Wednesday, May 4, 2011

What I Do

Whenever someone asks me what I do for a living, everything slows down as I release the word 'Screenwriter' from my mouth. I stretch time, savouring their widening of eyes and the 'wooooooowwwwww' that seems to go on for days.
I do this because the next question will promptly crash my little hovercraft of delusions into the ground.
"What films do you write for?"
"Non fiction."
"Like serials?"
"No...like documentary films."
"Like Big Boss?"

Here, I pause. Because they're right. These films I help make (or 'supposedly' help make, as my mother believes) don't reach too many people. The last time I did something that was broadcast, was in 2007. I know of 2 people who saw it. One of them was my mother.

Still, it's a great job. Someone with a lot of money contacts me and tells me they don't have any money. Then they tell me the subject they wish to make a film on e.g: sewage treatment. I am asked to take a trip for research purposes. Thanks to such trips, I have experienced strange & fascinating things like the inside of a mountain, secret rituals of the Khalsa, Malyalee robots bumping into tables, a duet between Manoj & Shweta Tiwari and a Citibank conference.

Researching for documentary films is a respected profession amongst the 6 people who know what it entails. You're the equivalent of a Harvard PhD in this tiny group. What you say & believe about a particular subject is the gospel truth. You are, in fact Jesus of the film crew. (Or so you tell yourself as they delay your payment by another month.) No need for them to know that your analysis of the Guru Granth Sahib was the result of standing in the karha prasad line at the Golden Temple. After all, the final film will only give you 30 seconds of voice-over to expound on Sikh philosophy. Of which 'The Guru Granth Sahib is the Sikh holy scripture" takes up a whole 5 seconds.

After research is done, it's time for writing. This is a task of many contradictions. A good documentary film writer isn't one who actually writes well. It is one who knows when not to write. In a medium where the hierarchy of communication tools places visuals, sounds & interviews above everything else, the writer must constantly 'unwrite'. Shakespeare would've made an awful documentary film writer.

Then there's the unspoken rule. What you write is never right. Takes a while to get used to the gentle sounds of dismay when one presents first drafts. Contempt, horror & anger will be hurled at you by people who can't spell their own names correctly (or even spell 'correctly' krektly).
"Madam, you have not even written anything about our great Baba Kamdev's Exceptional Institute For the Hormonally Challenged!"
Who will explain to them that the visual of a building saying 'Baba Kamdev's Exceptional Institute for The Hormonally Challenged is quite Exceptional' does more than what a 2 page voice-over ever will.

And so you unwrite the script and present the film to your client.
They are effusive in their praise - "This cinematographer has done wonderful work!" "Who is your editor? Simply fabulous graphics!" Your chest bursts with pride or something like it and you eagerly await your pay cheque. You discover they've cut your pay because you only wrote 3.5 sentences in the hour long film.
You make like Guru Dutt in Kagaz Ke Phool and renounce the world.

Then, one day you're switching channels and catch a line that sounds vaguely familiar. You realise this is your line. You cringe at how horrendous it sounds but don't change the channel. You wait till the end of the show for that golden moment - the moment that, if your work was being shown in a cinema hall, would be the one when everyone walks out.
In a sea of names rolling up the screen, you see yours for a nanosecond.  It will be gone before you blink, not to return in a hurry, not to see a DVD release or fancy premiere. And so you stretch time again.



17 comments:

  1. I know what you mean! :D

    I've always found solace in the fact that I am the published writer, and I accept the fact that not all people will get what I write and it is ok. I recently started taking up freelancing stuff, writing for websites, writing copies for the TV Commercials and that kinda stuff.

    I so agree when you say nothing is ever any good for them! and then they go on changing visuals and call it 'tweaking' without realising it would need me to change everything! Sigh. I could go on and on and on.

    But, I know what you mean and yet it is an awesome feeling. to write and to create. :)

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  2. It's always more fun once it's over :)

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  3. It’s great to get a peek into the life of a screenwriter. I really wouldn’t know what it’s like but your post both enlightened and amused me :)

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  4. and now u put us geeks into shame..we just sit in our AC cabins and see the world in MS Excel sheets, dreaming about roaming the world which never happens.
    Anyways, your job seems to be a dream job here. Such beautiful nitty-gritties!

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  5. :) Yes, I'm very fortunate. Poor, but fortunate. I hope you make lots of money and then use it to travel the world.

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  6. Now you are inside my head! They should teach 'unwriting' in film school and infact have a provision for 'client draft' in Adobe Script version 1.0

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  7. I did tell you I love your blog eh?

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  8. ohh my my...hav eto confess..i so super love your writings..., wish i cud b as good as you some day...hail you Purnima! Awesome just loved every bit of it... wow!

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  9. I can only have admiration for you do. It is not a lazy writer's job, I tell you. I hope you direct one of them one of these days. Good job :)

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  10. Thanks Haroon! I don't know if I'll ever direct, it's not something that excites me. But never say never, right? :)

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  11. Why haven't I ever read you before? Very cool post. Never been a screen writer, but you would have loved the edit meetings we had for "features". Boss had a fight with husband lead to two page article on Indian marriages are failing. I sprained a finger(s) while doing personal things became 'yoga is good for sex' and so on and so forth. Hello, nice blog.

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  12. Jhoomur Bose...why does your name sound so familiar? DPS, RKP? LSR?
    Thank you for reading :)

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  13. "What films do you write for?"
    "Non fiction."
    "Like serials?"
    "No...like documentary films."
    "Like Big Boss?"

    Who the fack did you have this conversation with? Lol..."documentary films" "like Big Boss?" hahaaha.

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  14. Ah, it was one of the many cinema lovers I meet in the course of my day :)
    Thanks for dropping by.

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