As Vazhakku Enn: 18/9 gears up
for a May 4 release, its cinematographer Vijay Milton shares interesting
titbits about the film
A young mother brings
her son to school, buys him short-eats from the vendor at the gate, waves to
the boy and walks out. The father seated on a two-wheeler, a little farther
away, watches the happenings without the mother's knowledge … By the time those
around realise that a film shoot is on, the cast and crew move out! “We've
filmed several such guerrilla shots, as they are called, for Vazhakku Enn:
18/9. Our entry and exits were unannounced and without fanfare. So none
could guess a dream factory was on the job. The camera was hidden in places
such as a push cart, and the crew had headphones to communicate with each
other,” laughs Vijay Milton, the cinematographer of Vazhakku Enn…, which
releases on May 4.
“Balaji Sakthivel is a
very honest director. You understand what I mean?” continues Milton . I don't. “See, he prefers actors to
be as natural as possible before the camera, and instructs me to capture them
in their myriad moods. So I place two or three cameras around to film all the
nuances. And he doesn't insist that his dialogue be used verbatim. Instead
actors are allowed to improvise. ‘Everything about our film should be an honest
representation,' is his stand,” Milton
explains. “And he'll not thrust a scene into the film for the sake of formula.
An irrelevant song sequence or an unwarranted comic act never finds its way
into a Sakthivel film.” Milton
should know. The camera ace has travelled with Sakthivel even earlier for Samurai
and Kaadhal.
But why wasn't he part
of Sakthivel's Kalloori, which followed Kaadhal? “Because I had
just then begun my first directorial venture, Azhagaai Irukkiraai Bayamaai
Irukkiradhu. But now Vazhakku Enn… has brought us together again,”
he says. “A director is like a match box, and the other technicians, like
matchsticks. Unless the box is capable of striking the match, the stick can do
little on its own.” So Sakthivel is a perfect matchbox? “Ha Ha! He is,” he
guffaws.
Is Milton a poet too? His simile makes me think
so; and probably it also has to do with his name. “I am,” he says. Milton 's collection of
poems in Tamil, ‘Kolusugal Paesakkoodum,' is quite popular among young
romantics. “Yeah, the sale of my book increases during the Valentine season,”
he chuckles.
Vazhakku Enn … has taken an unbelievably long time to be
completed – nearly four years. “Finding suitable faces was a major reason,” Milton attempts to
justify. “The actual shoot took only 53 days.”
“We filmed it without
lights then, what do you have up your sleeve now,” Milton asked Balaji, before they began work
on Vazhakku Enn … “‘Let's take filming to the next level. We'll shoot
without a camera,' he said. I was foxed,” Milton
smiles. A mention in The Hindu about the Canon 5D still camera made the
two curious. Milton
tested it extensively using a lens-mount and professional movie lenses to
upgrade it and found the output incredible,” he says.
Each director is
different, and hence for the cameraperson, work-spot experiences are bound to
be different too. “Sure, adaptability is imperative. One director may believe
in larger-than-life images, the other could prefer subtlety. But more than
anything else, a cinematographer shouldn't allow himself to get carried away.
His shots should go with the story, not away from it.” Meaning? “For example,
if a lens man is shooting a sober scene and sees a tree in full bloom near the
spot, he may wish to include it, though it doesn't go with the mood of the
scene. He should curb such instincts,” he says.
Vazhakku Enn … is Milton 's 22 film.
Arulnidhi's Udhayan was his last release. As it didn't create a ripple at the
box office, Milton 's
work went unnoticed. Vana Yuddham and Eppadi Manasukkul Vandhaai are two other
projects for which Milton
has cranked the camera. “They should be out in a month or two,” he says.
Meanwhile, he's hopeful that Vazhakku Enn: 18/9 will repeat the magic of the
Sakthivel-Milton combo, Kaadhal.
Indian Movies shot on Canon 5D / 7D
That Girl in Yellow Boots
Act of Valor
Sanikizhamai Sayankalam 5.30 Mani – Tamil
Under Production:
Busstop
Uday Kiran's Jai Sriram
Mr.7
Uday Kiran's Jai Sriram
Mr.7