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Weekly Intent - Aditi Nadkarni

Intent - April 07, 2007

Aditi Nadkarni

When Silence Was Silver
I have often found myself hanging from the beams of a lofty ceiling or looking over a mountain top at the sprawling arms of a road.

I have felt the warmth of a single candle flame and imbibed the golden hues that come off its light without being anywhere near it. Fall has set ablaze a forest in the neutrality of black and white and a deer has been rooted mid-stride with its ear to the distant rustle that only he and I can hear. Even a stone has at times willingly come to life in a single frame. My imagination has then indulgently followed the frenzied momentum of unassisted, raw human emotion and returned with the gifts of rich perspective. When such slideshows and more, entice me into their many dimensional journeys, I have made my own thoughts, dialogues and background scores as visions told me their stories. Such is the magic of silent films.

Sometimes refered to as the "Age Of The Silver Screen" this glorious chapter in the history of cinema blended two fundamental aspects of entertainment: story-telling and photography. There was a time when by a mere look, an actor evoked the very response that filmmakers now valiantly attempt to draw out of audiences world-wide. The keys of a piano aroused a gamut of emotions; curiosity, fear, drama, sorrow and of course there were the few merry notes of joy that added life to a tale. It is with good reason that beauty was defined then by the facial features, which so smoothly extracted such complicated moods.

Years later we now get to witness the age of home theatre systems pouring heated exchanges accompanied by soulful songs into our living rooms. I sometimes picture our senses scattered in different directions, as blaring music, stunning visual effects and dramatic dialogues each demand, a share of our enraptured psyches.

Silent Film Monkey

In 1896 India saw the advent of stories brought to life. Slowly the lit mouth of a purring projector transported mythology and regal tales to the eager eyes of an audience that had the vital creativity to cultivate the art beholded and the abundant culture from which to choose its many stories.

I have always been in support of beautifully crafted language. In fact the film industry of a nation is responsible for colorful phrases and tag lines that define a generation. In India, the popular 'Bambaiyya' slang has been heavily influenced by films and brings rhythm to street-colloquy. Nonetheless, it is awe-inspiring to chronicle a time in the history of an art that braces the largest film industry in the world, when emotion and imagery were the only languages one needed to comprehend. Worthy of mention is India’s earliest silent film, the classic Raja Harishchandra, that was released in 1913 and directed by Dada Saheb Phalke, the father of Indian cinema.

Recently, Shiraz, a silent film made in 1928 was screened at a San Francisco Film Festival and upon reading the story all I could infer was that there was a time in Indian filmmaking when story-telling took precedence over glamor by quite a few notches. To the pioneers of the movie industry, who first made entertainment palpable enough to be conveyed and to those, who through the art of simple visual stimuli reached out to audiences irrespective of language, I dedicate my very first entry on Intent blog.

About me: I have always believed that diversity is the spice of life and hence flavored my own with quite a generous hand. I am a pharmacist, a cancer researcher, an international studies counselor, a photographer, a poet, a movie reviewer and a cook (whew!). Additionally, I am an author for Desicritics.org.

I audit poetry workshops, write short stories and film scripts and will soon be reading my work at a writing festival in Ohio. I will be visiting India shortly to start the groundwork for a documentary film project highlighting the work of NGOs that aid the street children of Bombay.

In science, I have managed to find a parallel for creativity. Artists and scientists both regard the intricacies and experiences of the universe with a sense of awe, constantly attempting to capture details with words, visual expression or observations. Moreover, neither artists nor scientists are bound by dogma in their exploits.

I believe that we achieve distinction not just by our material accomplishments but more so by our unique points of view, and writing has given me a viable way of expressing my own.

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Posted by Intent at April 7, 2007 10:15 PM

Comments

Welcome to IB, Aditi!

This is a special day and I am up and awake to attend to
the sun's rising as the moon, Jupiter and Mars
are finishing their evening waltz across the sky.

The film is now black and white as it should be at night.
As the ray's of light begin to make their descent to the lowly earth,
one by one the creatures thereof stir from their slumber.

I am as old as the night and younger than yesterday.
Stiff joints felt and eyes glued shut by the sands of Time
remind me of the temporary predicament of human life.

All is quiet in my neck of the woods
and the silence behind it all
is heard by my ears,
noticed by my soul,
and made welcome,
thanks to Spirit.

Thank You Keith! Love the poem :)

When Silence Was Silver
But Speech Was Divine

I believe sound also has its own merits provided filmmakers choose to make good use of it

Wonderful read, Aditi.... life is so amazing, and I stand in awe of all your accomplishments!!

with loving kindness,
North


Inspiration from music.
Music coming from who knows where.


Nigel Kennedy, Vivaldi - Spring III...


Musician meditation cliff
Nowhere flow of life
Notes vibrating string
Through body casing.


Evgeny Kissin plays Johann Strauss - Fledermaus op.56...

Come to think of my very early childhood of the silver screen..picture this; myself, my sister 11 months elder; and often one or up to 3 friends.

WE loved chaplin silence movies!! We'd sit right up front row, and adlib. It was hilarious!! We often got away with our roaring laughter, as we'd often be the only ones watching, ergo spending money on sweet drinks and sweet-eats; and who doesn't drool from the smell and taste of theatre popcorn with butter?!!

Great topic Aditi, because for myself; the big screen instilled a great imagination; to hear songs to the silent movies, which existed only in my own head; or, to hear words, to the silent lips; which mine would whisper...

--everything based on visual perception, emotional digestion, and mental maturity... lol We were a romantic group of girls, and memories are flooding my banks...

thankyou for this flood, which came to me, after pondering your topic!! : )

with loving kindness,
North

Oh, I must also make mention, that all of us girls, did our best "accent" impressionario's during these silent films...like french, english(UK)Italian..

life is one great big giant screen to the universe; and we, are the characters, the dramatic one's.

and thank goodness for this; because life would be slow, and seemingly unmoving--without drama.

Hi North,

Glad to know that my article evoked some pleasant nostalgia for you....it is always wonderful to go down memory lane. A film that integrates the concept of childhood bliss and silent movies is the Oscar nominated 'More' by Mark Osborne. It is a short, animated film with a very profound message; it is somehow enlightening and wistful all at the same time. Beautiful! You can watch it on this link:

http://www.gethappy.com/watchmore.html

If you are a cinema buff, I recommend that you check out my personal blog (Click on my profile name). I review movies irrespective of language/ year of release.

I had the pleasure of checking out your visually delightful blog. Great designs!

Best, Aditi

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