Tuesday, 7 August 2018

"Tere Mere Sapne Ab Ek Rang Hain" An Immortal Art in Celluloid.


Vijay Anand was an Ace Director. His directorial excellence was as much about his deft camera work as it was about his nuanced characters. He was a master of picturising songs. His songs outlived his times. This great song from Guide is an immortal art in celluloid. Both he and his elder brother Dev had a  belief that the songs have repetitive value. Besides the composition of the song, they were very particular about the picturization of the song. Vijay Anand used to say “My camera listens to the song and moves with it,” Long shots, lush backdrops and sharp intercutting brought out the poetry in the prose.
Guide (1965) was Navketan’s first film in colour. Based on RK Narayan’s novel. It became a classic because it excelled in acting (Dev Anand-Waheeda Rehman), music (SD Burman), photography (Fali Mistry), editing (Vijay Anand and Babu Shiekh)... 
There was a situation in the film where the heroine was dejected and to bring hope the hero sings a song. For this situation, three legends, Dada Burman created a tune for which  Shailendra wrote the beautiful lines and Mohammad Rafi gave the voice.  Incidentally, the saxophone that plays in this song was played by Manohari Singh, a music assistant to S D Burman (and later R D Burman).

The song Tere Mere Sapne was shot in the early light(Sun Rise) in Udaipur. This sequence lasts more than four minutes, but it is made up of only three shots, which increase progressively in length – in other words, there are only two cuts in the whole scene. And this isn’t an arbitrary stylistic decision, it is central to what is happening in the film at this point. 
The two cuts in this scene (the first around the 39-second mark, the second around 1.44 minutes) both occur after a movement of the song has been completed, and both have Rosie drawing away from Raju after initially reaching for him. In the first scene, she strokes his shoulder; in the second she hugs him briefly, but then bunches up her fist and moves away. She is still conflicted at the end of both these movements, and in each case the cut serves as punctuation, indicating that the process of reassuring her must begin anew. And this is done at a dual level, by the lyrics of the song as well as by the sympathetic, probing movement of the camera.

 In his book Cinema Modern, Sidharth Bhatia quotes the cinematographer Fali Mistry’s son as saying of this sequence, “It was shot over two evenings and a morning, at dusk and dawn, which means they must have had a very small window of about 10 minutes each time, so they had to ensure nothing went wrong in the acting, camera placement, lighting etc … It required great coordination.” 
Song of Guide 1965

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