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FTII
ARRIVES!
Deepa
Gahlot
As
some graduates from the early batches of FTII
came to Mumbai to work in films, they were not
exactly welcomed with open arms.
Producers would shoo them away from their offices,
and technicians already entrenched in the industry,
looked upon them with suspicion and skepticism.
Could their three-year training replace thirty
years of experience? They were not allowed to
enter shooting sets, and there was general hostility
towards them. In those days cinematographers
used to keep things secret from their assistants,
and here was a bunch of trained, well read,
well informed youngsters ready to replace them--
they met with resistance in most places.
Cinematographers Kamlakar Rao and Pramod Mittal
(both batch of 1968) were invited by fellow
student Prem Sagar (son of Ramanand Sagar) to
join his father’s production company Sagar
Arts, when the film Geet (1970) was
being made. K.Vaikunth was the cameraman and
had his own team of assistants and it took time
for a rapport to develop between the crew and
Prem Sagar’s ‘FTII friends’.
Geet was a hit, Rao and Mittal were
well entrenched in the Sagar group, but when
Rao got an offer to work independently, he accepted
and Mittal went along with him. The film was
Saanjh Ke Baad Savera by S.J.S Pachhi,
with Shibu Mitra, also an FTII graduate as Associate
Director. The actors were from the FTII too
-- Danny Denzongpa, Baldev Khosa, Subhash Ghai
along with ‘outsiders’ Sameer Khan
and Sulakshana Pandit.
The film was eventually shelved, but director
Ram Dayal, happened to see a song and asked
who the cameraman was. He sent a message to
Rao for a film to be directed by Feroz Chinoy
from the FTII, the editor was Mahendra Batra,
the actors were all from FTII too -- Anil Dhawan,
Radha Saluja, Shatrughan Sinha, Rakesh Pandey.
Do Raha was the first film that actually
advertised the fact that it was made by FTII
graduates, at a time when they were still unwelcome
in the mainstream industry. “It was a
risk for him,” say Rao and Mittal. “It
was a bold subject about adultery and also technically
experimental, since we shot on actual locations
and made do with minimal equipment, since we
were in no position to demand anything.”
“If the boom man complained, the producer
would say, ‘they are mad, forgive them.’
By today’s standards, the approach to
cinematography was primitive, still when we
see the film today, we are surprised how we
managed. Undoubtedly out FTII knowledge helped.
Technically the film was very different from
what had been seen till then.”
Luckily Do Raha was a hit, followed
by another success Chetana also with
a lot of FTII cast and crew. “These two
films changed the way the industry looked at
FTII graduates. The papers discussed out technical
talent and the visual excellence of our films
and after this the FTII contribution was recognized
and we were accepted.”
Deepa Gahlot is a Mumbai-based critic,
columnist, editor and author. This article has
been taken from Under the Wisdom Tree,
the commemorative book of the Wisdom Tree Film
Festival held at Pune, 2003.
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