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FADE IN
INT. MUMBAI CENTRAL STATION - DAY
SUPERS: 1999
23-year-old Ritesh Shah alights on platform number 1 from a train that’s just rolled in. He’s come from Delhi with a trunk full of dreams and a fistful of change. A stepping stone to realising his dream is a play he’s just written, which has the potential to be turned into a film. Unfortunately that doesn’t happen.
CUT TO
INT. A 5-STAR HOTEL - DAY
SUPERS: 2016
Ritesh is basking in the glory of the success of Pink with the legendary Amitabh Bachchan by his side. And just a couple of months back, he had checked another item off his bucketlist – Ritesh had got Bachchan to autograph his LP of Sholay dialogues on his birthday.
FADE TO BLACK
Ritesh’s journey from being schoolboy in Srinagar to graduating from Hindu College in Delhi and later passing out from Jamia Millia was accompanied by a huge appetite for Salim-Javed films. His early influences inevitably includes Sholay but he also adds that he loves Trishul more than probably both Salim sahab and Javed sahab do.
With that I launch into a list of questions on Ritesh’s latest film Pink.
(Spoiler Alert: If you haven’t watched the film yet, be warned that this interview could have spoilers.)
Ritesh Shah: First Aniruddha (Tony Da) pitched it to Shoojit Da and he had narrated it to me also and our collaboration started from there.
Ritesh:
Ritesh: In terms of reaction, yes - this is the most I’ve ever got out of a film honestly but Airlift, D-Day and Namastey London have been deeply satisfying and I am very proud of my contribution to those film and those films to my career. Kahaani, I wish I could take all the credit for but it is really Sujoy Da’s baby.
Ritesh: But we are not Men from Mars. We have lived around women - our mothers, sisters, cousins, girlfriends, friends, wives - if we wouldn’t know how they feel about this topic already, how could we even think of writing this?
Ritesh: Absolutely. Sach bade zor ki awaaz karta hai. If deep down you don’t respect or do not acknowledge a woman’s right over her body, you can’t make a film like Pink. Such films can’t be faked. They have to come from conviction. Tony Da, me, Shoojit and Ronnie all have daughters in varied age groups. I hope this makes them proud of their papas.
Ritesh: I have usually worked with very sensible people so I have not been forced to change something against my will . Some of my films are very close to the scripts we wrote. Sometimes when they were drastically altered the film has suffered but sometimes radical changes have benefited the film also.
Ritesh: Yes, I think I was in my teens then and do remember a lot of clap trap dialogues but the argument of Pink is different - there is no ‘rape’ in Pink.
As you said maybe it is reflective of the changing times and perhaps also because of the fact that a different breed of people have entered the Hindi film industry and are writing and directing films. People who would not be a part of the industry in another time. I wonder is it the society which changes and things get reflected in films or is it the audience’s taste that changes? I wouldn’t know perhaps a sociologist would.
Ritesh: Honestly didn’t think about it that way. He maybe a cinematic cliche but it is not as if such people don’t exist and one such person came to mind and we put him as the antagonist or as a representative of that exercise of power. We should never try and be different for difference’s sake. We already had a professor Javed in Falak’s life. Did we say is he a better man? There is a dimension of power also involved in certain sexual crimes. We did what came naturally.
Ritesh: Our bunch of enthusiastic assistants and associate directors can be very persuasive and they can easily con you into something like this. In this case they said that the guy they had chosen to play Kirti’s boss looks in awe of her but you would be convincing. They put a jacket on me and underneath I was wearing jeans and chappals and I fired poor Falak. Later I realized they hadn’t even called an actor. What confident con-men these young kids are!
Ritesh: So far the one I remember clearly has been like a replay of the ending of those court scenes. It wasn’t verbal. It was from my daughter’s friend’s mother. We have spoken quite a number of times before but after a show she held my hand and just looked at me with moist eyes and I understood what she was saying with the way she looked at me and in the manner in which she held my hand.
Ritesh: It is too soon I feel to think like that and after such a huge emotional response from the audience. The only thing is, film stories have to be told within a duration - had we the luxury of say a mini series, we could have given you a more clear picture of the cumbersome legal process involved in the cases which are heard in the film. For example that it is a fast tracked, combined case etc etc and where it is being heard and why.
Ritesh: It was my suggestion on a Whatsapp chat between Tony, Ronnie, me and Shoojit and then Shoojit fought for it and won with Mr. Bachchan as an ally who announced it over Twitter. The colour itself represents compassion and this pink for girls, blue for boys is a very late American merchandising thing which we realised when we were finalising the title. Of course we knew our film and realised the subversion of the normal association with pink.