Close of the year. Closest to how big it gets in Bollywood. The last act of a play, they say, overrides everything you’ve seen before. So here it is, Indian Cinema rolling out in all its glory the most beauteous bouquet —Shah Rukh Khan as the grown-up guide to Alia Bhatt in Gauri Shinde’s Dear Zindagi [Alice Munro would be pleased?], Sujoy Ghosh creating a Durga not with 10 hands but with a mother’s heart in Kahaani 2, and Nitesh Tiwari taking leaps and bounds from his maiden Chillar Party to the million-dollar play field that’s Dangal. Bollywood saving the best for last; each of the three finish-liners setting their own tone—some breezy and some brutal. We speak to these filmmakers to give you a glimpse of what it means to be up for a truly grand finale.
Gauri Shinde
Dear Zindagi
Can you sum up your journey as a filmmaker over the years?
I’d say that my craft has evolved in two parallel ways. The first is as a filmmaker—learning from my last film and working as a TV commercial director for so many years. Other than the technical aspect, your craft evolves as you grow as a person. It is an invaluable experience, an incredible journey that affects all human beings.
What inspires your art?
Life is often the best inspiration. There are infinite stories and experiences to create from…the good, the bad, the ugly, all of that shapes how one thinks. That informs my work as a filmmaker. I’m interested in the detail and the spice in human relationships and that’s how my first film [English Vinglish] came about; and the second film is also about the small joys.
Can you give me a blurb on Dear Zindagi?
It is difficult to describe it since there’s no reference point. It does not fall into a coming-of-age, slice of life category…these are all clichéd terms. What I can say is that it’s a story about how looking inward and understanding our strengths, weaknesses and fears allows us to experience the world outside with open arms, to embrace life. It’s like a love letter to the opportunity that we’ve been given, to not lead a passive existence but go out and participate, to understand what your status quo in life is and maybe want to change it.
Take us behind a key aspect of your creative process.
To work with a team and cast that is of my choice. Luckily even during English Vinglish I got to make my own creative decisions and that’s how I want it to be. I’d never make a film where I had to compromise on my ideas or my choice of crew.
This story is from the November - December 2016 edition of Platform.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November - December 2016 edition of Platform.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Beyond The Gully: The Changing Shape Of Indian Hip-Hop
The rap revolution led by Divine and Naezy has disrupted the music industry in unprecedented ways. Let’s take a trip.
Everything Is Big In Uzbekistan
The man most of the world knows as Tamerlane and generally reviles, as a ruthless invader, is revered in his native Uzbekistan as Amir Timur.
TASLIMA NASREEN
A PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST AS A WOMAN
SWIZERLAND
AJITPAL SINGH
RAQS MEDIA COLLECTIVE
The artistic triumvirate of RAQS Media Collective – Monica Narula, Jeebesh Bagchi and Shuddhabrata Sengupta – has been in the field of art since 1992.
SHAMELESS
The Sequel to the bestselling LAJJA
THE BEAUTY OF YOUR FACE
SAHAR MUSTAFAH
MIRA NAIR
A SUITABLE BOY
MARTIN PARR
IN CONVERSATION WITH ARTIST AND CURATOR RAVI AGARWAL
AMIR KELLY
I try to display what it’s like to be a first-generation Indian immigrant in the UK. I don’t try to use my Indianess as a calling card, rather music.