Sudeep - Find me on Bloggers.com Little bit of this and that: August 2012

Thursday, August 23, 2012

When the screen comes alive


Modes of communication is the backbone of our existence as a society, and it has been decades since cinema has evolved as one of them. It has been communicating countless emotions and ideas  that transcends the visuals, and the poetry on screen has flabbergasted us, many a times. Modern cinema has evolved into a form of expression, which can touch your heart, burnish your spirits and revamp your thoughts through the depiction of stories and events.

There are no clear cut rules ragarding the ingredients of good cinema. However, in general, we can say that, it should be a slice of life. According to the legendary director, Alfred Hitchcock, cinema is life, after you take the dull part out. But this doesn’t defy the role of the unrealistic or surreal elements. It only means that, the audience should, in some way, relate the journey of the characters, to some or other aspect of our existence. There are several examples for the not so real elements in cinema, offering us deep insights into life. Christopher Nolan’s Batman series is about the existential crisis and the subsequent struggle of a superhero. Peter Jackson’s Lord of the rings is a fantasy about the battle between good and evil, depicted with the help of stunning visuals. Woody Allen’s Oscar winning ‘Midnight in Paris’ uses an illogical and inexplicable time travel in the story, and still ends up being an excellent film, which tells a lot about human nature and the soul of a city. 
The intricacies that we can relate to life, woven somewhere inside, is what makes all these films special. The most excellent movies are made, usually, using the common things that we see, in life, as raw material.

When we look at Indian cinema, in the same perspective, things are very interestingly poised. People in different regions of our coutry speak different languages, and we have different film industries for each. If we were a country with a single language and culture, our film industry would have been much bigger, with a huge audience, which would have created a room for bigger budgets, and more effort behind each film. The biggest film industry in our country, Bollywood, does not represent our films as a whole, and there are several well made films coming out, in the regional languages. But the bigger audience ensures that Hindi films do better business.

We have a fairly big group of audience for the mindless comedies, logicless hero centric action films, and cliched romantic movies. But apart from all those, which of course, succeed in the business part, do we see enough life on our big screen?

Rather than bits and pieces from their films, what we need to take up from Hollywood, is the way, they adapt true stories and books, into movies. We have seen how smart screenwriting creates a story out of events as simple as a King’s fight to speak without stammering (King’s speech), a grave and mundane book on the economics of baseball (Moneyball), and an unproven theory about who actually was behind Shakespear’s works (Anonymous). We too, have plenty of stories happening all around us, and there are a lot of books, worth being adapted, in our literature. 

 Cinema is an art form, in which, creativiy plays the pivotal role. It assumes it’s mellifluous best, when it draws inspiration from life and literature, and whole lot of creative vision acts on it. That is exactly what we need to see more often, on screen.