Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

Bollywood Losing Naturalistic Style, Getting Louder: Filmmaker Dibakar Banerjee

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Mar, 2015 02:56 PM
  • Bollywood Losing Naturalistic Style, Getting Louder: Filmmaker Dibakar Banerjee
Preferring intensity to money power, National Award-winning filmmaker Dibakar Banerjee feels Bollywood is losing its naturalistic style, distancing itself from the rich oeuvre of restrained, controlled performances and veering towards more money and decibel power.
 
The "Khosla Ka Ghosla" maker says shades of that natural style can still be seen to some extent in Bengali cinema.
 
"Bengali theatre was not theatrical at all. It was natural, very controlled, very restrained... so you still see traces of that restraint in acting. That's an amazing thing because Bollywood is losing that skill because I think it is getting louder and bigger. It's all about having more money, more decibel power," Banerjee told IANS in an interview here.
 
Having worked with Bengali film industry stalwart Prosenjit Chatterjee in "Shanghai", the Delhi-born Banerjee, a Bengali, is keen to work with more actors from the region for the value they add to his films.
 
"I think Bengal cinema has still got a trace left of that famous naturalistic style that used to be so well seen in its cinema and theatre," he said.
 
It is this particular style that Banerjee has tried to bring out in his forthcoming flick "Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!" based on the fictional detective created by Bengali writer Saradindu Bandyopadhyay.
 
It stars Sushant Singh Rajput, Anand Tiwari and Bengali actress Swastika Mukherjee in lead roles.
 
The reason for choosing an interesting mix of actors, Banerjee said, is for their prowess in enacting intense characters.
 
"I like intensity... that speaks far more than money. So if I have an intense actor or an intense plot or an intense character onscreen, I can actually spend Rs.10 crore less on fruitless car chases and bomb explosions and have the same reaction from the audience. That's why I like intensity," explained the "Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye!" maker.
 
But he is not averse to stars. It is only a question of being on the same page, he clarified.
 
"Not really (not averse). Stars give you a great advantage in opening up your film to a huge audience because one of the main reasons why audience go to see a film is the star.
 
"When I get a script that a star wants to work in the way that I want him to work; when the star gets a script that he likes and completely surrenders to me then I will work with a star," said Banerjee, whose political thriller "Shanghai" starred Emraan Hashmi and Abhay Deol.
 
For the time being, Banerjee is getting ready to dish out a young Bakshi, an "eccentric man who is on odds with the world" to a pan-Indian audience and is "aware" of the possibility of comparisons that it might elicit with the Bengali series of films on the detective that have struck gold with viewers.
 
"My films have never really comforted every one in terms of giving them what they expect. I don't think "Khosla Ka Ghosla", "Love Sex Aur Dhokaa" and "Shanghai" gave any one a reason to say: 'Oh! that is what I expected'.
 
"So, I know that Byomkesh will shake up a lot of people. Whether it's a good shake or bad shake that time will tell," he said.
 
From the graphic art-like posters inspired by illustrators who have designed images for Bengali detective stories from the 1940s to a flash mob performance on the Howrah Bridge, Banerjee is leaving no stone unturned to perfect his vision of the detective.
 
"I think this kind of a film the audience needs to know because the experience of a detective film is not hugely entrenched in the Hindi film audience's mind that are used to see either love stories or comedies and a detective story has a different kind of a storytelling technique," he said.

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

I'm a host first, an entertainer later: VJ Andy

I'm a host first, an entertainer later: VJ Andy
He has hosted reality shows and participated in a few as well, but popular video jockey Andy, who can be seen grooving on the seventh season of celebrity dance show "Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa" nowadays, says he prefers to be referred to as a 'host' over an 'entertainer'.

I'm a host first, an entertainer later: VJ Andy

Big B unveils poster of his first fiction TV series 'Yudh'

Big B unveils poster of his first fiction TV series 'Yudh'
Megastar Amitabh Bachchan launched the dramatic poster of his first fiction TV series titled "Yudh", which is expected to go on air from July, here Wednesday.

Big B unveils poster of his first fiction TV series 'Yudh'

'Fugly' cast skips screening for troops in Leh

'Fugly' cast skips screening for troops in Leh
Director Kabir Sadanand had to go alone for the special screening of his film "Fugly" for army 'jawans' (soldiers) in Leh.

'Fugly' cast skips screening for troops in Leh

Flops can't take away anything from Subhash Ghai, says his student

Flops can't take away anything from Subhash Ghai, says his student
Newcomer Neha Yadav, an alumnus of Subhash Ghai's Whistling Woods International Institute, says that the filmmaker might be going through a rough phase, but his recent string of flop movies can't take away his past accolades.

Flops can't take away anything from Subhash Ghai, says his student

Amit Sadh plans belated birthday bash

Amit Sadh plans belated birthday bash
Actor Amit Sadh, who recently turned 31, spent his birthday shooting for "Guddu Rangeela". But he now seems to be in a mood to party.

Amit Sadh plans belated birthday bash

I'd love to be called actor, not comedian: Kiku Sharda

I'd love to be called actor, not comedian: Kiku Sharda
He makes TV viewers burst with laughter with his drag act as Palak of "Comedy Nights With Kapil", but Kiku Sharda says he'd rather be called an actor than a "comedian".

I'd love to be called actor, not comedian: Kiku Sharda