How Movies Are Filmed in Nepal. Part 2

Here in Kathmandu the filming of the movie “Dasdgunga,” of which I began to speak in the first of three planned posts about Nepalese films, continues.

I’d like to remind you: in the Nepalese film studio, a couple dozen people and one Bollywood star are filming a thriller based on the mysterious death of several high-standing persons. In 2008 I was fortunate enough to spend several days with them. One year later, after passing censorship, the movie saw light. At the end of the post is an episode that had been cut out by censorship.

And so, yet another day of filming after many hours of working in a closed pavilion that is meant to act as an interrogation room, it was decided to spend it in the home of the director’s friend’s friend. On the second day, the beaten-down Nick and I spend several hours looking for the address which we were given at the studio, we were afraid of being late, yet after arriving we spent a while watching the adjusting of equipment and the set-up of a mini-screen for the camera. The actors, wearing make-up, repeated their parts and worked on the dialogues with the director and his assistant. The operator, as before, smoked a lot and was hostile. I guess that’s just the type of person he is.

The director, in the top left corner, watches over the filming of the scene “Entering the house.” The actors ascended five times. Passersby and the owner of the house kept getting into the image.

The operator demonstrates what has been filmed to the actors playing the main characters and to the director.

Boys are playing next to the building across the street that looks like a dormitory.

The son of the owner of the house. We chatted a little. He is a student in Kathmandu, plans to be a designer. Meanwhile he’s helping his father with a small business, I don’t remember exactly what kind.

The newly-set-up crane occasionally bowed dangerously. A worker was put next to it for safety.

The camera was placed on the crane with pancake-like weights on a balancing foot. It smoothly rolled into the window as the work progressed.

Walking by, a curious worker went up to the viewfinder.

A room on the second floor of a typical Kathmandu building is decorated to look like an office of a politician of moderate importance. There are portraits on the walls, flags everywhere and other attributives. Attention! “Action!” The director speaks English. Everyone freezes in positions that have been taken ahead of time, like in a game of freeze tag. In the middle of the house, the owner offered everyone hot tea which he himself carried around on a tray.

In several days we sort of befriended the guys from the filming crew. Both we and they felt somewhat special.

“Detective” Anup Baral and his assistant are asking the suspected official ticklish questions.

Like last time, after the photographs from the places where events took place, I’m attaching a chunk of the movie, in which you can see what came out at the exit and compare. This episode didn’t pass censorship and didn’t end up making it to the theaters.

 

 

In the next post I will introduce you to the, so to speak, kitchen. This will be a photo report from the production workshops of Nepalese studios: film development, printing, editing, voicing.

Part one

Part three

How Movies Are Filmed in Nepal. Part 1

Here in Kathmandu, local cinema is called Kollywood. The cost of one movie, as I was told by a manager who decided to audition for the part of a tour guide, is 10-50 thousand American dollars. In just a few months, a crew of 7-10 people manages to make a ready product. Detective stories with a lot of killing are well-liked. In one year, the studio makes up to about 70 (!) films. I got to visit and participate in the making of the movie “Dasdgunga,” about the to this day mysterious death of Nepalese leaders.

The story is so fishy that the movie did not pass censorship right away and was approved for showing only in January of this year, one year after its making. In short, the plot is based on the death of two representatives of the top of the government of Nepal: Madan Bhandari and Jivraj Ashrit. In the 1993 incident, they died in a car accident. The driver, Amar Lama, somehow survived, but was killed ten years later. The murderer was not identified.

The main part of a detective with a difficult life is played by the star of Nepalese theater and cinema Anup Baral. The director is the round-faced Manoj Pandit with kind eyes. They say he’s also pretty famous.

Meanwhile, we look under the cut at a series of 35 photographs with commentary.

Make-up took over an hour. Mustaches got combed, faces got powdered and after three hours of waiting for lights to be ready, filming began. I included the best picture from this period in the “The Culture of Modern Nepal” series.

An extra playing a guard watches as the workers set the lights.

Meanwhile, a scene was being filmed in the hallway. A driver is being led to be interrogated. The blinding light of a projector hits the characters in their backs.

Most of the first day was spent on setting the lights.

The workers of the studio spent over four hours covering, setting and adjusting do-it-yourself reflectors made from rags, white panels and mirrors.

Speaking of the necessity of a professional set, lighting equipment and super-expensive lenses and cameras. Any available resource is used in Kollywood. The room was whitened in one day, rags, mirrors and ropes were brought from storage. The intensity of the projectors’ light is set using black discs with a hole in the center.

A static stage, the set is ready. We are witnessing an interrogation in the basement of a Nepalese security service.

Before starting to film, the director and the actors discuss the details.

The director accentuates the attention on something of moderate importance.

The equipment, as you can see, isn’t cheap. The camera, no matter what, is rented, and there’s a special person designated to watch it. One films, another controls, the third watches over so that the camera doesn’t get dropped.

The operator seemed like a nervous person, smokes one after another.  There is something in his position that opposes the power of the director.

The detective wearing a hat strictly gazes into the eyes of the suspect. They sit close to each other, so their eyes are a bit crossed. On the chair with an umbrella during the filming sits the suspected Amar Lama and sweats.

The director and operator occasionally check how the light falls on the faces of the actors. Sometimes they asked me to show them what the photographs looked like: sometimes the shadows were too rough, sometimes there was too much light.

The terrifyingly quiet partner of the main character. At some point, judging by the circumstances, they attempted to play bad cop/good cop. It didn’t really work, the suspect laughed a couple of times.

I don’t know why they gave the main character of Asian decent, who doesn’t have very abundant facial hair, a stupid mustache. But a special person adjusted it almost every other set.

The director’s assistant. Anup Baral’s companion at the teaching workshop. A sweet person with pretty decent English.

Outside of the scene, of course, you have to sit quietly and wait for it to end.

The view of the set.

In my search of an interesting angle I climbed to the top level using a rocky ladder. The director is explaining something to Anup.

The director, Manoj Pandit.

The actor playing the main part, Anup Baral.

Dayahang Rai, the actor playing a secondary character, the driver Amar Lama at the interrogation.

It’s normal to smoke in the police station basement, there’s nothing to explain here.

The detective’s assistant repeats the text. He did not have many words. Mainly he goggled his eyes.

The person who controls the operator’s work. As you can tell, he wears the headwear of a brahman and not all work can be done by him.

Working on the key moments with the director.

Since you scrolled through to the end, you will probably be interested in finding out a bit more.

You will recognize some scenes right away. Some of the phrases were repeated so many times during filming that even today, a year and a half later, they seem familiar to me.

The guys and I spent several days with the crew. Pasha (r0ver) ended up with a short but good combined report. In my remaining posts from this series you will see the second day of the filming process and the dungeons of the film studio where development, printing, editing, voicing and everything else without which a movie can’t happen take place.

Part two

Part three

Сбор голубики: ешь сколько сможешь, уноси сколько соберёшь

Здесь в нескольких километрах от города-сателлита Гамильтона мы на обратном пути из Раглана заскочили на ферму голубики (у нас в Амурской области её называют «голубицей»).

Заплатив десяток новозеландских долларов в офисе компании мы получили карту с описанием того, как проехать к «поляне» и вёдра для сбора. Принцип достаточно прост: ешьте сколько сможете, собирайте сколько хотите — на обратному пути взвесите, расплатитесь. Как минимум в два раза дешевле, чем в супермаркете получается, не считая съеденных килограммов.

В продолжении этого недлинного поста несколько аппетитных и не очень фотографий, которые напоминают о лете сегодня, когда вместе с наводнениями в Новую Зеландию пришла осень.

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Пока вы там митингуете

Здесь в Хелена Бэй (Helena Bay), что в регионе на севере Северного острова под названием «Bay of Islands», русский стальной магнат Александр Абрамов строит, возможно, самый дорогой особняк в нашем маленьком островном государстве.

Личное состояние Александра по оценкам журнала Форбс составляет около 7,5 миллиардов долларов. Это очень много денег, как мне кажется. На полмиллиарда больше, чем у преждевременно ушедшего от нас лидера церкви Apple Стива Джобса.

Постройка и обустройство самого дорогого в стране частного жилого комплеса оценивается в 40 миллионов долларов. Предыдущая сделка подобного масштаба состоялась с участием султана Брунея. Ему когда-то продали оч. приличную недвижимость в Окленде за 35 миллионов. Говорят, султану наскучила новозеландская резиденция и брунейские авиалинии перестали сюда летать, новозеландцам стало сложнее в финансовом плане выбираться в Юго-восточную Азию.

В продолжении поста фотографии с комментариями.

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Где вы, генераторы идей? Стартап стучится в двери.

Здесь в Окленде мы в своей небольшой компании Sliday решили занять свободное время в апреле. Если у вас есть суперидея о создании суперпопулярного мобильного приложения и небольшой свободный капитал, но вы не умеете программировать или разрабатывать дизайны — вам к нам.

Скооперировавшись с генератором идеи по схеме «39% вложил, 31% от прибыли получил», мы готовы сообща создать iPhone/Andorid приложение. Порядок вложений — до 10 000 USD. Меньше — лучше, была бы идея, от которой бриллиантовый дым по углам, и мурашки по коже, мол, как же мы раньше не додумались!

Быстрый пример для тех, кто ленится считать: при стоимости разработки проекта $1000 и при прибыли $10000. Автор идеи вложит $390 и получит $3100.

В штате нашей компании есть программисты и дизайнеры: мы «заменеджерим», нарисуем и закодим. В процессе сотрудничества будем прозрачно показывать совладельцу идеи/инвестору финансовую составляющую: чеки из банка об оплате труда задействованных сотрудников, логин-пароль к панели магазина приложений, куда прибыль поступает. По вашему желанию будем транслировать процесс в блогах Хабра.

Приветствуются любые идеи. Мы выберем ту, что покажется интересной, подпишем соглашение и начнём работать.

Важный нюанс: ориентируемся на англоязычный рынок, не горим делать игры.

Присылайте, пожалуйста, ваши предложения мне на почту. Уточняйте детали в комментариях. Интересно, что из этого получится.