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Weaving emotions into celluloid
Mani Ratnam prefers the hard way out in making films. With a
variety of entertainers already to his credit, he has now come up
with ``Alaipayuthey'', an equally dramatic and promising venture.
GAUTAMAN BHASKARAN writes...
WAVES BREAK into emotions. Emotions into songs, and songs into
dances. Mani Ratnam's latest celluloid offering,
``Alaipayuthey'', is as dramatic as the breakers pounding the
rocks, and, at another level, as tranquil as the waters moving
away from the shoreline. In Tamil, the film sets in almost
rhythmic motion the beat of two young hearts as they grapple with
sarcasm and hostility at one end, and with suspicion and discord
at the other. As love's pendulum swings between these perilous
points, the boy and the girl clutch at whiffs of joy as remorse
and regret torment them.
``Alaipayuthey'' takes off from a suburban train station in
Chennai. In fact, the train appears as a leitmotif in the film,
playing Cupid to Shakti (Shalini, off screen) and Kartik
(Madhavan) as they roll into romance, and, later, as a catalyst
to soothe unhappy minds and tortured souls.
But, often the journey runs on cliched tracks. The girl is a step
or two below the boy in social hierarchy, and although she
qualifies to be a doctor, this does not stop the elders from
wallowing in their own complexes. When the two ultimately take
the plunge, they find that there are other shadows to confront.
Admittedly, there are only A number of stories, and a tale by
itself need not necessarily make or mar a movie. What can is the
way it is handled: Mani Ratnam does manage to inject a degree of
novelty into his characterisations. One cannot but like Shakti's
sister, Poorni, who is much more than a willing accomplice in the
love game. Unusual in Indian cinema. Kartik's father, the
criminal lawyer, is another fascinating personality, but
somewhere along the cut and edit process, these two people lose
out in depth. Instead, a lot of gloss and glamour - mostly in the
song and dance sequences, one of which on the beach is certainly
not very tasteful - find their way into the final frames.
Although it does seem such a pity that Mani Ratnam, who is
certainly one of our better directors, ought to have gone off the
rails at such critical junctions, one is happy that
``Alaipayuthey'' signals his return - of sorts - to ``Mouna
Raagam'', the picture that pushed him into the limelight with its
tender, sweet narrative of a love that blossoms between a husband
and wife under trying conditions.
Simple and shorn of pretensions, ``Mouna Raagam'' continues to be
my favourite in the Mani Ratnam basket: if Mohan and Revathi
enriched it by their fine performances, the director's restraint
helped elevate the work to a higher plane.
Mani Ratnam, of course, forsook simplicity later. He jazzed up
his canvas, complicated his scripts. He made films like ``Roja'',
``Bombay'', ``Iruvar'' and ``Dil Se'' whose political or quasi-
political hue proved to be added impediments. His penchant for
filling his screen with a string of picture postcards was
distracting and annoying. An overcast horizon, a windswept river
bank, a bed of marigold and a designer costume that matches the
mood of the sky may look alluring, may even lift audiences high
above the mundane, but they interfere with the narration and
divert attention from the plot. In the end, the whole show may
well begin to look trivial.
Mani Ratnam agrees with this. He says during a chat at his office
in Chennai the other day, ``I thought that I could take the
viewer up there and bring him back. But I do fail sometimes. I
know it is difficult''.
Mani Ratnam - whose first work was in Kannada, second in
Malayalam and third in Tamil - prefers the harder way out, rather
than sink into complacency and walk the beaten path. He did not
know a word of Kannada when he stepped behind the camera for the
first time. ``It is tough when you are not familiar with the
language. You have to depend a lot more on your actors. I suppose
you trust them much more than you would normally do. I understand
one misses having the finer control. But in a way, this is
liberating, because you cease to be a puppeteer. Eventually, you
get to understand the artiste better.''
Another way, Mani Ratnam strives to stay on his toes, peppering
his career with challenges, is by refusing to get stuck in a
slot. That is why I made a variety of movies: ``Nayakan'',
``Anjali''... That is why, even after ``Roja'', I dabbled in
something like ``Thiruda Thiruda''.
``Also, there is the question of topicality. The plot of ``Dil
Se'' revolved around the 50th year of our Independence. I had to
do it then. I could not possibly do it after three years''. So,
Mani Ratnam quickly prepared himself to shoot ``Dil Se'',
although he had other ideas in mind then.
Would you say that this indicates flexibility ? Most probably.
The director says that he believes in giving his actors and
actresses the freedom to improvise. ``I certainly have a script.
It draws the boundaries, so to say, within which my artistes can
even take the liberty of doing something quite different than
what I envisaged. Of course, I have to agree to that. I always
welcome thinking men and women.''
Yet, parts of ``Alaipayuthey'' did not quite appear to have
emerged from a thinking group. The songs and dances, for example.
Originally, Mani Ratnam did not want to have them, but somehow
they got in. ``I had to make something within mainstream cinema.
And, I was talking about an age group that is slightly
Westernised, that parties... The beach song, for one, came in
much later. Well, I said to myself that if at all I am going to
have songs/dances, let me then go the whole way and do them in
style''.
In all fairness to Mani Ratnam, it must be mentioned here that he
has managed to capture some lovely nuances, yes even within the
so- called commercial format. It was marvellous to see the story
- told in a series of flashbacks - travelling to and fro the
railway station: Kartik desperately looking for Shakti as train
after train arrives and departs. It was splendidly visualised.
Also, the manner in which the romance itself develops between
Shakti and Kartik has a rare touch of artistic realism. It is
believable, despite innumerable coincidences, which do push the
picture to an end that seems to suggest that marriage is not the
end of romance and love.
``I wanted to convey something more deeper than that'', Mani
Ratnam interrupts me. And, he perhaps does, when he introduces
Arvind Swamy and Khusboo - in cameo appearances - whose regard
and affection for each other is an overwhelming pointer to a
great, meaningful relationship. ``Alaipayuthey'' offers more such
poignant moments that are worth cherishing.
But would Mani Ratnam make a film minus the song-and-dance
tamasha, which tends to be superficial? ``I would'', he smiles
with rare candour.
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