Sunday 25 March 2018

Recalling an IFFK INTERVIEW

“You can’t be alone in this world,” says Kupal, the Kazem Mollaie film in the World Cinema category of the 22nd International Film Festival of Kerala (Iffk).

The Iranian multifaceted filmmaker, who has brought out the subtlest of emotions with vibrant creativity, shared his thoughts and ideas with the Iffk’s Official Media Cell members Aparna Ajith and Anand Seetharaman.

Director, his translator and the official IFFK reporters
Kupal received many accolades and laurels at its Indian premiere at the Kolkata International Film Festival. How do you feel?
I feel really honoured and proud at my film making it to this prestigious festival. I watched my film with the audience, and their perception and reaction really made me ecstatic. The people here are just amazing. The hospitality and how they treat us, make me happy. The quality of films being screened is supreme, and I’m delighted that Kupal features among them. It gives me boundless joy.
How was Kupal born?
Ahmad Kupal, who is so full of ego, is a symbolic character. His life, choked with loneliness and solitude, is something many can relate to. I know four ‘Kupals', and of these, I was able to tell two that they are not the only ones. What matters the most for me is personality. Rather than a colossal theme or a story, I wanted to canvas the subtlest and gentlest of human emotions, and that’s how my Kupal was born. Remember, you can’t live alone in this world.
What were the challenges that you encountered in the making of this film?
See, back in Iran, things are different. There are a lot of restrictions and limitations, which my words fail to convey. Most of the films that are being screened here will never be in Iran. We have very less freedom, and if we cross the red line, the film is instantly boycotted. I dream of bringing my art, moreover genuine and real art, to my countrymen but I really am not sure of materializing it. But we never give up, we don’t leave Iran. From another perspective, the restraints bring out the best of the creative souls in us, and my bold journey continues.
What do you think about the Indian scenario with regard to Padmavati?
There are many challenges and religious regulations persisting in my country. As I said, the scenario here is much better, and here people have the courage and liberty to express their emotions freely. Creative voices should never be caged.
Majid Majidi, Asghar Farhadi, and Jafar Panahi, are a part of the active vocabulary of Indian movie-buffs. So, when can we expect a joint venture of yours with India?
I love the atmosphere here. The warmth of the people makes me want to come to this land again. The IFFK audience really did receive world-class films with all their hearts, and I bet this is going to be one of the grandest and the world’s most celebrated film festivals in the very near future. And about working in India, I hope someday I will come across a producer with whom I can collaborate.
We’re looking forward to that. What is your message to this global community?
You can’t be alone in this world.

List of the links where our article was published with acknowledgement( byline)
https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/more-freedom-make-films-india-iran-kupal-filmmaker-iffk-73040
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm5109822/news?ref_=nm_ql_rel_2
http://chennaicity.info/more-freedom-to-make-films-in-india-than-iran-kupal-filmmaker-at-iffk/ ( Those moments of rapture when your report gets published in a newspaper and that too with the name <3 <3. This happens scarcely when we work as a team of official media cell.

Monday 12 March 2018

Tradition of Dissent : P.K. Nair Colloquium



Cinema plays an archetypal part in the daily life of an ordinary human being. Film as a multi-dimensional medium, with great potential to inform and educate has extensive power to play with a man’s psychology. Being the cultural artifact of human life, it has carved a niche of its own by depicting the eternal verities which are universal in nature. It has become the rich heritage of man and we see the recordation of the heart- beats of the entire human race in celluloid form. How do we articulate a modern being which creates a world beyond us and opens a world for us? The very query points us to cinema, a medium that is never static. It is constantly in motion and not at all in an inertia. Cinema always has the caliber to create alternatives and space just like the montage juxtaposing the plurality of voices, space, images and time. It can generate new and continuous dialogues not only between people, but also between history, past and future. We can look at this line of time.  Our tail is bloody and we have a head that will eat up whatever needs to be eaten up to avenge the wounds of history.  Head will devour its own tail in course of time. It will be encountered in the very near future. Between the head and tail lies our present.  Cinema has the charisma to present all these possibilities. Film makers will bestow another space, dialogue, time and it will give you another future as well as many futures. Cinema is thriving in an air circumscribed in the heated discussions on freedom of expression, censorship, political interference and art house cinema. Taking this discourse ahead was the seminar entitled ‘P.K.Nair Colloquium: Tradition of Dissent’ held at Hotel Hycinth as a part of the 22nd edition of the International Film Festival of Kerala. This annual colloquium dedicated to late Paramesh Krishnan Nair, the grand old man of film archiving in India had an astounding panel of writer N.S.Madhavan, the acclaimed writer of contemporary Malayalam literature, Amrit Gangar, film scholar and historian, Anup Singh, film maker, Alencier Lay Lopez, Malayalam actor, Sadanand Menon, Indian arts editor. Bina Paul, Kerala State Chalachitra Academy vice chairperson welcomed the gathering and the session was moderated by professor Dr.Veena Hariharan.

Amrit Gangar created the aura of the colloquium by speaking of the voices of dissent and the remarkable contributions of P.K.Nair to Indian cinema. P.K. Nair would always lament in his deep archival mode- negative in the time of celluloid was a crucial factor. A factor bestowed upon it by the late 19th and 20th centuries. It was responsible for producing a positive; a positive of image and sound, a positive of polyphony and of enduring thoughts. It was in the negative like silver lining that Nair’s lamentation has become an illumination. At this moment, this negative is turning into a metaphor; a moment of dissent. This moment of dissent is a part of our grand tradition of positive. A positive of plurality, a positive of multiple resonances, a positive of patience where thousand flowers bloom. A positive of parampara to survive the centuries of samaya, the mahakaal. We have to understand how forms of art in themselves become means to dissent. Political dissent is the only notion that is widely discussed or pondered over these days. We have huge traditions of dissent which is often ignored or which can be used. Dissent has become either so suppressed or brash. Most women of our epics are the voices of dissent either feeble or forceful. The voices of Sita and Draupudi, Ahalya and Rukmini are still heard.  Surpanaka and Shambuka had their own voices of dissent. Buddha did dissent, Mahavira did dissent and so did Charvaka. Tukaram was a great dissenter. His albums were voices of protest against power and oppression of the poor.  Bhakti movement was a part of the great tradition of dissent. If religion is the opium of the masses, it is the sigh of the sufferers also. It is the sigh that history keeps reminding especially the middle classes over time. The voices of dissent also build the wailing walls of our times. At this juncture, the ironical sounds of history reckon to save Hinduism. Amrit Gangar exhorted the progressives and Marxists to save Hinduism. “From turning into an instrument of repression and killing, we have to save saffron, the colour of emancipation and giving for the progress. Th very colour of the fakir has to be reclaimed from the oppressors. It is for the progressives to save the saffron colour of deliverance”, added Gangar. It is the irony of history that pleads the multitudes for a reinvention with the multifarious nature of dharma. Here comes the question of dharma which is not an equivalent of the English word religion.
“Yada yada hi dharmasya glanirbhavati bharata
Abhythanamadharmasya tadatmanam srijamyaham

Paritranaya sadhunang vinashay cha dushkritam
Dharmasangsthapanarthay sambhabami yuge yuge”

(Whenever there is decay of righteousness, O Bharata,
And there is exaltation of unrighteousness, then I Myself come forth;
For the protection of the good, for the destruction of evil-doers, 
For the sake of firmly establishing righteousness, I am born from age to age.)
In this stream of consciousness are born, Kanhaiya Kumar and Jignesh Mevani. To kill one Gouri Lankesh and more Gauris will be born. When Safdar Hashmi is killed, more and more Safdar Hashmi’s will be taking birth.  A valiant voice against repression and oppression is the voice of the universe. Amrit Gangar has been right in stating that we have transcended the boundaries of a nation as well as nationalism.


“Silence is the most viable option when it comes to resistance”, opines eminent writer N.S.Madhavan. Citizens in the garb of supporters are muddling up the art of articulation. Dissent is an art whereas art is not a medium to dissent.  To pursue one’s own vocation of art may not be possible all the times. The idea of dissent is inbuilt into art. Dissent in actual political situation for an artist is challenging. Many artists did react to the oppressor’s situation when art was denied.
M.F. Hussian remains as an excellent testimony as his portrait of Indira Gandhi in Silk sari pointed figures of suspicion at him. Silence is a better option than support and many writers have materialized that. Mulk Raj Anand, the renowned Indian writer opted silence throughout in many disparaging circumstances of Emergency. An array of artists incorporating Phanishwar Nath Renu, Shivaram Karanth, and Satyavrat Sinha embody the dichotomy of silence and violence at the times of oppression. Allegory is the medium available for dissent during the times of protest. Poems by Malayalam writers Sachithanandan, Ayyappa Panicker, Kadammanitta Ramakrishnan and the short stories of Kakkanadan are single solitary instances of protest. Hence, it is impossible to think that we are not allowed to protest in times of coercion. Silence acts a healthier choice than joining the madding crowds of protest.
 Moving on to the medium of cinema, Madhavan emphasized that it is a matter of pride and prestige that the biggest protest during Emergency emanated from cinema. One artist who really stood against the emergency of India and its paroxysms was Kishore Kumar. He refused to sing in the All India Congress Committee meeting and he was banned from AIR then. His fully completed movie ‘Kissa Kursi’ was ruined during the risks and pains of emergency. But Kishore Kumar still lives on and no age, no custom can wither the immortal variety made immortal by his creative vibrancy.
“The time to dissent is now” added Madhavan. He mentioned the role of archiving to keep the memories afresh forever and the need to preserve the pristine negative in the archive of history.
Anup Singh began his deliberation with the notability of hope in the practice of dissent. The first thing that comes to his mind when he thinks about the process of film making is the frame. He looks at the frame as it holds within it a space and time. This is the primary thing that strikes him. “As far as I am concerned, this space and time is very resonant because everything in cinema is within the space and time that the frame is holding. It is pivotal that what kind of frame we create”, says Anup Singh. Cinema allows the frame a constant transition. In cinema, the frame is never static. Everything that befalls within the frame changes the frame. It renders a new value and new quality life to it. We have a present that is strange and a past that is bloody. We will avenge it and redeem it by creating the time.
“The process of politics of today has given us a tremendously powerful frame which has somehow squeezed the space and time. We are left in fact with a frame that is not moving anymore. It has taken control over time and space. I am amused in many ways”, added Singh.
Film makers know the ways and means to tackle this hurdle. They are not helpless as film makers.  They have a commanding art, a tool to combat the kind of control of the time and space. In a way, film is mirroring the common man of flesh and blood like us. Singh holds the view that each of us are endowed a certain moment on the mighty planet of Earth.  We have a firm time and space to make ourselves responsible and celebrative of the gift of life we have been bestowed.

Alencier Lay Lopez feels ecstatic that he is born in the very land that gave birth to legendary cum mythological figure Naranath Bhranthan. His job goes coterminous with the job of Bhranthan. All day, he would roll a huge boulder to the top of a hill and when the sun hit the horizon, he would roll the boulder down from atop the hill, clapping his hands and laughing derisively. It was clearly a dig at the materialistic society that has lost sight of the ultimate goal, He does his job and so does the actor Alencier.
“I am an actor and my medium of expression is my body. I earnestly believe that drama is my medium and passion. It is my way to protest also” says Alencier. He has some responsibilities to the society as an actor and a human being. Albeit he has become a star and part of the commercial industry recently, he ascertains that he is a star from the streets. “I am basically an actor. This is what I am and I will always be” opined the actor who doesn’t wish to create a frame to expose his stardom. He regrets that the stars are still afraid to speak out against the injustice that is rampant in the world.
The world we dwell is a world of intolerance. The dire need of the hour is to speak out not silently and subtly but loudly and clearly. Here comes the application of body. By opening the biosphere beyond body, it becomes more free and unrestricted. Hence the body fashions its own space.

“The act of dissent should be an act registered as dissent. This natural act of human expression is to reveal the oppression than being on the side of the oppressor”, opines Sadanand Menon. The space of dissent which we need to own is not necessarily owned. The concept of dissent has to be nuanced. Dissent, a political act with art is an immediate impulse that comes from social and historical contexts. All sorts of people in the creative community comprising poets, artists, film makers, musicians, theatre workers are ensnared in the debate, the conflict of unequal power, control, dominance and hierarchy. Literary, artistic and social production that emerge contribute to this skirmish. During the moments of intense political eruption, artistic outputs can make the context of conflict look normal. A set of artists and public intellectuals try to expose this struggle. There are ample number of moments in history where people have spoken out with a voice that has come to the limelight. Many artists endorse invisible tactic where as many expose the tyranny. The language of cinema through frame, duration, pace of camera, gesture of an actor exposes the oppressive nature of social structure we are facing day by day.


 Amrit Gangar pointed out the role of education in silencing the voices. Management education since its inception with the mantra ‘no lunch is free’ has killed the concept of dissent. He expounded this with a management question who the best salesman is. The answer may sound preposterous as the best salesman is the one who can sell comb to a baldy man. The youngsters are put themselves in tune with the music of existing education to surreptitiously follow these sorts of answers without raising a question or hint of doubt. Education not only makes the students follow this system blindly but also impose silence thereby killing the thinking ability. Mass media which started dominating the new generation has removed the cinema consciousness. The discipline of humanities is gradually getting erased from the academia. Humanities that nurtures the faculties of mind is not seen or acknowledged in the present era of scientific and technological advancements. Film makers of today are from advertising field and precarious to anticipate whether there will be visionaries like Ritwik Ghatak, John Abraham and G. Aravindan in cinema today or the days to come. It is time to question the education we attain and start dissenting. The time to dissent is now. The oft quoted adage ‘better late than never’ exemplifies the need to dissent. It is better to protest than to regret later. Cinema acts as an influential weapon to question and answer. The Canadian poet  Leonard Cohen’s Anthem bestows a note of optimism.
“There is a crack, a crack in everything
That’s how the light gets in”.
This crack or little opening must be wholly pressed into action. Let this anthem glimmer hope to the humanity to create minds without the fear of expression.