24 February,2024 04:44 AM IST | Mumbai | Rahul da Cunha
Illustration/Uday Mohite
Our film, Pune Highway, is ready - ready to be enjoyed, ready to be examined, ready to be released "into the ether", ready to entertain.
In the cinema, there is no such thing as an "opening night" - once a film is locked, that's it. The film waits in a can, on a hard drive, for the right moment to première.
Screen is a far more complex business than the stage, it has many more moving parts - as Paul Anderson, director of There Will Be Blood, once famously said, only 40 per cent of movie-making is the actual making of the film. (The rest is selling, distribution, marketing).
Pune Highway comes very loosely out of a play I wrote twenty years ago. Plays focus on the verbal; Cinema, the visual. "We have to open the story out considerably, tell the story as action, words are secondary", Bugs Bhargava Krishna, my co-writer and co-director told me, as we FaceTimed our way, constructing the screenplay, bit by bit, beat by beat - the play's action was confined to a motel room, actors related to us events that happened outside this claustrophobic space - the movie traverses the worlds of South Mumbai and Satara, and the Mumbai-Pune highway that connects the two.
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Last evening, Bugs and I settled down to watch our film, a year and half after we first put pen to paper - the last time, we would do so, just by ourselves.
We've watched our movie, often⦠but each time the mind space is a little different.
We've had many "edit watches", the edit is where your story finally takes shape - you delete shots, shots that don't serve the story, don't further the plot, that don't strengthen character.
Tiny decisions are taken, hold that scene, slip in a close up to intensify an emotion. Do you need a wide shot to explain geography⦠have we told our story well, the visual is finally locked.
There's the "Digital Imaging/Colour Correction watch".
Getting the colours, and tones correct - how do you combine grunge with glam, grime with grit⦠You want your film to have a certain look.
Then there's the critical "background score watch" - does your music heighten a moment⦠do you have recurring themes⦠leitmotifs? When do you resort to silence, is your music an additional unseen character? Is it melodic dialogue?
And this morning, as Bugs Bhargava and I sit down, I ask myself, where do I want my want my movie to be seen? In a darkened movie theatre with Dolby sound? In a drawing room? In a French festival? On a handset through headphones?
Dibakar Banerjee once asked me, "How do you get a wide angle shot on an iPhone?" That's the key to modern film making.
How do I want to release my first film, in the best possible way? Audiences want good content⦠sure, they want their stars⦠but today, they want their storyâ¦. They want a "12th Fail" - a story of struggle and the overcoming of a hurdle. No one quite has the winning formula, except the audience who know what they want⦠and they want to be gripped.
Do I want my film to reach the remotest part of India? Not necessarily, but I do want it to be remote control proof.
"OTT or cinema release?" I've been asked.
I'm hoping bothâ¦. Though the film's resting place will be ensconced in a streaming platform.
As we watch Pune Highway, my debut film, and Bugs's fourth offering, do I have butterflies in the stomach...
Theatre vs cinema openingsâ¦. in the theatre, there's an opening night, it's the first night it all comes together, you have one shot at it, no guarantees, a mic may drop, your lead actor may have a sore throat, that opening night audience will sample your wares truly for the first time in one auditorium.
In the movies, there's no opening night in one solitary place - an audience will watch you once, twice , thrice, maybe see you over three sittings.
Is my film screen-worthy, OTT or festival⦠I'd like to believe all three.
As I sit down to watch my film, there's just one truly controllable question one universal truth - do I love what I see?
Rahul daCunha is an adman, theatre director/playwright, photographer and traveller. Reach him at rahul.dacunha@mid-day.com