘अजीबोगरीब पुल’ की अहमियत कम कर दी थी. कोसी के किनारे बसे शहर अब कमला-बलान के करीब आ गए हैं. रेलमार्ग और राजमार्ग मिथिला की सांस्कृतिक एकता के पुल हैजो शहर के कारोबारियों के लिए भी नए अवसर लेकर आया है.

कला पारखी की तलाश में

मधुबनी मिथिला पेंटिंग का दूसरा नाम है, हालांकि यह नाम मिथिला पेंटिंग के साथ न्याय नहीं करता. झंझारपुर के आस-पड़ोस के लगभग हर गाँव में मिथिला पेंटिंग होती है. दरभंगा-मधुबनी से दूरी होने की वजह से कलाकारों की पहुँच सत्ता केंद्रों तक नहीं हो पाती है. मधुबनी जिले के रांटी’ और जितवारपुर’  गांव राष्ट्रीय पटल पर छा गएझंझारपुर के गाँव उसी तरह कला पारखियों के इंतजार में हैं. क्या पता कोई सीता देवीगंगा देवीदुलारी देवी भविष्य के गर्भ में छिपी हो?

मिथिला के इतिहासकार राधाकृष्ण चौधरी ने लिखा है कि झंझारपुर के बने कांस्य-पीतल के बर्तनों की मांग दक्षिणी राज्यों में थी. आज भी बाजार में कुशल कारीगर मौजूद हैंलेकिन वस्तुओं की मांग नहीं है. बाजार में गहमागहमी रहती हैपर वह रौनक नहीं जो तीन दशक पहले तक थी. कई मारवाड़ी उद्यमी शहर छोड़ कर दिल्लीसूरतमुंबई जा बसे हैं.

बेलारही का पुस्तकालय

शहरी क्षेत्र से सटे गांव बेलारही में 85 साल पुराना एक पुस्तकालय है, मिथिला मातृ-मंदिर. पिछले दिनों इसे सांसद-विधायक विकास निधि से किताबों की आमद हुई है. शहर में एक भी पुस्तकालय न होना अखरता है, जबकि ललित नारायण जनता कॉलेज करीब साठ साल पुराना है. केजरीवाल और टेवरीवाल हाईस्कूल से निकले पुराने छात्र पूरे देश में मौजूद हैंलेकिन अपनी मातृ संस्था की सुध किसे है! कहते हैं प्रसिद्ध इतिहासकार प्रोफेसर डी एन झा ने अपनी नौकरी की शुरुआत झंझारपुर से ही की थी. यशवंत सिन्हा ने भारतीय प्रशासनिक सेवा के दौरान अपना पहला प्रशिक्षण नजदीक के 'सिमरा' गाँव के निवासी आइएएस भागीरथ लाल दास के साथ किया था. शांति स्वरूप भटनागर सम्मान से सम्मानित गणितज्ञ अमलेंदु कृष्ण भी इसी जगह से ताल्लुक रखते हैं.

कोई भी बन जाए भोजन भट्ट

मिथिला अपनी सांस्कृतिक विशिष्टता की वजह से पूरी दुनिया में जाना जाता है. शहर में ‘पग-पग पोखर माछ मखान’ है. तरह-तरह की मछलीकिस्म-किस्म के चावलचूड़ासाग-सब्जीआम के विभिन्न प्रकार किसी को भी भोजन भट्ट’ बनाने के लिए पर्याप्त हैं. अब स्ट्रीट फूड- मुरहीचूड़ाकचरीचप के साथ-साथ चाउमीन और चाट भी नुक्कड़-चौराहे पर मिलने लगे हैं.

आस-पड़ोस के लोग शहर छोड़कर महानगरों में जा बसे हैंलेकिन वे शादी-ब्याहछठ आदि में गामक घर’ देखने जरूर आते हैं. यदि यहाँ स्वास्थ्य सुविधा बहाल हो जाए तो आने वाले सालों में लोग वापस अपनी जड़ों की ओर लौटेंगे और अपने अनुभव से इस शहर को संवृद्ध करेंगे. यूं एक मेडिकल कॉलेज का निर्माण कार्य जोर-शोर से चल रहा है.

{आउटलुक (5 सितंबर 2022)}

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Tale of interesting times: Lucknow Boy

Vinod Mehta’s memoirs, Lucknow Boy, could not have been published in a better time. We don’t have to agree with Press Council of India’s Chairman Markandey Katju’s prescription entirely to know what is wrong with Indian media today. Media criticism is the flavor of the season. It is written all over the wall.

With the curiosity of knowing the inside story of media industry I finished this unputdownable autobiography very fast. I always wonder ‘how one can write autobiography!’ For most of us tend to experiment with truth’ in our life, rather than write the ‘truth’.

In Mr Mehta’s own words these memoirs are, ‘…the first rough draft of my history.’ He dissects his life like a seasoned surgeon.

Fathering a daughter, when he was in London in 60s, and not having courage to own her up, he has the temerity to call himself a ‘bastard’. And only a flamboyant editor like Mehta has courage to name his dog ‘the Editor’!

Viond Mehta, a self confessed pseudo secular’, has the distinction of being an editor for the last 40 years. In this age when we no longer care to know and they no longer care to inform who are the editors (by the way do we know who are the editors of The Times of India and Hidnustan Times?), It is a rare feat indeed.

Journalists have the privilege to see and report the events of a nation from close quarters. ‘Lucknow Boy doesn’t disappoint us, telling tales of our times and power and mighty with a pinch of salt and pepper.

We, who grew up in liberalized India, didn’t see Mr Mehta’s editorial skills when we was at the helm of Sunday Observer, the Indian Post and other magazines. On a personal note, I knew Vinod Metha, the editor, in 1995, the year I came to Delhi. I vividly remember an October evening we were taking a stroll in Mukherjee Nagar in Delhi, a student hub for Bihari migrants, when I chanced upon a new news magazine ‘Outlook.’

In my long student years, I have subscribed to many other current affairs magazines, but, I rarely missed to flip through ‘Outlook’. In between, I was fascinated by Tehelka’ and ‘Frontline’, but ‘Outlook’ kept my interest intact.

Before he joined as editor of Outlook, Mr Mehta was famous editor of infamous’ ‘Debonair’ in mid 70s.

‘Although I had become a full-fledged editor, I failed to penetrate Bombay’s esoteric social scene’, he bemoans.

Further recounting his Debonair days he writes, “Debonair’s name and fame grew by the year but it was unable to shed its smutty aura.’

Mehta quotes former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajypee complimenting him, ‘Your magazine is very good,’ but I have to keep it under the pillow.’

All the great editors are product of their times and the confidence they enjoy of their proprietors. This is amply evident from the experiences of Mr Mehta. At the Debonair, he enjoyed the confidence of the owner of the magazine Susheel Somani, and the ditto for The Sunday Observer’. But his stint at the ‘Indian Post’, launched in 1987, was short lived. Mr Mehta notes, ‘The paper was looking good, the reader response was good but the management was terrible.’ His relationship with owner of the Indian Post, Vijaypat Singhania soured. And inevitable happened; he was fired in 1989!

Soon after that Mr Mehta launched ‘Independent’, the same year, under the proprietorship of Indian Media’s ‘golden boy’ Samir Jain. Alas, it was just 29 days wonder and Mr Mehta had to go from Times network. It is little baffling and a riddle to decode that why he is still all praise for Sameer jain, but has no qualms in blaming the ‘denigration and decline of Editor as an institution’ on Dileep Padgaonkar.

However, in between these lines, we read how in the licence quota raj, in the 1980s, the news stories were killed, business interests served and editors were left unguarded at the mercy of ‘white elephants’ like Satish Sharma and Sharad pawar.

With the uproars of Mandal and kamandal in the air, a disenchanted Mr Mehta came to Delhi, in 1991, with a new edition of the ‘Pioneer’ under the proprietorship of maverick L M Thapar. After few months of bonhomie he notes, ‘my only worry was the proprietor.’

Defying his own records of ‘being most sacked editor in India’, Mr. Mehta has been with Outlook magazine for the long 15 years, since its inception. Needless to say credit goes to the proprietor of the Outlook, Rajan Raheja.

Mr Mehta writes, “When I go and meet the supreme editor-in-chief in the sky, I will tell him ‘Lord, I committed many small sins but on the big issues I remained entirely professional.’

And he had to pay for his ‘professionalism’ many times in his career. He has written at length how NDA government targeted the publication and its proprietor.

To put it on record he mentions that he has been close to Vajpayee. But he writes, “For the pukka journalist, however, it is not important how close you are to the prime minister but how close you are to reality.”

Last year, Outlook was in the news when it published the transcripts of Niira Radia tapes. NDTV’s Managing Editor Barkha Dutta was also there in that tapes ‘stringing along a source’.

Reality bites and NDTV has banned Mr Mehta from their channel!

(Published on the Hoot under 'Vintage Vinod' on 3 December 2011)

(Photo courtesy Outlook)