And these are 6 different cuts that happen within a span of
a few seconds. The pacing is furious, the framing is innovative,
the editing pushing the retentive capacity and the discerning
capability of the eye in regard to the holding time of each
frame, and more importantly the music, the main partner in the
crime, is pulling the strings in the background.
Pick
any few seconds of his movie, the frames feel like moving at
twice the prescribed pace for a regular Telugu movie. Add to
that the hurried nature of his characters, which seem to occupy
their own frenzied world, caught up in their own whirlwind of
activities. His transition from a normal story teller to a different
kind of narrator to a 'dynamic' director would however need
to observe at half his pace and half his speed. He never deviated
from his off beat path and never tried to run the mainstream
race. It takes a different kind of imagination to pull off even
the weird imagery in a tasteful way like a beautiful woman in
a garish dress holding a huge lotus between her teeth, a small
face wearing a huge vermillion, the hero's costumes with the
dangling price tags, glasses that seem too large for the face,
to name a few. He handled the dolly as an assistant to the director,
he worked his pen as author of good repute, he wielded his baton
creating some hummable tunes, he worked behind the lens that
eventually made his name synonymous with weird, innovative,
jarring, imaginative, confused, dynamic and many such extremes
- Vamsi.
If history is any indicative, a given audience can fairly predict
the style of a movie coming out of a director's pedigree. That
is because they usually confine themselves to a particular genre
they can truly identify with and truly believe in and hence
do not stray too far from that comfort zone. This gives some
sort of predictability buffer to the audience so that there
is a near or an absolute match between what it expects and what
the maker delivers. In this aspect it is quite difficult to
categorize Vamsi as a 'genre director', for the range he has
showed in his repertoire and for the pattern and predictability
game that he so willingly refused to be a part of. He balanced
a "manchu pallaki" with a "preminchu pellaaDu",
he upended a "sitara" with a "anveshaNa",
he neutralized the ripples of a "aalaapana" with a
"Ladies Tailor", he rib-tickled the viewer with a
"April 1 viDudala" while showing the depths of pathos
with a "Maharshi". The fact that he never tried recreating
successes by sticking to the same formula that brought him monetary
rewards and commercial acceptance, speaks a lot about his desire
to not fall back on his previous glories but start the reconstruction
process with each new venture by deconstructing himself totally.
And just like anything, which tries to tread a new ground that
is vastly different from the previous terrain that would meet
either totally acceptance or summary rejection, quite a few
of Vamsi's ventures tried to stand up on failing legs.
Two
technical aspects stand out in Vamsi's movies - the hurrying
camera and the over worked editing machine. During the times
when a framing a shot consisted in placing the camera right
in front of the talking parts and observing the action as a
impassionate observer, not too far from duplicating the standard
setup of the good old drama days, Vamsi's camera has the sort
of urgency that would grab hold of audience's attention and
virtually drags it at the same pace, racing through the forests,
running along the roads, maneuvering through the woods and hurrying
through the fields. The energy that the movement infuses into
the frame, which correlates with the mood of the scene, is one
reason to explain why a picture is worth a thousand words. Sundaram
hopes to get rich, and get rich quick. He basks at the idea
of having to wait years spending his energy, life and importantly
time at the sewing pedal. He seeks quick nirvana and instant
gratification. And when a half baked get rich quick scheme back-fires
on him, he finds himself caught up in the vortex of a turbulent
tornado struggling to keep find some breathing space while furiously
trying to score at another half baked quick scheme. Add to this
mix his characteristic trait - he is lazy. The camera work in
Ladies Tailor reflects Vamsi's getting into the mindset of Sundaram.
Sundaram has a deadline before he finds the "maccha unna
bhaama" that would bring him name, fame and glory. He whittled
down the sample size to 3. He has to work in a secretive manner,
lest he becomes the object of some serious "attention"
of venkata ratnam. All the 3 "bhaamalu" are closing
on him at an alarming pace with marriage proposals. The race
against time and life that is rightly depicted in the camera
accompanying sundaram at every step, working at double the normal
pace, places the audience right in sundaram's shoes in understanding
his urgency of the task and urgency of his mind.
Rhythm
forms an important part in his style, while cutting between
two frames. His cutting almost assumes a lyrical nature that
fits into a musical scale that is controlled by the pace and
the tempo of the scene. He does not hold on to a scene till
it has completely justified its purpose but instead splices
in several extra frames that completely changes the way the
scene would play out normally, were it cut in a conventional
way. This extra information that pertain to either a sudden
changed emotion of the characters involved or an exaggeration
of an inner feeling, urges the audience to not take the character
on his/her spoken word but instead treat it on the 'face' value
in light of this new information. Maharshi, who has a dubious
distinction in college, rags on a girl to prove his superiority,
only to be hard slapped by Suchitra. The moment Suchitra imprints
her palm impression Maharshi's cheek, the scene cuts away to
Suchitra dousing Maharshi with a bucket full of colored water,
some on his shirt, some on his face. If followed conventionally,
Maharshi would start a hate-love relationship that would finally
culminate into Suchitra accepting Maharshi. Instead, Vamsi cuts
down the process of Suchitra adding color to Maharshi's pale
and vapid life, with just a single frame of dousing. No love-hate
relationship, no courting, no cheesy dialogues, no corny situations.
Just one slap across the face, just one spliced frame in between
and movie takes a different direction. The forest officer suggests
that Bhanupriya and Karthik act intimate to catch the killer
let loose in the jungle in "anveshaNa:. And while the mechanics
of the process are being worked out between the hero and heroine,
the frames of Satyanarayana (forest officer) turning his grim
expression into a sly smile while his eye balls roll above to
their roof, suddenly changes the equation for the audience and
throws it off the scent. Again the nature of the scene that
is played out heavily contributing to the rhythm of the cutting.
The dynamic nature of the camera and the furious and unforgiving
scissors, helped Vamsi trademark his style and vision on the
silver screen, as one with little patience for lethargy and
scant respect for the gravity of the scene.
(Cont'd
in Part II)
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