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Crouching tiger
  Abhilasha Ojha / New Delhi February 23, 2008     *Abhilasha Ojha *talks to
Bharat Bala, king of "music videos", on why that's not the right term and on
his "reply" to Hollywood productions.    It's over tomato-celery juice at
the Mumbai Taj that Bharat Bala announces his thoughts on the Indian film
industry. The weather outside is balmy and being a Sunday morning, the
traffic, says Bala, is less maddening than it usually is.    With 20 years
of experience in directing ad films, documentaries and music videos, it
wouldn't be an exaggeration to credit Bala for making India a "visual
brand". After all, he has prepared a heady visual concoction for some of A R
Rahman's best works, including *Vande Matram, Pray For Me*, Brother, and
more recently, *Jana Gana Mana*, converting them into exquisite
"coffee-table-like visual treats of India".    Bala, in that sense, has had
a remarkable edge over other directors who've attempted music videos. But
he's uncomfortable calling these "music videos".    He may have a point:
When most good music videos were being made on a budget of Rs 20-30
lakh, *Vande
Mataram *was made at Rs 2 crore. *Jana Gana Mana *was shot on a budget of Rs
1.5 crore, excluding the fee given to the artistes. "I'm yet to conjure a
term but even you'd know that they're not music videos. They're short films,
maybe," he says, shrugging his shoulders, still in search of an appropriate
term.    Now Bala's setting himself up for yet another challenge, bringing
the Oscar-winner film, *The Lives of Others*, to the Indian market. The
German film, with subtitles, hopefully without Censor Board scissors, will
hit select screens on February 29.    Having tied up with exhibitors like
PVR and Inox, Bala says he wants to bring many more international films into
the Indian market — and not just for the audiences but also for Indian
filmmakers. "I want to bring intelligent international cinema into India
because I'm passionate about it," he says.    He credits the multiplex
culture and the changing tastes of audiences as prime reasons for bringing
this Oscar-winning film to select Indian cinemas. With just 10 prints of *The
Lives of Others* in India and limited screenings in cities like Mumbai,
Delhi, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Bala says he's enthusiastic about his
debut as a distributor and promises to bring at least five more
international films within the next four-five months.    "These are films
that have been well received all over the world but still need to be seen by
audiences at large in India," he adds.    Speaking of films, BharatBala
Productions is also heading towards its next directorial venture, an
Indo-Japanese film, tentatively called *The 19th Step*, which will cost
around $12 million and will release early next year. "I think it's high time
India looked for an answer to Hollywood's *Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon*,
and I think our film, in its treatment, not just the budget, will be just
that," he smiles.    Isn't he being overconfident? He disagrees: "I think
we, as filmmakers, have a lot of stories to tell. I'm never driven by
budgets, on the contrary, I sincerely believe that I'm driven by ideas and
collaborative attempts." Bala's first film, *Hari Om*, directed in 2004,
travelled to 40 different film festivals and bagged as many as eight
audience awards in best film categories.    The film was produced jointly by
BharatBala Productions, Tips and Tricolor Films, a US-based company started
by venture capitalists and managed by Hollywood studio executives and
consultants. Though he's still tight-lipped about the actors in the
Indo-Japanese film, Bala says that it'll boast of the best talent from both
the film industries.    "It's a tale of a Samurai warrior and yes, this will
be a martial arts film with action that Indian films have never seen
before," he adds. While 30 per cent of the film, he confirms, will be shot
in Japan, almost 70 per cent of it will be shot in exotic locations in and
around south India on a tight 90-day shooting schedule.    In addition, Bala
is working on another film which will be based on a classic Hindi novel but
set in a contemporary scenario. "There are five more films in the
directorial pipeline from our production house which we'll announce within
the next four months," he adds confidently.    For someone who was studying
zoology, Bala, in a span of 20 years, has directed close to 500 television
ads, documentaries and music videos. In all these, it's his visual portrayal
of India that remains firmly etched in the minds of audiences.    "My
father, a Gandhian, suggested that I needed to create something that
revolved around the creation of an idea called 'India'. That's when we made
*Vande Mataram *and since then something along those lines has always
worked," he says.

-- 
regards,
Vithur

AIMING TO BE A TRUE RAHMANIAC

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