The Hindu (Bangalore)

Miming in Mongolia

- Shilpa Nair Anand

When cinematogr­apher Antony Samson got a chance to shoot in Mongolia, he was excited. What he did not factor in was being the only English speaker on a crew which barely knew any English and using hand gestures to explain camera angles or the light positions. “Until I went there, Mongolia meant Genghis Khan to me!”

The 10episode web series he shot, Pictures of Murder (English title), directed by Dorjsuren Shadav, is streaming on a Mongolian OTT platform VOO.

“There were times when I was tempted to quit and return home. But, I knew, I would regret it if I did,” says Antony, 29. Since there are no daily flights to India, it made staying easier. He admits that he had no clue about what he was getting into when a friend told him of a Mongolian producer, Mungunzul Amgalanbaa­tar, looking for a cinematogr­apher from the South Indian film industry.

“Mungunzul, who is also an actor, knows director Anil Kumar. She, with her husband, Dorjsuren, had been to Alappuzha and visited Anil Kumar. He was supposed to direct a film starring her as the lead. She is familiar with South Indian films, maybe that is why she wanted a cinematogr­apher from here,” Antony adds.

Antony who studied cinematogr­aphy at the LV Prasad Film Institute, Chennai, has been assistant director for films such as Darwinte Parinamam, Sethum Aayiram Pon, Thumbaa and Bheeshma Parvam. He is now an independen­t ad film maker based in Bengaluru; he is in discussion­s for his next film project as cinematogr­apher. Pictures of Murder is his first as an independen­t cinematogr­apher.

He did not set out alone, he took an assistant from Chennai when he headed out to Ulaanbaata­r. “Unfortunat­ely, a month in, he had to return home due to a family emergency. So it was only me then, for close to a month,” he says. Google Translate was not of much help either, especially on the set because he had to find translatio­ns of technical terms pertaining to filming.

“It is difficult trying to communicat­e camera angles without a language or rather a smattering of one. I had some reference shots saved on my phone, which I would show the director and I would get the idea across.”

He calls not being able to converse with another human being (aside from phone calls) “a different experience.” That is not to say he has not picked up any Mongolian. “The Mongolian for black cloth is khar daavu that I learnt because we needed it to cover the windows.”

The experience has toughened him, he jokes, “I can now do anything. Even build a rocket and go into outer space!”

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