|
WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
An interview with Deepa Mehta, director of Earth
"If people want to separate they should understand what
it would really mean"
By Richard Phillips
6 August 1999
Use
this version to print
Indian-born director
Deepa Mehta spoke with Richard Phillips last month following her
attendance at the Melbourne International Film Festival. The festival,
like its Sydney counterpart, screened Earth, Mehta's latest
work. The film, based on the novel Cracking India by Bapsi
Sidhwa, deals with the 1947 partition of India, as witnessed by
a child. Earth will be released world-wide in mid-September
with Australian screenings beginning in Melbourne on September
16 and Sydney showings sometime in October.
Deepa Mehta began her filmmaking career after she immigrated
to Canada in 1973. She started writing scripts for children's
films before moving into television work as an editor, producer
and director. In 1985, she directed Travelling Light, a
one-hour television documentary on Dilip Mehta, a world-renowned
photographer, and in 1987 produced and co-directed the television
film Martha, Ruth & Edie. In 1990 Mehta made her feature
film debut with Sam and Me, a poignant story set in Canada
about a friendship between an Indian immigrant and an elderly
Jewish man. The widely-acclaimed film was followed in 1994 by
Camilla, starring Jessica Tandy and Bridget Fonda.
Mehta's third feature, Fire, produced in 1996, tells
the story of two lower middle class Indian women, both trapped
in arranged marriages, who form a lesbian relationship. The movie,
which is set in contemporary New Delhi, provoked hostile demonstrations
by Hindu fundamentalists who attempted to force the government
to ban the film. Screenings were stopped in several cities and
the film was resubmitted to the Indian censorship board. The Indian
censorship board eventually re-released the film uncut.
Mehta's latest feature, Earth, is a moving account of
the British partition of India in August 1947 into a Muslim-controlled
Pakistan and a Hindu-dominated India (see link to film review
below). At least 11 million peopleMuslims, Hindus, Sikhs
and otherswere driven out of their homes. Some reports put
the death toll from communalist pogroms and rioting at one million.
The greatest numbers were killed in Punjab, which was split in
two. Tens of thousands died in weeks of carnage. Partition was
organised by the British Labour government with the support and
collaboration of the Muslim League and the Indian Congress Party.
Richard Phillips: Before talking about Earth,
can we discuss Fire? You said in one interview that nothing
had prepared you for the response to this film in India. Can you
elaborate?
Deepa Mehta: We all knew that Fire would perhaps
be a contentious film in India and so when it went through the
censor without one cut we were very heartened. Our censor boards
are not like yours, or the North American censors. They just don't
cut things here and there because of violence or sex; they are
sort of moral guardians. So for them to have passed Fire
without one cut was very heartening. We thought this is good,
things are becoming very liberal.
When it opened in India, and it was opened at 40 cities I think,
it did really well. The response was amazing and it was played
for three weeks before the controversy started. So in the period
between the censorship, as well as the fact that it was doing
well at the box office, and the favourable reviews from the critics,
I thought that everything was fine and I could move on to the
next project.
Within two days of me saying this, the s--t hit the fan. There
were demonstrations and protests, all sorts of things started
happening. I suppose I was a little naive in thinking that because
it had screened without any problems for three weeks everything
would be all right. But I am not a politician, I am a filmmaker,
and although you should be able to distance yourself from your
own work and be objective about it, there is so much of your own
personal emotions and involvement put into a film and so I was
shocked.
There were protests against Fire, there were demonstrations
for it and there were editorials, both for and against. There
was a mobilisation of the women's movement and a great mobilisation
of people for freedom of expression. And so although the fundamentalists
started the protests, the whole thing took off and became more
than the film. Fire became a much larger issuea springboard
for a dialogue about the fact that women in India don't have choices
and how dare anybody tell them what they should watch and what
they should not. Or what is morally right for them, and what is
not. So it started a huge debate in India.
The government really didn't know what to do about the protests
so they banned the film in Bombay and Delhi, the two major cities,
and then sent it back to the censors to be reviewed with the possibility
that they may make some cuts. Much to the censor board's credit
they said no, they would not cut it and it played throughout India,
including in Bombay and Delhi.
RP: What was the response of Shiv Sena and other Hindu
fundamentalists to the censor's decision?
DM: They've just kept quiet and have effectively disappeared
from the scene on this issue. It's like when a bully meets a strong
opposition, they just cower. The opposition to these elements,
and in support of Fire, was very widespread. It was not
only the so-called intellectuals, but also housewives and students.
All sorts of people spoke out.
RP: You've said that although Fire deals with
the problems facing Indian women, every character in the film
is a victim of society's rules and regulations. Could you explain?
DM: Fire is about particular individuals, but
it is also a universal question, not unlike Earth. At the
moment I am reading Luis Buñuel's autobiography; it's called
My Last Sigh. Buñuel talks about the importance
of characters being rooted to a place. He says that any character
that is honest and rooted to a place immediately becomes universal
because human emotions are universal. I think this is true.
Every society or traditional value, whether in the east or
the west, has an incredible impact on human behaviour. So everybody
in Fire the women, the menconfront these problems.
The younger man in Fire really wants to get married to
a Chinese girl. She doesn't want to marry him. He doesn't want
to be in a joint business, but this is the way things are dictated.
And so the complex pressures of society impose on all the characters.
RP: Can you provide some background to Earth why
you made the film and why you think there have been so few films
made by western filmmakers about the partition of India?
DM: The partition of India was like a Holocaust for
us and I grew up hearing many stories about this terrible event.
Naturally I was attracted to this subject.
I have my own theory about why there has been such a silence
about this tragedy by western filmmakers, and it is just a theory.
I think it is bound up with a number of attitudes that prevail
in the western countries about India. Obviously I am not including
everybody in this generalisation, there are many exceptions, but
there are several conceptions that prevail in the west about India.
There is firstly the spiritual Indiaa place where you go
and find nirvana. Secondly, there is the conception that India
is entirely poverty stricken, with a permanent kind of begging
bowl attitude. There is the India of Maharajas, princes and queens,
and the India that comes from nostalgia for the Raj. And there
is always the prevailing pressure that people should feel superior
to some other place: look how bad India is with all the beggars,
aren't we lucky to be better off.
It is uncomfortable and difficult for some filmmakers to produce
works that destroy these perceptions. India brings specifically
fixed images in many western minds, and the minute you start de-exoticising
that, you have you deal with Indians as real people, and there
is a pressure not to do that.
Finally, there are many dark political questions about partition
that the British establishment doesn't want brought to light.
When you know the real history of partition and the responsibility
that lands in the laps of the British, obviously you understand
why it is a very uncomfortable subject for them. Generally the
response there has been to romanticise Gandhi and Lord Mountbatten.
This is done to such a degree that I find it quite nauseous.
RP: Earth is a direct statement against nationalism
and separatism, not just in India, but everywhere. Could you comment?
DM: Oh yes, it certainly was. Of course Earth
for me was a very particular film in that it deals with the partition
into India and Pakistan by the British, but also it has that universal
resonance. Whether you look at Kosovo, Ireland, in fact, whatever
country has been colonised, wherever there has been some kind
of separatism, division, or so-called ethnic cleansing, 50 years
later there are still all the same problems. In fact the situation
is always worse than before the division.
RP: Could you explain the situation that confronted
your family during partition?
DM: My father and his brothers were brought up in Lahore
and they faced tremendous difficulties. They had to leave their
family home. They never saw their friends again and my father
never saw his Muslim friends again. I grew up hearing about all
the horror stories of partition, as did a lot of people who were
from the Punjab, the area most affected. In fact, if you ask anybody
from the Punjab today, and we are talking about third generation,
what does 1947 mean to you, they will never say the independence
of India. They all say the partition of India. Every family member
has some horror story to tell. It was a Holocaust.
RP: At the question and answer session after the screening
of Earth in Melbourne someone made a statement that Muslims
and Hindus had their own homeland, why shouldn't the Sikhs? You
rejected this. Could you comment?
DM: Either we decide that we want to be a part of a
single united country or we divide up on the basis of religion.
If the last course is taken, the basis for division will become
narrower, narrower and narrower. It might appease one's ego for
the moment, but to follow such a course would be a disaster. All
the same problems would remain and the divisions would never end.
The Sikhs might want a homeland, tomorrow the people of South
India will want one, and it will carry on and on. And we know
that it doesn't work.
There are certain lessons that have to be learnt from history.
When we don't learn those lessons then what is the point of recording
history?
The issue of separation comes down to a socio-economic platform
where religious fervour is used, or misused, by politicians for
their own ends. Today it is basically the dollar that drives the
demands for separation. The British first perfected it through
the method of divide and rule. Today it is a similar kind colonialism
except the multinational corporations are doing it. And what is
happening in the Balkans is a horrible example of it.
Film is a powerful medium and my hope is that Earth will
produce a dialogue and force people to think more deeply about
the cost of such divisions. If people want to separate they should
understand what it would really mean. I know that there will be
some dialogue or some debate. I hope that Earth will put
this into perspective. I think I have made a film that shows the
futility of sectarian war, a film that is anti-war.
RP: Earth personalises the partition. Could you
explain the complexities of personalising the political?
DM: First of all I have to be engaged personally on
an emotional level with all my characters. To make epic sweeps
and have politicians representing the anguish that the ordinary
people went through is not for me. I wanted to tell this really
large story from the standpoint of an intimate group of friends
from different ethnic groups and trace out the process of partition
through them. The difficulty for me was to keep a balance between
the intimate and the epic, and to do that you must always give
your characters the power to represent a point of view and not
be scared of doing that. You have to trust your characters.
RP: What were some of the more memorable moments in
making Earth?
DM: There were so many. I was amazed at how much the
film engaged me emotionally every day. This was a revelation.
As you know we don't shoot linearly, we shoot according to the
schedule. But whichever scene we shot, it affected me very deeply
because I know that all this happened. Whether it was the love
scene, the train scene, or little Lenny saying it is my birthday
and everybody is too busy reading the newspapers or the little
boy saying, "my mother was raped and do you want to play
marbles?" All these scenes had a profound effect on me.
I couldn't divorce myself from the pain that Lenny, or Bapsi
[author of Cracking India], or the ordinary people went
through and then you would get up in the morning and read the
newspapers about how nuclear-armed India and Pakistan were getting
ready to fight again. Suddenly everything we were doing in the
film was in context. It was very eerie.
Earth was also a period of self-exploration for me,
if you like. I got to know a lot about myself and I also recognised
that there is so much more to learn. It was not just a question
of making an anti-war film, but a constant challenge.
RP: You have no formal training in filmmaking. Who are
the directors that have most influenced you?
DM: There are a quite a number but there is one group
of great masters. There is Satyajit Ray whose work has played
an enormous part in my appreciation for the cinema. I regard him
as one of the most lyrical and humanist filmmakers of the century.
I also admire Mizoguchi, Ozu, Vittorio de Sica, as great masters.
There are three contemporary directors that immediately come
to mind whom I enjoy and am inspired by. I think Emir Kusturica
is brilliant, and one of my favourite films of all time is Time
of the Gypsies. I like the fact that he doesn't flee from
an emotion, he embraces it fully. He doesn't seem to give a damn
about how his films will be perceived. If he wants to be irreverent
he will be. I like the use of music in his films, I love the heart
of his films and they always carry a very strong political message.
I also like Pedro Almadovar very muchI like his black humourand
I like Peter Weir, because he has managed to keep his integrity
as a director while making his films very accessible. That I admire
enormously. I am sure I could go on at length.
RP: Can you provide us with information about your next
film, Water, the third movie in your trilogy?
DM: I am in pre-production right now and we start shooting
on November 1 in Varanasi, which is our holy city, our Mecca or
Jerusalem if you will. It is on the banks of the Ganges, about
2,000 years old, and it is a city of temples. The film is set
in the 1930s and is about the politics of religion and its impact
on ordinary people. So Fire was about the politics of sexuality,
I guess. Earth is about the politics of nationalism and
Water about the politics of religion.
See Also:
Earth, written and directed
by Deepa Mehta
One of this century's human tragedies, as witnessed by a child
[21 July 1999]
It All Starts Today:
A film by Bertrand Tavernier, starring Philippe Torreton and
Maria Pitarresi
A work of authenticity, artistic substance and optimism
[10 July 1999]
An interview with Bertrand
Tavernier
[10 July 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |