Making Films In Bollywood Was So Easy Then
When I came to Bombay Dec 4, 1990 I didn’t
know Andheri East from West. Did not have a telephone number that I could call,
besides my friend Virendra Saxena (The Actor) who was kind enough to allow me
to share his roof. I wanted to make films. Those days the only man who made
films in the city was Mr. Mahesh Bhatt. His cream color Maruti 800 number BLN
50 (Pl excuse my fetish for numbers) would travel from ‘Dil hai Ke manta nahin’ to ‘Sadak’ to ‘Saathi’ during a single day.
Vikram Bhatt was first aide on one film Salil Verghese on another one and so
on. Pooja Bhatt would sometimes show up
riding pillion on Hamara Bajaj with Robin Bhatt. Yes she was still the heroine
of the film. His sets would have more visitors than the crew itself. I was one
of those, for months. Four months. For sure, until I got a job elsewhere. Not to forget a great meeting with just Mr.
Bhatt and me at his house. That meeting in another blog though. I remember Mr.
Bhatt telling someone one day, ‘People don’t come to see me; there is a rare
white pigeon on my shoulder. They come to meet that pigeon. Some day this
pigeon will be on another shoulder then these same very people will go there.
Fortunately for Mr. Bhatt that white pigeon continues to sit there. On his
terms.
Working in Bollywood was tough then. There
was only Bollywood in Bombay. There was No ZEE TV then forget SONY or STAR.
Internet was almost Sci-Fi. So if you had to work it had to be the movies. No
Less. Those were the days when people
cried when they said roll camera the first time. I did. It was tough to make
movies then. You had to be an assistant first. I know of people who worked as
assistants for two decades and still never got to make a film. These days kids
get restless in six months. After being an assistant for so long you had to
have a story and once you had a story you needed to have an appointment. An
appointment with a person who would believe in you. It could be a Star or a
Producer. Yes Stars were this powerful even then, just that the Producers had a
little more say in the film. The bad
news was that Bollywood didn’t make as many films every year then, so the
chances of making a film were even slimmer. It was tough. Damn tough.
There were no video assists. You would see
what you shot only a couple of days later. Until then? Nothing. Every time a
shot got over, the Director looked at the cameraman. When he said okay the
Director would move on to the next. Such was the trust. Such were the
relationships. These days it is simpler; you see the shot on a monitor as it is
canned. The bad news is that there are a number of people sitting behind you.
The number of people of course depends on how big your movie is and how many
stars are in it and of course each one has an opinion. At least one. Even
worse, you can’t reject them.
It was the 1991 Iraq war that brought Cable
TV to India. Cable News Network it was called, rightfully. CNN. Until then it
was only DD and Krishi Darshan. Then came ZEE, then SONY then STAR and then a plethora
of entertainment software ran through a weird maze of white cables that
suspended from one rooftop to the other. These cables were the arteries of so
many careers that would be built over the next two decades. TARA was the first
Super Hit show on ZeeTV. Navnit Nishan, a very dear friend from NSD became the
first Satellite TV celebrity in India. She didn’t know what hit her. From
various film assignments to appearances to endorsements to a wide range of new
career avenues. That was the beginning of the ease of making movies. Not movies
necessarily but yes, thereabouts.
Personally I started my Directing career
with some episodes of Yule Love Stories on ZEE TV in 1993. Around the year 1995 the world of music videos
were opening up. A beautiful Boutique Music Label and Sonu Nigam gave me my
break in to the world of music videos with ‘Tu”. Of course a few videos later I
was virtually bought over by Bhushan Kumar at T-series who turned me in to what
media called a Music Video Mughal. Yes I
did over a hundred music videos over a period of three years. It was one of
those video shoots that I received a call from Bhushan asking me if I wanted to
make a film. It was that simple. The only condition was that the film should
have ten plus songs. I loved music. I still do. I agreed but for reasons still
unknown to me I wanted to make my debut with rank new comers. Tum Bin released
on the same Friday with a magnum opus AKS that features the great Mr. Bachchan
(Who I still yearn to work with) and my dear dear friend, and then a new star
on the horizon Manoj Bajpayee. Tum Bin received great acclaim and success for a
film with five debutants including your truly. A year later at his house Salman
Khan with his inimitable sniff asked me the names of the stars that refused to
be a part of Tum Bin. It was his way of saying he had loved the film. It was
that simple. Eleven years after I came to Bombay I had managed to make the film
that even Salman Khan had seen and liked. It was that simple.
Twenty-four years since I came to Bombay it
is tough again. Very Very tough.
To be continued…..
A complete 24 years of struggle still makes a struggler & life is like that "Khaya peeya kuchh nahi glass tode baarah aaney"........ I personally wish you all the very best..... Keep shining.. Keep rocking
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