Gulf News

Bharat Bala directs film on lockdown

‘Meendum Ezhuvom’, out on YouTube, speaks of hope and a new tomorrow

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What was life in 2020 when India, the world’s most populated democracy, was held hostage indoors by a virus?

Filmmaker Bharat Bala’s new documentar­y Meendum Ezhuvom (We Will Rise) is a record for generation­s to come. Surreal images of empty lanes, deserted railway stations, sleeping cities and desolate places of worships emerge from this spectacle photograph­ed by his team of 15.

Opening with the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s announceme­nt of a lockdown on March 24, the documentar­y transports viewers across 14 states, stretching from Kashmir to Kerala and spanning between Gujarat and Assam.

As it draws to a close, there is hope when a woman says: “[I] don’t know what happened. In a moment everyone’s life has changed. But the sun will rise tomorrow and we too will rise together.”

MAMMOTH FEAT

“In a country where people don’t even stop at a red traffic light, how can you keep 1.3 billion people in lockdown?” asked Bala in a chat with tabloid.

The filmmaker, who is remembered for his Vande Maatram music videos, continued: “With the eerie feeling of facing an invisible enemy, I felt as a filmmaker and creator it’s critical for me to document pan India. How do I see and feel an empty and silent India — something that never existed in this 5,000-years-old culture?”

Operating from Mumbai, Bala took to virtual direction as he guided his crew over WhatsApp across the 14 states. Hopping digitally, he visited the empty Benaras ghats (piers), took in the silence of Srinagar’s Hazrathbal shrine and the deserted VT station of Mumbai.

“There were not even pigeons in the empty stations,” he added. “At Haridwar and Rishikesh, you could see the pebbles in the Ganges.”

OBSTACLES

Getting permission to film during lockdown was the big hurdle.

“Uttar Pradesh was the first state to support us,” said the filmmaker. “It was an unbelievab­le thing, but the states understood the vision.”

The documentar­y has been made in 11 languages, including English, Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Assamese, and is now streaming on YouTube.

“People should never forget what we went through as a nation so that when we come out and start gathering ourselves to move forward, we make responsibl­e decisions and better choices. We have seen the pain of the migrants. This is a reset opportunit­y. And, it’s about rising collective­ly as a nation,” he added.

 ?? Photos supplied ?? Filmmaker Bharat Bala.
Photos supplied Filmmaker Bharat Bala.

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