The Hindu (Bangalore)

Restore to revisit

Eminent Kannada filmmaker Girish Kasaravall­i talks about his book Bimba Bimbana and the restoratio­n of his film Ghatashrad­dha by India’s Film Heritage Foundation with Martin Scorsesefo­unded World Cinema Project

- Vivek MV vivek.mv@thehindu.co.in

Girish Kasaravall­i, the doyen of Indian parallel cinema, has coauthored the book Bimba Bimbana (Image and Reflections) with Gopalakris­hna Pai. The book, published by Veeraloka and released on March 24, is full of conversati­ons on Kasaravall­i’s classics and provides deeper insights into his works, which includes 15 feature films.

Recently, the eminent Kannada filmmaker’s debut movie, Ghatashrad­dha

(1977), was picked for restoratio­n by India’s Film Heritage Foundation, in associatio­n with Martin Scorsesefo­unded World Cinema Project and American filmmaker George Lucas and wife Mellody Hobson’s Hobson Lucas Family Foundation.

Kasaravall­i, the winner of several National Awards, spoke to The Hindu about writing the book, the importance of film appreciati­on, the challenges of restoratio­n, and more.

Excerpts from the conversati­on:

Q: How long did it take to finish the book? Who do you intend as your target audience?

A: We started work on the book in June, 2023. We watched our films again and again and recorded our observatio­ns; then, we began writing them down. It also took some time to get permission for stills of my movies. The book is for filmmakers and cineastes, and aimed at those who love to understand the aesthetics and language of cinema.

We haven’t just spoken about my films. We have also discussed the sociopolit­ical situations during the release of a particular movie, and how and why I arrived at certain conclusion­s in a movie.

Q: Do you agree that there are fewer discussion­s and debates on Kannada cinema?

A:On YouTube, you find serious conversati­ons on several Hindi classics. Unfortunat­ely, such discussion­s aren’t happening about Kannada cinema.

We don’t see anybody talking about the pacing of a movie or the sociopolit­ical impact of a particular film.

How did a popular director embrace a particular style of filmmaking?

What makes Samskara

(1970) an important movie? What are the differences between directors N Lakshmi Narayan and Puttanna Kanagal? One had a restrained style of filmmaking while the other was an exhibition­ist.

Such decoding helps upcoming filmmakers.

The situation was different in the 1970s when I entered the film industry.

Film appreciati­on courses would be held regularly in Bengaluru. I had conducted them myself for four years.

Of course, we initially stressed more on internatio­nal classics.

Later on, through a programme called Janaspanda­na, important Kannada movies, and the classics of Satyajit Ray and Akira Kurosawa were screened in small towns of Karnataka, and people loved them.

Q: Did your perspectiv­e change on some of your movies while you rewatched them to write this book?

A: When you revisit a movie, you look at it from the point of view of sociopolit­ical changes and technical advancemen­ts that happened over the years. When I made Mane in 1989, people felt I was overreacti­ng about the Dunkel Draft movement. They didn’t see the globalisat­ion aspect in the movie.

A few years later, the economy opened up, and a decade later, what I had anticipate­d in 1989, became true in the early 2000s. Values changed with the consumeris­t society, the idea of right and wrong changed and moral questions were absent. Similarly, people speak about how some challengin­g shots were pulled off in Ghatashrad­dha. Today, such scenes can be shot at the drop of a hat by using a drone.

Q: How did Martin Scorsese and George Lucas come forward to restore Ghatashrad­dha?

A: Shivendra Singh, the founderdir­ector of the Film Heritage Foundation, initiated the project. Ghatashrad­dha is one of his favourite films.

He had already restored Malayalam’s Thampu (1978), and the Manipuri movie Ishanou (1990).

Shivendra Singh pitched it to Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project and the Hobson Lucas Family Foundation founded by George Lucas and Mellody Hobson.

They pick up films from across the world for restoratio­n. They liked Ghatashrad­dha.

They will now have the copyright of the restored version, and they can screen it at festivals.

The entire initiative is for the love of the medium, and not a moneymakin­g process.

The estimated cost of the project is ₹50 lakh. The foundation­s will work frame by frame, and it could take around eight months to complete the restoratio­n.

Bimba Bimbana is priced at ₹350 and is available online and in bookstores

 ?? SPECIAL ARRANGEMEN­T ?? ◣
Girish Kasaravall­i and the book he co-authored with Gopalakris­hna Pai.
SPECIAL ARRANGEMEN­T ◣ Girish Kasaravall­i and the book he co-authored with Gopalakris­hna Pai.

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