Manishi
Rodduna Paddaadu
by Darina
poye daanayya
It
finally happened. The industry has at last lived to see
the day when the very source and the means of its existence,
the producer, wanted to take a plunge into the proverbial
and a literal cesspool and end his life. After a spate of
incidents that involved farmers committing suicides, unable
to handle the pressures of every day life and incapable
of coping up with the copious amounts of debts, and the
simple interests on them compounding to the already existing
miseries, here is a start to a similar script involving
pressures, debts and interests, leading to a similar conclusion
following a similar fate, in a totally different arena.
It wasn't that long ago, when the producer was on the other
end of the receiving stick, playing the evil one, troubling,
hassling and haggling everyone that he could play around
with, withholding payments, reneging promises and shortchanging
people. Though nobody has ever seen the meteoric rise of
the producer, his fall from the grace and good-books has
become quite a public spectacle, winning a little sympathy
and a lot of ill-will.
A
simple question - why would anyone want to undertake an
operation that would involve drawing out meticulous plans,
making sure the plans are carried out in the way they were
laid out, assemble a team that would help him realize his
dreams, make a concerted effort to optimize the output of
every individual member of the team, and finally deliver
the product that is both personally satisfying and universally
accepted and respected? As lofty and as complex as this
mission statement sounds, the answer is quite simple - glory
of rewards or want of riches, and in some rare cases, both.
Now let the question be modified to reflect the real world
- why would anyone want to undertake an operation that is
born out of pure whim or blinding passion, finding like
minded people who share the same insanity, assembling a
team that is either popular or available whichever is cheaper,
deal with the every second headaches involving delays and
egos, and finally deliver a product that he hopes would
give him enough seed money to start his next venture and
repeat the above all over again? As troublesome as the revamped
statement reads, the answer, this time again, is quite simple
and very much like the previous reply - claim to fame or
route to riches, and in almost all the cases, both.
What
does the producer actually do before, during of after the
writer comes up with the skeleton, the background technicians
add meat to the bone, the actors enhance the likeability
factor, the director delivers a movie making a cohesive
unit out of all these different elements? Besides the obvious
answer that he produces and delivers everything (at least,
most of everything) that is needed by the different functioning
units within his team into the making of the movie, the
producer's job is to manage the show, keeping a cautious
eye on what is coming in and what is going out. In effect,
he is a gatekeeper, first and foremost. Checks and balances,
tallies and differences, credits and debits is his language.
How much does it cost, can it be completely avoided, can
it be done cheaper, is his sequence of operations. As long
as the producer restricts himself to the production side
of the game, the focus of his vision becomes clearer and
thereby the desired results become achievable. Put money,
play smart, make money, put money, play smart... the game
could go on uninterrupted, with minimal setbacks, for a
longer time. Again, as with everything, real life follows
a different script.
What
happens when a producer who had a couple of early successes
following the earlier roadmap, now goes for the glory and
tries to make everything on his own? The successes have
shown him how to meddle with scripts, the successes have
taught him how to herd the resources and men along his path,
the successes have led to him to believe that he can have
the cake and eat it too. If history is any indication, great
many producers fell into the showmanship trap only to have
production houses, productions and eventually their careers
ruined. However ruthless and heartless it may sound, for
the amount of perspiration, agony and desperation that the
producer has to put up with while going through each step
in the production, glory and riches are in most cases, mutually
exclusive. Either go for the glory and not worry about the
riches, a la Usha Kiron, or follow the money and not concern
about the glory, a la Suresh. If glory meets money midway
or if money finds fame along the way, then icing is all
the much the better. All that he needs to do is to get his
priorities right and choose the sides. Much before the scripts
are written, much before the stories are told and much before
the production even commences, toss the coin, O poor producer!
anuvugaani
chOTa adhikulamanaraadu
Dabbu peTTitinanna Daabu madi nunDaraadu
keerti kanDooti paerlalO teeruchuKovayaa
viSwadaabhiraama vinave sinee seema
-
Daarinapoye Dannayya
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