Shahid, a film by Hansal Mehta
"From
reluctant jihadist to crusading lawyer, the life of Shahid Azmi was a
remarkable one. Gunned down while defending accused Mumbai bomber Fahim Ansari,
Azmi was transformed into an unlikely martyr. But Hansal Mehta’s new film is
much more than a biopic; Shahid
captures the zeitgeist of a generation.
Shahid’s story began in the slums of Govandi in
eastern Mumbai amid violent riots between Hindus and Muslims. A young witness
to injustice, Shahid fled his home to a jihadist camp deep in the mountains
but, never a dedicated soldier, he deserted as a teenager and returned home —
only to be imprisoned on terrorist charges. Tutored by older political
prisoners, he resolves to fight injustice upon his release. Finding work in a
law office, Shahid struggles against a system steeped in contradictions and
hypocrisies, defending clients labelled "anti-nationalist,"
"radicals" or "terrorists."
Hansal Mehta’s Shahid
is as much a testament to a remarkable life cut tragically short as it is a
cathartic journey through a city filled it seems with equal measure grave
injustice and great idealism."
Cameron
Bailey
Artistic Director,
Toronto International Film Festival.
Consider this: By
the time he was gunned down, Shahid Azmi had at least 17 acquittals to his
credit, a great benchmark for the small span of time he was an advocate.
So
why am I writing about this film? Or rather, why am I compelled to write about
the experience of this film? Because the film is as close to a real tale as I
have seen. The real story of the film concluded with Shahid’s death but just 2
years ago. His strife is still fresh in our minds. It is a Mumbai tale that
Mumbaites know. Difficult to satisfy a critical Mumbaite filmmaker’s mind with
a Mumbai story.
In
the film, the protagonist is a young lad from the FTII stable of actors,
Rajkumar Yadav. Leave aside the fact that the bloke does not age through the 2
decades that the narrative unfolds. This fact does not bother me and has not
bothered others while watching his stunning underplayed performance. All the
other characters (Casting Director Mukesh Chabra) move through the fabric of
the film story with finesse
(Prableen Sandhu, Mohd Zeeshan Ayyub,
Baljinder Kaur, Tigmanshu Dhulia, Kay Kay Menon, Vipin Sharma, Shalini Vatsa, Vinod Rawat, Suvinder Pal, Pawan Kumar, Vivek Ghamande, Paritosh Sand, Prabal Panjabi, Yusuf Husain)
Their
mannerisms and expressions are palpable, the interactions are humanly common
stance, and the scenes make me angry, make me cry, make my blood rush through
my temples, and sometimes make me smile, even squirm with discomfort.
Hansal’s
approach to acting as well as most things in the film has been organic in
nature, and bereft of conventional method. Many scenes, even dialogues have
often been reworked on location. It is a dangerous terrain for a Director to
operate because an actor can easily bend a scene in a fashion that could alter
the earlier intent. Hansal chose a difficult route to extract from artists what
they felt was the most honest delivery. So in the court scene, when the judge
too becomes argumentative with the advocates and the accused, the theatre split
into laughter, or when the naked Shahid is tortured in the Lodhi Police Station
Cell, the viewer in the next seat clenched his fists.
There
are other reasons too why this impact is astounding. The Cell is lit by a
single tube, and does not light up the protagonist in agony.
Consider this:
The DOP (Anuj Dhawan) saw the location (A friend’s godown in Andheri) and said,
“Perfect! Lets shoot!” And Hansal as a Director had the balls to do exactly
that. Hence the spaces become volumes that the viewer can relate to and
inhabit.
So
Hansal’s choices, or democratically speaking the crew’s and the cast’s choices
were nakedly honest. Hansal was able to guide them through to keep the story of
Shahid alive and true. It is one thing to say, fine, I do not care that the
actor’s face is not lit up in a scene, and yet another to accept that different
digital cameras will land on the shoot on a regular basis.
Consider this:
They get a RED MX camera one day, a Red One on another and the next day an
Alexa. On some days all they had was a Canon 5D. Hansal and his DOP (Anuj
Dhawan) have the guts and gumption to mount it and shoot, to make the most of
the time available with the given location and the cast on roll call. What a
nightmare for the DI artist and the Post Production technical crew.
It
looks like a film about the muslims for the muslims by the muslims. However,
there is not a single crewmember except the artist Arif and the Professor
(Played by Mohd Zeeshan Ayyub and Yusuf Husain
respectively) who are muslims.
Not the protagonist, neither the Director, nor any of the artists, nor even the
writers. And the film is about the plight of the muslims in India. Or perhaps
anywhere and everywhere in the world. Simple folk who are pious, righteous, and
who wean through the hard struggle of life. Muslims who are wronged for the
only reason – that they are Muslims.
And
yet, the story could be of any community, as one never becomes conscious of the
‘religion’ in the story but is sensitized only to the situation and the events.
Go see any other film about the Muslim community made with adequate or handsome
funds and compare. Which is the more engaging, which is more honest, which is
the tougher film to make, which is bringing a truer story for the audience’s
appetite in today’s time of the RTI, which has more layers, which sets you
thinking, which churns your bowels, which makes you feel guilty, helpless,
angry, which is the one not biased, which is the one that makes you more aware,
more empowered, which is the one non exploitative?
So
there is no definite genre that the story can be pinned by. It is neither a
courtroom dram, although the crucial scenes are set in courts, neither is it a
romantic tragedy, although Shahid’s supportive wife leaves him and then he
dies, nor is it a martyr heroic film, although Shahid ends his life as a martyr
for a cause…In fact, it is all this and more because Hansal does not steer it
to a dramatic fictional tale but insists steadfastly to narrate the story of an
individual with all the truisms intact.
Consider this:
Shahid was supposed to be a well-funded film by a corporate production house
with a star in place. Hansal and Sunil Bohra (Producer) chose the other route
lest the shenanigans of the star system or the numbers game shackle them. And
they embraced the hardship with a tougher stance of honesty to make a moving,
compassionate film.
For
any Director to touch and mould his material with a humanitarian approach is
one of the most difficult directing tasks. Hansal has not just immersed himself
with the material but internalized it, forgotten his leanings, left aside the
grammar of filmmaking that he learnt through his earlier seven feature films,
as well as rid himself of easy shooting or post production solutions.
Consider this:
The Editor Apurva Asrani also co wrote the film. The earlier decision was to
make a non-linear narrative as the world over, the traditional linear narrative
is considered to be passé and not smart enough for today’s times. Apu is also
known for drastic usage of NGs (No-good takes), jump cutting, and edgy editing
styles. With the material in front of them, they both opted to be dumb but true
to the material and formed a linear narrative! Apu’s edit does not leap out of
the screen at you but lets you immerse yourself in the development of the story
unhindered.
Consider this: A
veteran artist has reservations because her role seems to be just 3 pages in
the courtroom. So she decides nearly 8 hours before the shoot to decline. She
has doubted the Director because he has said that we will improvise the scene
and the dialogues as we shoot. But that is the organic way that Hansal wanted
to make the film by involving everyone concerned with the scenes.
Consider this: When
the village in the hills threw up extras that were Hindus, the lead actor Raj
Kumar Yadav had to train them stepwise (12 steps) how to do Namaaz. The
Director read numbers in order to get shots with movements in cohesion from the
group. The sound recordist had but just one assistant for the schedule. That is
brave for a film with live sound (Sound Recordist: Mandar Kulkarni).
Although the temptation to turn voyeuristic is huge, Hansal’s camera does not try to barge close to the man who is in flames in the riot filled streets of 1993 Mumbai to sensationalize it, nor does it travel from sunset silhouettes to a frontal of the twosome’s faces up North in POK as they share a happy repartee moment, nor does it underline the most significant moment of Shahid’s assassination in the office with a close up or a long shot. Hansal and the DOP refrain from the usual temptations of over dramatizing the situation. The screenplay (Sameer Gautam Singh and Apurva Asrani), the Mise en scène, the acting, and the editing too blends the subtle manner of telling, aided by a music track that does not interfere with the realism. During the depiction of the love story, the dialogues are as matter of fact as can be, and so are the situations.
Hansal’s ingenious shot division helps us see events in a seamless fashion. This Spartan style of filmmaking lends way to a new language that is close to real life, and not the crafted, arranged carefully kind of a story, spoon fed by loud, crass everything-to-be-said-through-dialogue and underlined by music. The proximity to the material increases manifold and the viewer relates to the unfoldment of the story in a much more integral, much more organic manner. No wonder that audiences in Canada (At the Toronto Film Festival) and at the MAMI waited in long ques due to ‘word of mouth’ to see the film. And no wonder that Hansal has had standing ovations at both places.
Consider this: While
Music was being discussed for the film, the sound Engineer was asked what ought
to be the music. “Sparse, minimal, hardly there types”, he said. His dictat was
followed. (Music: Karan Kulkarni)
Hansal’s
directorial abilities were never questioned, and infact lauded several times
(Dil Pe Mat le Yaar, Chhal, Jayate, etc.) Nor were his sensibilities (It was
his own decision to stay away in ‘Wanvas’ at Lonawala for so many years). He
meandered just about everywhere in the Mumbai Bollywood terrain of
storytelling. This film has cemented his road. Hansal has to start walking on
this path which will lead him to greater heights and us as viewers to greater
experiences that he will invoke as a refined old-wine director.
I
just hope that the film sees the light of the day and does not but just roam
the festivals of discerning viewers across the globe. And hope against hope
that the authorities and Political parties do not intervene with their typical
horse blinds on release or before…
Consider this: Hansal
and Sunil Bohra (Producer) have refrained from censoring the film and releasing
it because they want audiences to see the film in this form; the more the
better – wonder what will transpire at the censor board.
It
is a significant film of our times about our times. There, I have said it…