As
they say, all good things have to come to an end. And it cannot
be more truthful and painful in regard to the stardom of the writers.
The seventies ushered the star system and relegated the writer
to the back seat. It also bought into a false myth about the star
system, that a star alone could pull in the crowds and win over
the audience without the words propping his nature and stature
in the movie. The reasons are innumerable and beg to be told.
Up until the previous decade, not many people evinced interest
in the production of the movies and the existing players were
either true lovers of art or atleast ones who respected or valued
the art. The business aspect of production was chalked out before
hand and complete creative freedom was given to the creator (writer-director
duo) team to come up with a sensible theme within those business
parameters. It challenged both the writers' creativity and directors'
sensibility to fit the drama within the time allotted and the
budget allocated. Back in the late 40s, when B.N.Reddy set out
to make Swarga Seema, a control was implemented on the amount
of raw stock that one could import for a movie. B.N.Reddy, the
ingenious mind that he was, paced his movie in such a way, that
it never feels that the movie has either ended too early or dragged
out at the end. In much the same fashion, K.V.Reddy used to time
each scene, and would exactly know the amount of the film that
was going to be exposed, before the movie even hit the sets. None
of that wizardry would have been possible without the solid backing
of their writers.
The
star system brought along with it - domination of the lead character,
relegation (or lack of equal elevation) of the anti-hero character,
glamour doll concept, variety in story and other spices and ingredients.
Just because a star had a certain number of successes, an illogical
concept, that he can dictate about the look and feel of the entire
movie, started to creep in. And the number of people venturing
into the production of the movies, certainly did not help reverse
that dangerous trend. All the old writers either retired, expired
or simply bucked the trend and joined the flow, to feed and fend
for themselves. Thus was created the concept "image".
Earlier, it used to be the characters marrying the actors and
not the other way around. Now stories had to be imagined with
a specific person in mind, without letting go of the traits of
the character that made him successful in his previous outings.
Mannerisms, catch words, styles replaced sensibility, plausibility
and subtlety. The producers, in a bid to cash in the success of
a star, forced the writer to gimmickize the screenplay to grab
and hold the audience attention, to surprise them with something
that they had never seen before in the star, and to bring them
back for second and third servings. People, who could look through
this smoke and mirrors act, stayed away from the movies. Shock
value, in the form of logic defying stunts, exotic locales, visceral
scenes, sense gratifying acts, were shoved down the audience's
throats. Thus was born class system. Money minders started to
divide sections of audience into mass and class. That it was the
same audience that was enthralled by rich poetry, great aesthetics,
was completely forgotten by the producers. The most clichéd
statement "the audience wants it" found its roots. Beneath
this furor was trampled, gasping for its last breath, the writer's
voice.
Amid
this chaos, emerged an interesting trend in our neighboring state.
Directors started to give a new dimension to the stale and sedated
stories. They called it treatment. It consisted ion taking a sub-standard
plot and presenting it in watchable way. Telugu film industry
slowly caught on to this trend and the focus shifted from the
writer to the director.
K.Balachander
and Bharatiraja were the pioneers of this trend. During the late
70s, an unknown production house by name Yuvachitra made a small
movie with a budding story writer/director, called Tata Manavadu.
Dasari Narayana Rao, a one man army helming different important
branches of movie making, emerged as a key player, changing the
course, path and fate set to the telugu film writer. What is being
told gained more importance than how it is being told. Dasari
dialogue became a trade mark. His juxaposition, jumbling, mix
and match style, was something new and was never heard before,
from any professional pen. Case in point, Sardar Paparaayudu.
NTR has to denounce the Britisher's tactic of divide and rule
and this was what he was made to utter - "nuvvu maa daeSaaniki
enduku vaaccav?" "udyOgam kOsam", "kaadu
vyaapaaram kOsam.", "naenu maatram udyOgam kOsamae
vaccaanu", "kaadu kaadu kaadu. vyaapaaraaniki
kOsam vaccina nuvvu, maa lO kalatalani sRsTinci aa viDipOyina
vaaLLani neetO kalapukunnav. alaagae talliki biDDaku, biDDaku
talliki, annaku celliki, celliki annaku, akkakoo tammuDiki, tammuDiki
akkakoo...." and so goes the dialogue. Premaabhishekam
boasts of dialogues that haven't aged quite gracefully either.
"enduku vaccaav ikkaDiki". "aem raakooDadaa?".
"konta konta mandiki konni konni cOTlu unTaayi. aa konni
konni cOTlaki aa konta konta mandi manashulaki anumati unDadu".
"aa konta konta mandi manushulu, inko konta konta mandini
manushulni......". But to Dasari's credit, the stories
that he created really stood the test of the time. Meghasandesam
and Sivaranjani stand out as his best and continue to remain
as one of the sensible movies to come out of those decading decades.
At
the same time Dasari was capturing the imagination of the audience,
two other filmmakers, with two completely complementing paths
vied hard for audience's attention. Raghavendra Rao made his mark
with Adavi Ramudu and K.Viswanath won regional, national
and internal acclaim with Sankaraabharanam. Even startling
is the fact that the same writer worked for both of those movies.
The ability to handle a subject as commercial as Adavi Raamudu
and as aesthetic as Sankaraabharanam came naturally to
Jandhyaala. His pen could come up with a rib tickling "kaLLu
kanipincaTam laeduraa, sooryaandhakaaraa" with the same
ease as a heart tugging "paschaatya penu tuphaanu taakiDiki
repa repa laaDutunna satsampradaaya sangeeta jyotini oka kaapu
kaayaDaaniki tana renDu caetulu aDDU peTTina aa maha maneeshiki
sirasu vanci padaabhivandanam caestunnaa!". Every dialogue
that was written for SankaraabharaNam was memorable, ageless and
stimualting even to this day and age, considering that 25 years
passed, since the movie was released. Consider this golden nugget,
when Sankara Sastry chides the rock and roll group, ridiculing
him for his traditions and habits - "Here after, don't
be silly, stupid and childish. Music is divine, whether it is
western or Indian. sangeetaaniki bhasha bhaedaalu swa para bhaedaalun
unDavu. adi oka anantamaina vaahini. ae bhaasha vaadaina ae jaati
vaaDainaa aa jeeva dhaara lO daaham teercukOvaccu. oka rakaimaina
sangeetam goppa dani, maroka rakamaina sangeetam adhamamainadani
nirNayincaDaaniki manem evaram. sajeevamaina ee sangeeta dhaara
lO daaham teercukOvaDaaniki, vidaeseeyu endarO vacci, aa pranava
naadaanni aalapistoo unTae, meeru, ee daesaalO puTTina biDDalu,
daanini avanincaDam, kanna tallini dooshinchinanta naeram, dvaesincaDam
anta paapam". During the early 80s, media baron Ramoji
Rao entered the filmdom, and brought with himself, the old studio
style of film making. He set a budget, offered hands-off production
and chose Jandhayaala to weild the director baton and thus was
born the film that could be hailed as the funniest movie ever
made since the 80s - Sri vaariki Praemalekha. A largely
unknown cast, a simple and a fresh theme, loads of inventive and
rib-splitting dialogues, and some great tunes carried Srivariki
Praemalekha to months of packed houses and remained one of
the best comedy movies made till date. Jandhyaala, along with
his theater friend Aadi Vishnu and novelist Malladi Venkata Krishna
Murthy, treated the entertainment starved with one comedy capsule
after another starting from Srivaariki and continuing with rendu
rellu aaru, aha naa peLLanTa, jayammu nischayammuraa, shh... gupchup
and the like. How he managed to squeeze within his comedy repertoire
a Saptapadi, a Saagara Sangamam, a Ananda Bhairavi,
a Aapatbhaandhabudu, a Vetagaadu, was unbeknownst
to anyone. Though during his later part of his career, bowing
to the producer's pressure and the unable to scale the high standards
that he has set for himself in the aforementioned movies, Jandhayaala
had to repeat himself, his voice nevertheless would remain synonymous
with unadulteratd Telugu tanam, healthy subtle humor (suniSita
haasyam), touching sentimentality. Jandhyaala - haasya
brahma, dhanya janma.
(Contd
in Part 4)
Also
read Part 1 and Part
2 of this series
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Srinivas Kanchibhotla how you liked the article.
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