The Hindu (Visakhapatnam)

All about director Atul Sabharwal’s Berlin, a moody espionage thriller set in the intelligen­ce circles of Delhi

- Shilajit Mitra shilajit.mitra@thehindu.co.in

erlin is an unusual title choice for a Hindi Œlm set entirely in 1990s New Delhi. In Atul Sabharwal’s atmospheri­c spy drama, Berlin denotes a café — or co„ee house, as they were once known — in the national capital. Shrouded in cigarette smoke and intrigue, it is tucked away on a nondescrip­t plaza in the city’s diplomatic enclave. The setting is winter, 1993, in the runup to Russian President Boris Yeltsin’s landmark visit to India.

Ashok, a deaf-mute waiter played by Ishwak Singh, is arrested in connection to an assassinat­ion plot. He is held inside an imposing government building, called simply the Bureau, and

Binterroga­ted by Pushkin (Aparshakti Khurana), a sign language instructor from a local school. Watching over their every move, with unblinking aplomb, is Jagdish, a sly, shifty intelligen­ce man played by Rahul Bose.

Berlin is Sabharwal’s third feature after the cop drama

Class of ‘83 (2020) and

Aurangzeb (2013). The writer-Œlmmaker grew up in Agra, in an India that hadn’t yet shaken o„ its Soviet in•uence. English and Hindi translatio­ns of the Russian greats (Dostoevsky, Tolstoy) would be disbursed on mobile vans and vastly read by school children. “There was also a lot of Soviet science Œction and manuals on gadgetry,” Sabharwal recalls, “Doordarsha­n must have had a tie-up with socialist countries because the athlete Nadia Comăneci was very popular on television,” Sabharwal says. “We would open the newspaper and see Indian politician­s visiting Moscow, etc. There was a certain ‘Russo’ atmosphere, so to speak. The Soviet Union was always more in conversati­on than USA.”

Its Cold War intrigues notwithsta­nding, Berlin emerged from a personal space for Sabharwal. There was a time in his career, he says, when he felt trapped between institutio­ns and forces greater than him, much like Ashok in the Œlm. He picked up the character while

A still from Berlin. hanging out at a Costa Co„ee in Mumbai, which employed deaf-mute waiters. Sabharwal combined these prompts with his childhood memories and the astringent spy cinema of England and America. “Alan J Pakula’s Watergate time paranoia thrillers like The Parallax View and All the President’s Men were an in•uence. I also just love the look and feel of John le Carré TV adaptation­s. The characters in those shows look like diplomats and oªcials I have seen.”

While not a silent Œlm,

Berlin often plays like one. The Œlm’s leads, Ishwak and Aparshakti, workshoppe­d in sign language in Mumbai for months. They also interacted with people from the deaf-mute community in Dongri. “The whole process was so organic that signing just went into my system,” Aparkshati says. It got to a point where the actors could improvise in sign.

K (Krishna Kumar), the Chennai-based composer of

Yuddham Sei, Aandavan Kattalai and Thuramukha­m,

supplied the score for Berlin,

while Anthony BJ Ruban is the sound designer. “Because the Œlm is about a deaf-mute character and his memories, we wanted a soundscape that is non-intrusive yet suspensefu­l and entertaini­ng,” Sabharwal says. A reference by contrast was Walter Murch’s work on The English Patient (1996), which stitches through sound and music its protagonis­t’s memories across two timelines.

Berlin was recently played at the Habitat Film Festival in Delhi

The music or Berlin is by K (Krishna Kumar), the Chennai-based composer known for his work in Yuddham Sei and Aandavan Kattalai

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