अशोक मेहता ashok mehta cinematographer
चवन्नी के पाठकों के लिए यह इंटरव्यू http://cameraworking.raqsmediacollective.net/pdf/interviews/ashok_mehta.PDF से लिया गया है। यह 1996 में पहली बार प्रकाशित हुआ था।
ASHOK MEHTA
Can you tell us how you came to Bombay?
I came to Bombay when I was very young. I must have been about 13 or 14
years old. I ran away from home when I was in class seven…
When I came to Bombay, I knew nobody and I
had no friends here. I did any job that came my way. My first job was working
with a hawker. I used to sell boiled eggs. Another job offered to me soon after
was to sell watermelon slices – this was in 1963. Once, during a holiday, I got
a chance to go and see a film shoot happening. So I decided to actually go to
the studios after that to see if I could find something to do. I went to
Ranjeet Studio, Rooptara Studio and to the Sri sound studios at Dadar. They
wouldn’t allow me in. The gates were closed. Shooting was going on inside and I
couldn’t go in, they said. While I stood there and waited a gentleman came up
to me. He asked me a few questions about myself and then asked if I would be
willing to work. I said yes and so I became a studio canteen boy. I got work as
a canteen boy in Asha Studio where I worked for some months and then shifted to
the canteen at RK Studios. It was raining very heavily that year, and part of
the floor had caved in. The studio manager at R.K. called me and asked me to
fill the hole with earth. So I did that. I don’t why, but he was damn happy
with my work. So, he spoke to the canteen owner and said I want this boy to
work in my office. So I got the job of an office boy at the R. K. Studios for 4-5
months. That studio was very popular for stunt films and it was always busy. They
always needed extra hands, and they used to call me for the help for all kinds
of work, so gradually I got into the studio floor. At that time, camera, lights
and sound were provided by the studio along with a camera coolie, and that is
what I became. Basically, I was never trained, I just picked things up. The
studio had just acquired two brand new Arriflex cameras, and there was a
cameraman called Mr. M.W Mukadum who was looking for an
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attendant for these cameras. Some people told him about me and said that
I was a bright boy, so he called me and gave me the job of a camera attendant.
Gradually I
started getting really into it. I had some knowledge about the Mitchell camera
from the time I had worked as the studio floor boy and camera coolie, but most
of my knowledge about the Arriflex I got when I joined as a camera attendant.
Basically I
worked as the camera caretaker for a couple of years. Then I get a better job
with more money at a company called Srikrishna Films. There was a Mr. Sabarwal
in this company who was very good to me. Apart from the work of being a camera
attendant I began to find other things very interesting as well, so I started
assisting the cameraman sometimes.
What happened
was that once some lens caps and cards went missing. So one of the bosses
called me and told me to leave the job. So I left, I didn’t have any choice at
all. The cameraman called me and asked me to join him as an assistant. I said I
didn’t mind but I don’t want to become focus-puller or something like that. You
see, my confidence had started building. I worked very hard.
After a few years Mr. Sudarshan Nag came from Pune, he was a batch-mate
of K.K. Mahajan at the film institute. He had lots of films in hand and I
worked with him as a camera attendant. He was very impressed with me and asked
me to join him as a chief assistant. Maze aa Gaya, I felt great. So I
joined him on the unit of a film called Trishna which was being backed
by NFDC, Waheeda Rahman was supposed to be the main actress. The film was
supposed to be completed in one stretch but it did not happen that way. After
one schedule, Nag Saab became very busy, and he said he didn’t want anyone from
outside to work on the film. He recommended my name and said, “I have worked
with Ashok, he is OK”, and so I went and shot the rest of the film. This was in
1969. By that time I knew how to light up. That was the beginning. My needs
were very few that is why it didn’t feel like I was struggling.
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Then I got another film called the witness with Shashi Kapoor and Rakhi
in the lead. I was very young; people didn’t have confidence in me. There was
some objection from Shashi Kapoor, he said “This boy is very young, what will
he do in this type of film?” This was in the October of 1972. The film was
supposed to be a quickie, it was meant to be completed in 4-5 months. We were
shooting that film in Bhendi Bazaar, which is a very dicey area in Bombay. Anyway,
here I was, getting involved with an intellectual group, and I had not studied
or read anything. I am very grateful to my friend, and to luck and everything, that
it all went off well. Once during the shooting Shashi Kapoor said we should
have a break, and look at the rushes. After seeing the rushes he felt very
happy. I went to his house and met him there as well. Jennifer came and met me
and congratulated me.
So that was
beginning of my career. Shashi Kapoor liked my work so much that we became a
sort of pair. He gave me a lot of breaks; actually it was he who introduced me
to the industry. I am very grateful to him. He advised me not to get only typically
mainstream kind of camerawork, he told me to get other kinds of work as well.
At this time I
began to go and see a lot of foreign films, and I used to wonder why the camera
work in those films was so much better. Gradually I understood that it has all
to do with lighting. Lighting ka kamaal hai. I got a lot of exposure
when I started working with this intellectual group, Shashi kapoor and his
friends. I got a lot of opportunity to see some good films.
Are there any films that you remember from that
time?
The films that I
am talking about are films like, The Graduate, Guess Who is Coming
to Dinner, A Man & A Woman, etc. As I said, when I did a
comparison in my mind I realized that the main difference was in the
quality of lighting. I realized that you
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have to think about the look and the feel of
a film and contribute your work according to the demand of a particular script.
I realized the importance of all this at that time by watching these films.
None of the films that I had worked on till
then were released. Then Basu Chaterjee offered me a film. In that shoot I
learned to shoot with very few lights, without reflector and on location. This
was my first film, which got released. Then I did some more films like Daaku,
and Teesra Pathhar. Then a filmmaker called Ashish Roy came from
Calcutta. He became quite close to me and I did his film in Bengali, called Lal
Kothi. There were lots of problems with availability of stock at that time.
There were import restrictions; we had to be always careful with stock, in
shooting and in printing. All the films were in colour. I have not seen the B/W
era at all. Only in one film called Trisandhya I had mixed B/W & colour
and have shoot in B/W and colour. The problem with B/W is that the labs
in our country can’t handle very fine printing demands. What is very sad is
that you may take out a test print now and then go after an hour and take
another test print and these will not match. There will be no consistency; there
may be another layer of colour that you never wanted. I find this damn
difficult actually. Or, you could have worked with the system of using ‘lilies’
but the labs couldn’t control this either. This is because there are a lot of
chemicals to manage! Also what would happen is that when you shot B&W and
wanted to print in colour you had to keep track of whether you were shooting in
the same emulsion or not, or at one speed or not. Otherwise, when you looked at
your stuff after processing, one roll would be pink and the other a bit magenta,
while a third one would be white! I think that even now our labs are not
capable of doing a great job.
----------------
I am basically from the ‘new wave’ cinema, and
I worked with intellectual filmmakers. In Lal Kothi I got a BFJ (Bengal
Film Journalists’) award, and this was the
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first time that something like this had happened to me. Then I worked
with Umesh Mehta in his film. It was called Hamare Tumhare. I had done a
few films in between. I was a bachelor, I had very few needs, and by then I had
an ego, I wanted to work only with good people, and on good projects. So I went
to work with Umesh Mehta. It was his first film as a director. Rakhi was the
heroine, and she recommended me. By that time, I had very good relations with
my stars. I was in two minds because the payment was not much, but Umesh
insisted that I do the film (we were both of the same age group) There was a
lot of pressure on me, so I agreed to do the film, it was my first main stream
film, must have been1978-79.
Did you work in advertising films at all at that time?
At that time, there
wasn’t much advertising film going on. There were very few people, who used to
make commercials, and there was a typical style, and specialized people who
used to do all this. So I didn’t have much of a chance in advertising films at
that time.
At that time were you watching the work of other
cinematographers?
I used to like K.K.
Mahajan’s work very much. In my opinion he was the best cameraman in that
period. I wanted to assist him, but he didn’t have any place on his unit.
What were the films of Mr. Mahajan that you had
seen in that period?
I had seen films shot by K.K. Mahajan like Uski
Roti and Ek Aadmi ki Kahani. Mr. Mahajan got an opportunity to do
some very good work in B/W. Subratada’s (Subrata Mitra’s) work was also much
appreciated and I saw one or two of his films. I really liked his work in Bombay
Talkies, and then I saw Guru.
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And how was
your own work
developing? And what
were the work
conditions
like?
There was a certain amount of satisfaction
because I got some good reviews and I got an award (the BFJ award) as well.
Sometime after this I got the first film which
really brought fame to me, and for which I got my first and last National award.
This film was 36 Chowringhee Lane. This film gave me a hell of a lot of
a good reputation. It had the best calibre cinematography. After these films I
started working with Shyam Benegal in Mandi and with Girish Karnad I did
a film called Utsav. I started mixing different kinds of work, sometimes
mainstream sometimes something different. Like I did, Shiva ka Insaaf (a
3D film), I did Ijaazat with Gulzar, Trikal with Benegal and
quite a few films with Aparna Sen. After Utsav I had a good portfolio
and I began getting advertising and television work as well. There were more
commercials being made and in better quality, so keeping this in mind I did a
couple of ad films
But, you know
how it is, in the cinema you might do good work but the films would not be
released because there would be no buyers. For instance, Paroma on which
I worked with Aparna Sen, was a golden jubilee hit in Bengal, but there were no
buyers for the film in Bombay. Everybody wanted mainstream films. This led to a
lot of frustration. Then once Subhash Ghai offered me a film. I said to him
don’t take me, I am an art film cameraman, how will I do your kind of work. I
also said that I am more expensive, and I will take time to light up a scene, it
will depend on my mood, I will demand a contract, and on top of all this you
will all complain that when you project things in the cinema hall, you can see
nothing, it is all dark. I thought that I had discouraged him, but it turned
out the other way round. He called me the next morning and said you have to
work on my film, I want quality. He also agreed to my rates and
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told me to start work the next morning. You
see, Ghai in Marathi means “jaldi jaldi” or ‘fast-fast’. Then I gave him
another name; I used to call him panic station! The first Ghai film that I made
was Ram-Lakhan, then Saudagar, Khal-Nayak
and the last films with him was Trimurti.
When I started
doing big time commercial work I also became famous for handling mega sets and
all that. Now I can say that this industry has given me everything, it has made
me a better person and I am very grateful to everybody here.
But now I am
once again in touch with art films after a long time. I have done a film with
Mr. Benegal, Making of the Mahatma, and Shekhar Kapoor’s Bandit Queen
and M.F. Husain’s Gaja Gamini.
In that period there were some very good
filmmakers and some films did a lot of good business. But still technicians
were insecure. There was a feeling that if you asked for more payment you might
not get work. Say, if I asked for a particular price, others might come and ask
for less. So due to insecurity, technicians acted against their own interests. I
should not blame only producers and directors for this; a lot of the blame is
ours as well. Now people are demanding money and it is happening because there
is a feeling that there should be really good technicians in a film. Also, our
audiences are not bloody fools you know, they won’t just see anything.
Now things are
becoming much better, now you (the cameraman) get the price that you ask for, and
you can become a star of a different kind. At one time, only the main actor /actress
was a star, even the director would not get a credit, let alone a technician
like a cameraman. You will see that this balance has changed many times in the
history of filmmaking. You know, especially when there is a new director, you
will notice he will usually be in tandem with a well-established and famous
cameraman who can control him and guide him.
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Around this time people started watching
films on video. People were watching bad quality VHS prints. I am not taking of
common people; even the elite was watching it. If you go to Europe or to Cannes,
people walk off from a screening if the print is not good. But when video first
came in here, people would see anything at all, it happened in my family as
well. What can you do, you have to live with it. Now at last people are getting
mature.
But in the early days of video, because of
the decline in attendance in the movie theatres, filmmaking became a very
insecure business. Every production wanted to fit into the commercial
mainstream. If you wanted to do a different kind of film, you would have to
face a hell of a lot of problems. That affected filmmaking. This happens
everywhere, you see American films too, they produce any old shit, but as long
as it works and draws the audiences in, they keep producing the films.
You have worked with Art film directors and you have worked with
Commercial film makers, what is the experience of working in these two
different kinds of film making cultures?
See, for instance, one thing great about a
film like 36 Chowringhee Lane was that it had a complete script and a
very good script. If you have a script like that, you will understand
immediately what the film requires of you. Once you read the script everything
is clear and if you have a good director, he will tell you what he wants. A
good location also helps, in 36 Chowringee Lane, for instance we went to
the location beforehand. These things happen in art films, and they make it
possible for you to deliver better.
I don’t take much time to grasp what the
director wants and I can also give suggestions. I find it very important that
the director and the cameraman should understand each other. I don’t have the
kind of ego which makes me think that I know
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everything. In 36
Chowringee Lane, I had a very good opportunity for playing with a little
bit of light, and with darkness.
Do you improvise a lot of the time?
Yes, see improvisation always helps, but you
have to be consistent. Again lets take 36 Chowringee Lane as an example.
You have this lonely character played by Jennifer Kapoor, and you can do a lot
to evoke her moods, but at the same time you cannot make anything overdone. That
also looks very bad, you can’t also break the consistency of the film, consistency
is very difficult to achieve. That looks very bad, you should not jump too much
between the looks of different scenes. You have to be consistent, only then you
are good, otherwise you are bad.
But this doesn’t mean that you storyboard
everything. This storyboarding stuff started with advertising. I don’t think
that you have to know each and every frame. There has to be an image in your
mind and you have to keep thinking. But storyboarding started in advertising, because
they had no other means to communicate with their client. The client makes
shampoos, he doesn’t know what filmmaking is, so to make every picture clear to
the client they started using storyboards in advertising.
Do you prefer shooting on locations or in the
studio?
Not on locations because the condition of
sunlight in India is very toppish. I prefer to shoot in a studio because there
you can create the light ambience that you want, and it remains a constant. Everything
can have a standard actually. Whether you are right or wrong whatever you are
doing should maintain a standard. If you keep that in mind then it is good.
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What about stock?
My first choice
is to shoot on lower ASA, because I think this gives you better quality. Nowadays
all films are shot on Anamorphic lenses. Whatever is in the background is out
of focus. Now this is all right to a certain degree, but after a point it gives
you a headache so you have to shoot f4.5, f5.6
Also I have a
habit of shooting slightly underexposed. You have to know about the mood of the
film. Then natural sources of light available to you have also to be considered
when you are choosing your stock.
When I saw these foreign films
then I suddenly realized, that the look in our films is terrible, and that
their films look good. We tend to use the top light system, there are always
bridges, we tend to forget the window source, and there are double shadows in
the frame. Nobody was bothered about these things; there was no such thing as
source lighting. These things developed later. When you see the paintings of
old masters you can see that the sources are absolutely well maintained. I have
not learned these things; I have picked them up over time through observation.
Actually what happens is that the acceptance
of natural conditions gives rise to better things. Artificiality breeds
artificiality. Sometimes difficult times, people who have suffered, countries
that have faced war, give rise to better filmmaking. Look at Iran, they started
to make very good films recently because they have been through so much. It’s
no as if they had no talent before, so how is it that all this happened there
recently?
You have to be
more receptive, you can’t always be taught things, you have to pick them up as
you go along. Sometimes a hard, difficult life gives this to you. I am a school
drop out, but even I pick up languages. While shooting with Aparna Sen, I would
pick up Bengali, understand what everyone was saying. So you have to keep at it.
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Tell us how was to work with someone like Shyam
Benegal?
He was very different in different films. When we did Mandi the
work was very straightforward and simple. But in Trikaal, he wanted to
do something different, he wanted to experiment. As you know, Trikaal is
a period film, set in colonial Goa. I asked about the kind of lights that they
would have had in Goa at that time. He said that there was hardly any
electricity at that time. So I said that we should work with candle light as
much as is possible. He then said to me “Ashok I don’t understand these things,
take some tests and see if it can work out.” So, we shot a couple of reels, the
250 ASA stock had just come in at that time. That is what we used. So you see, he
could allow for this kind of flexibility.
You think change in technology in camera etc has
changed your style of work.
All that is not
really that important. What is important is that you have good lab facilities. And
that the lab technicians are co operative with you. That they are willing to
push by one stop in the processing, may be punch one or two light numbers, if
you ask them to. Let’s say you are shooting with candles, as I was in Trikaal,
then they should be able to understand what I am trying to achieve and print
accordingly. Sometimes even the so-called best lab technicians are not able to
understand that I am playing around with sources, cheating to achieve an effect.
People say that I use a lot of lights. I do, but you don’t get to see it in my
work do you? I use a lot of light to make it appear that there is very little
light. But all this depends on the lab.
You use lot of bounce light.
Yes, it depends
a lot on the situation that you are supposed to depict. You know I was the
first person to use HMI lights in India, and I also began using acrylic sheets
with lights in feature films.
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Are you responsible for bringing HMI lights into
the country?
Yes, I was aware
of the technical parameters of using HMI lights. I knew which frequencies they
matched, and all that sort of thing. I had seen them being used in Ismail
Merchant’s Heat and Dust, then after a long gap we got them for shooting
Utsav. They were available, so we got them. I could have also shot the
whole film without them. The point I am trying to make is that the
lights themselves do not make such a difference, what makes a difference lies
in how you create with the lights. You have to be experienced, and you have to
be intelligent.
Are you always working towards achieving a natural
look?
If you look at my films, you will realize
that I use backlight very seldom. If there is a door or window in the frame
that justifies the presence of backlight, then I think that you should use that,
but otherwise you shouldn’t. People do it anyway because it looks glamorous. If
an actor/actress becomes a star then the cameramen are afraid of going the
other way with them, they have to look glamorous. But I don’t believe in this. I
am not like that.
So what is your problem with the backlight?
There should be
a sufficient reason for using backlight when it comes to the shooting of
heroines. Yes, we do have to take into account the need for beautification. But
if you see my work, you will see that I don’t make anyone unduly beautiful.
According to Shekhar Kapoor, the best that
Madhuri Dixit ever looked was in Ram Lakhan, Sometimes you have
to compromise to get the amount of glamour that is just enough.
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Do you follow a different system of diffusion for
men and for women?
No I don’t like
diffusion. If I use diffusion at all, (you can see it in Utsav) then I
might use a low contrast number 1 filter. This is what has been used throughout
the film.
If I keep doing
that kind of job (using diffusion, backlight etc.) I will become mechanical. I
don’t want to be mechanical in my camerawork. I don’t want to be too technical
but my main concern is the achievement of consistency (from my earliest to my
latest films).
If I have to use diffusion, then it is
because I am trying to get a ‘filtered look’. I don’t try and conceal my use of
filters. I am not trying to use it just to create beauty.
I did use a
diffuser in Ijaazat, but there was a reason, the film moved between past
and present. The present was clean, but we made the past look a bit soft. This
helps the audience feel slightly different about the past and the present, but
the difference is subtle, they can’t tell exactly what the difference is.
I am not from
that school that believes that to achieve ‘extra’ glamour one must keep on
using diffuser. When you shoot on video or when you are shooting something very
hard edge, you might need to soften things up a bit, but otherwise there is no
real need to use diffusers.
What about lighting continuity?
I try and stick
to lighting continuity as far as is possible. There may be a variation of 1-2%
because my assistants are using the meters. But in general I would say that
there is never any problem, this is especially true when my negative goes for
telecine transfer anywhere. I never face any problems in telecine because the
lighting continuity is maintained so closely.
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Who was your favourite cinematographer?
I am not my own
favourite! I used to like K.K. Mahajan’s work, especially his early work, but
not the work he does now. He has done lovely and beautiful work earlier. And in
terms of black and white work, I like Subrata Mitra’s work a lot. When you go
back earlier, there are of course Jal Mistry and Fali Mistry, they had their
own style. At that time the diffuser must have just come in, so they used it a
lot. But otherwise I would say their work was very good.
In commercial cinema do you work for lighting the
character?
No, I work
towards lighting the frame. We have to think about the frame that will follow a
particular shot and about the transition between long shot and close ups and
extra long shots. You can’t do bounce lighting for one shot (say in a long shot)
and then have direct light in a close shot. You have to manage all this, and
use butter paper to ensure that the shadows match between different frame sizes.
How do you start lighting a dark room?
The first thing that I have to think about as
a cinematographer is – “What can be the possible sources of light in a dark
room?”. Sometimes a character’s expressions are very important, then you have
to think about how you are going to make that register in a completely dark
environment. Like right now I am working on a film called Gupt, suddenly
I realised that there is a scene in a dark dungeon like set, so I thought that
the best thing to do is to look for cracks in the wall, through which we can
establish certain patterns and light the characters.
Today actually I
don’t have so many problems in convincing different people. I have the time on
a set to try things out. Lighting also takes time and needs to grow, just like
acting, direction and script writing. So, things take time. The Taj Mahal was
not created in a day. Lighting cannot be done in a hurry.
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But you know, most
of our films are commercial films. Six songs at least, and lots of heavy action
scenes, plus regular dramatic scenes, and no one knows anything about how they
want things done. Songs and action scenes require a lot of time. A lot of extra
time. But time is the one thing we never get. Everything has to be done in a
hurry. So we end up making a lot of compromises in the lighting to save time.
Its not that it
can’t be done in commercial cinema, or that nothing interesting is ever done. But
it’s all a question of attitude. Even the Taj Mahal looks flat in top light. But
in the golden light of the moon it is something else altogether. We have
different seasons, different terrain, and many different kinds of naturally
available light. We can plan in advance and get really interesting situations
in terms of lighting. Sun and nature are the best lighten and the human eye is
the best lens.
Who decides the look of a
sequence, you or the director? For instance, in ‘Bandit Queen’
there is a clear difference between the look and lighting of the love making
scene and the rape scene. The love making scene very soft lighting and the
rape scene has very dramatic lighting. Who decides this, you or the director?
Let me answer
your question in a roundabout way. Shekhar Kapoor has done two or three films
in India. Masoom, Mr. India, and with me, Bandit Queen. You
can see for yourself how different the three films look. All the cameramen were
good, but the films are different. When Subrata Mitra shot Satyajit Ray’s films,
they were different. I try and bring to the film something that the director
cannot give, something that he is not capable of giving. It’s all a question of
give and take between director and cameraman.
Now if I start demanding 25,000 – 30,000 Rupees each day no one will
give in to me. Only if I am capable, and my work and services are up to the
mark, then only can I
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demand something. Otherwise, no one does any
one a favour. Basically you have to understand your capabilities and work in a
sensible way. Creativity is also important and so is your capacity to adapt to
new situations and to keep learning. Ultimately whatever you do depends on what
you can do. And it takes time. Any artistic work takes time, be it painting, making
a building or creating anything at all. But there is a lot of time pressure, because
filmmaking is becoming expensive all over the world.
Talking
of adaptability, how
do you as
a cinematographer see
the question of
adapting to new technologies, like video or
computers?
See, you have to
adopt to technology so that you don’t lag behind . I have a computer and I don’t
know how to use it because I don’t feel its important ,but its not that I don’t
know anything, I have a certain amount of knowledge about this thing. If
tomorrow I get an opportunity to work on a computer I should know enough to be
able to work on it. At the same time you shouldn’t change everything about
yourself. There should be a line in your life that determines how much you will
compromise and change. I should not change my entire look, even though there
are no limits to creativity.
What did you think of the practice of giving
references in advertising?
Earlier, there was some fun in working on
advertisements. But now everyone works with ‘references’, that is copies of
foreign ads. If they were strong in terms of what they wanted to do, then they
wouldn’t constantly use references. It’s not as if just because they make a
storyboard nowadays in ads, that they don’t ever deviate from it. Storyboards, references,
they have their uses, but they are more for the client, for the layman. Just
because they give us a reference, doesn’t mean that we have to make a replica. Reference
should be just that – a ‘reference’.
Ashok Mehta 16 12/12/1996
The History and Practice of Cinematography
in India
When you were working in Utsav (the entire
film has a created look), did you have
to work a lot with the Art Director before?
No, actually, the
whole thing was improvised on the run. I was busy shooting Mandi at that
time. But when I do get the time I like working a lot with the Art Director.
Some people like this, some don’t. But if I fail in what I had to do, then
it is my responsibility alone. I shouldn’t be blaming the Art Director. I don’t
have the right to do that.
Would you like to do a film with lot of time?
If I am really creating something it is good
to have time. Otherwise having time is also wasting time, why should I do it. But
it is true that if there was a little time then it does make a difference to
creativity, it does help. Things get a chance to grow.
See, we put in lets say 100% in terms of
effort; we achieve maybe 80% or 90%. We are never able to reach the 100% mark. Again,
it all depends on how much pressure there is. All over the world, we keep
working between the takes, changing things, trying things out, that is
creativity. We even help the actors, when the director is raw and inexperienced.
The world should give credit to our craft for all this as well.
Last question, do you want to make your own film?
I don’t know, of
course I want to direct my own film. Do something good. When you look through
the camera you become a better judge of what you see. I am talking about
improvisation and all that. When I am not looking through the camera there is
always a margin of error. So I want to look through the camera and make my own
film.
Ashok Mehta 17 12/12/1996
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