‘Harishchandrachi Factory’ humanises Phalke beautifully (Marathi Film Review)
January 30th, 2010 - 3:09 pm ICT by IANSBy Subhash K. Jha
Film: “Harishchandrachi Factory”; Cast: Nandu Madhav, Vibhawari Despande; Director: Paresh Mokashi; Rating: *** 1/2
This is the film that went all the way to Oscar-land and came back empty-handed. But whose loss is it anyway?
Writer-director Paresh Mokashi’s tender-sweet film about the founding father of Indian cinema Dadasaheb’s Phalke’s struggle to make the country’s first feature film is not short of a miracle. It alchemizes the pain, humiliation and compromises of a struggling artiste into something extraordinarily funny, satirical and self-mocking.
While retaining the inherent warmth, sensitivity and dignity of the protagonist’s uphill task of proving to his family, friends and neighbours that Phalke is no lunatic, the film chronicles the early years in the long and chequered history of cinema in India with a crisp and curvaceous comprehensiveness.
Making a life so consumed by a new art form interesting and compelling could not be an easy task. Mokashi’s Phalke could easily have become a portrait of an obstinate and obsessive man who thought the moving images on screen could actually add up to make some collective sense.
Cannily, Mokashi spends a substantial amount of playing-time looking at Phalke’s domestic life. The easy and affable atmosphere in the pioneering filmmaker’s home explains why and how the audacious genius was able to do what he did.
Phalke’s relationship with his children is that of a progressive pally father at a time when the cane did all the talking with kids. Only a man who treats his family as his allies could dare to venture into an unknown vocation like filmmaking.
It’s Phalke’s relationship with his spunky wife Saraswati (played with uninhibited starkness and gusto by Vaibhavari Deshpande) that gives to the bio-pic the distinctive colour of a love story.
Phalke’s wife is shown to be supremely supportive of her husband’s outrageous experimentation with moving pictures. She willingly, if not gladly, pawns her jewellery, furniture and finally home and sits in on his editing when he makes his film while he attempts some seriously clumsy cooking.
Truly an early feminist, Saraswati Phalke’s bonding with her husband is the fulcrum of the narrative.
The director recreates the era (1914) not through an extravagance of extraneous props and piles of in-your-face periodicity, but with understated nuances and gestures. Sights and sounds suggest an indelible link between Phalke’s obsession for cinema with the progressive and liberal middle-class Marathi milieu.
Interestingly, Phalke, as portrayed by accomplished theatre actor Nandu Madhav, is often captured in the mood that Charlie Chaplin patented. Director Mokashi lets Madhav be. The actor interprets Phalke in a spirit of freewheeling spontaneity. Madhav’s Phalke is a driven and passionate soul consumed by the thought of making a feature film but able to see the amusing picture he portrays to those around him through his single-minded determination to make a film on Raja Harishchandra’s journey from royalty to penury.
Phalke’s own journey did not quite take him to the dog house. This film finds enormous hope and inspiration in a life that defined Indian cinema. Paresh Mokashi scatters Phalke’s journey from a wannabe dreamer to a trained London-returned filmmaker with dollops of comic-strip witticism and wisdom.
The well-known search for a heroine to play Harishchandra’s wife is here detailed in savagely satirical sequences. Eventually we see Phalke’s whole house turned into a theatre of the absurd with wannabe actors rehearsing their lines in every nook and cranny.
“Harishchandrachi Factory” is in Marathi. It could be in any language or no spoken language at all and it would be just as warm, funny and welcoming. This film does to the father of Indian cinema what Richard Attenborough’s epic did to the father of the nation. The film humanizes the mythic figure without peeling away the layers of luminous inner life that always defines extraordinary lives.
- Special screening of 'Harishchandrachi Factory' at Rashtrapati Bhawan - Dec 30, 2009
- Juhi Chawla misses entry to Oscars - Dec 12, 2009
- Paresh Mokashi Takes Harishchandrachi Factory To The Oscars - Dec 19, 2009
- 'Harishchandrachi Factory' out of Oscar race - Jan 21, 2010
- Marathi film 'Harishchandrachi Factory' is India's Oscar entry (Second Lead) - Sep 20, 2009
- UTV to release 'Harishchandrachi Factory' Jan 22 - Dec 02, 2009
- Harishchandrachi Factory In Oscars Race - Oct 23, 2009
- Indian entry Harishchandrachi Factory fails to make it to the Oscar nominations for the Best Foreign Film - Jan 21, 2010
- A director is like a parent, guide: Rekha - Aug 13, 2009
- On Indian cinema's centenary, wax statue to honour Phalke (With Images) - Feb 17, 2012
- 'Harishchandrachi...' out of Oscar race, director unfazed - Jan 21, 2010
- 'Harishchandrachi Factory' to be India's Oscar entry - Sep 20, 2009
- Director Paresh Mokashi on India's Oscar entry Raja Harishchandrachi Factory - Feb 09, 2010
- 'Harishchandrachi Factory' to be India's Oscar entry (Lead) - Sep 20, 2009
- Shahrukh Khan misses Oscar - Dec 28, 2009
Tags: art form, bio pic, chequered history, cinema in india, collective sense, deshpande, distinctive colour, first feature film, founding father, friends and neighbours, history of cinema, indian cinema, madhav, moving images, new art, obsessive man, playing time, subhash k jha, talking with kids, uphill task