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issue 2bullet january-february 2005
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Headlines : India News
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Shwaas: A must watch film

September 2004

A still image from the film "Shwaas"A grandfather helps his grandson come to terms with his inevitable blindness. In a typical Bollywood film, this would lead to painful, handkerchief-demanding melodrama.

Refreshingly, in Sandeep Sawant's debut feature, Shwaas, he hasn't allowed Bollywood stereotypes to get in the way of good storytelling -- a style that comes easily to him after his long theatrical innings.

"When I read it, I knew I had to make this movie," says Sawant, referring to the Madhavi Gharpure short story inspired by a true incident in Pune, 12 years ago.

A villager (Arun Nalawade) brings grandson Paarsha (Ashwin Chitale, in a National Award-winning role) to a town doctor (Sandeep Kulkarni), only to learn that the child is a one-in-a-million victim of the rare retinoblastoma -- a rare retinal cancer. The operation will save his life but leave him blind.

With social worker Asawari's (Amruta Subhash) sympathetic assistance, the tottering grandfather steadies himself, and supports the child through it all.

In a scene that lingers long after the film ends, the doctor is forced to accept responsibility for explaining to the child that he is to lose his eyes. We accompany him through the hospital rounds, waiting for doctors, certificates, tests, scans, results and watch the child's tantrums when the operation is postponed.

And just when you think the narrative is moving to the tear ducts, suddenly the grandfather goes missing from the hospital: Taking along little Paarsha on a pleasure trip through a park, a fair and a temple, showing him sights he will never see again.

But the panic in the hospital over the missing patient bursts into comedy, when nobody wants to take responsibility, and newshounds sniff, hoping for scandal. The enraged doctor later understands what prompted grandpa's "irresponsible behaviour”. The rustic grandfather's moving simplicity is contrasted with the urbane doctor restraining himself instead of reaching out to his patient or his grandfather, visibly embarrassed at times.

After watching the film, the first thing I realised was the pin-drop silence among the audience as they filed out, an obvious hangover of the moving docudrama. Excellent performances by the whole team stand out, especially as the camera shuns slickness and sentimentality.

The child's spontaneity is amazing. The script knows the power of silence and stillness, keeping you bound to your seat.

Considering that a film made on a modest Rs 60 lakh budget (raised with great difficulty by Sawant and six of his friends) has turned out to be such a remarkable effort, merely places the achievement in deserved perspective.

Now that Shwaas has won the National Award for best film (50 years after Shyamchi Aai) and is the official Indian entry for the Academy Awards, it will empower new filmmakers to experiment and bring back glory to Marathi cinema.

Other India News stories in this issue:
Bullet image Extending the benefits of education to disabled children
Bullet image Reliance launches new application for visually impaired users
Bullet image Intelligent cane to guide blind users
Bullet image Magiktuch concert for visually impaired people a grand success
Bullet image New computer centre opened in Bangalore
Bullet image Blind students open people’s eyes to horrors of dowry

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