Anupam Barvé wrote to me through my website on May 19th this year.
Hello Amitav,
Warm Regards
Anupam Barvé
This was my response:
Dear Anupam
Thank you for this wonderful letter! I am really glad to hear of your long-standing interest in the Shadow Lines: it is evident that the book means a lot to you (which is very heartwarming for me).
‘The Hungry Tide’ has been optioned by two Delhi based producers, Shernaz Italia and Freny Khodaiji. They now have an excellent screenplay for it too. ”The Calcutta Chromosome’ has also been optioned – by the Italian production company that made ‘Gomorrah’.
‘The Shadow Lines’ however is not under option, and I would be glad to talk to you about it. But I should warn you straight away that my film rights are dealt with by my literary agent in New York (I feel I should tell you this, because I’ve noticed that some Indian film-makers are averse to dealing with agents and the like).
If you would like to take this further I would be glad to meet with you in London. They are going to keep me quite busy while I am there, but I could see you on Sunday, June 5 in the late afternoon. Or else before the Asia Soc event on June 8 – they have asked me to be there for an early soundcheck so I’ll have a little time before the start.
With my best wishes
Amitav
Shortly after this exchange, I went to London for the release of River of Smoke. I met with Anupam during my stay and was enormously impressed by his enthusiasm his encyclopaedic knowledge of film-making. I am glad to announce that we recently signed a contract giving him an option on The Shadow Lines.
Last week Anupam sent me a short bio and a synopsis of 44, Lymington Road, the script he wrote with Vaibhav Abnave. They are posted below.
Anupam Barve is a film maker from Pune, India currently based in London. After a brief detour to science college, he opted to complete a graduation in Performing Arts(Dramatics). Before moving to London to pursue a career in Film Direction, he also spent a few years doing drama, making documentaries and running an environmental organisation. He is currently teaching on the University of Westminster’s MA in Directing: Film and TV course in London. His most recent Short Film- ‘Fresh Suicide’ has been very successful at various festivals and competitions all over, including a nomination for the ‘Golden Palm Tree Award’ at the 42nd International Film Festival of India and a special screening at the 13th London Asian Film Festival 2011, amongst others. Anupam is currently in development of future film projects.
Film Synopsis
44, Lymington Road
“….a place doesn’t merely exist… it has to be invented in one’s imagination…”
Ghosh, A. The Shadow Lines (p.21).
?
Migration implies one’s encounter with the alien, the unknown, the unseen.
Yet when one migrates from a past colony to a current metropolis, a land that promises
opportunities, one is already filled with the anticipation and intense desire of what one
is going to encounter. A lot of the so-called unseen and unknown has already been
constructed essentially within one’s imagination. The actual physical encounter with
the unseen merely completes the act of seeing/knowing something or some place,
thus, becoming an encounter with one’s inner self. Migration, ironically thus, instead
of uprooting the postcolonial subject from the homeland, fulfills its desire of actually
encountering one’s invented and intensely desired inner landscapes. It is this inventive
imagination of us humans which makes even the alien an integral, indivisible past of
one’s self.
44, Lymington Road, a short film, tells the story of how one invents any place in
his imagination without ever visiting it. The protagonist, a young filmmaker from Pune
(India) is an avid fan of Amitav Ghosh’s writing and has passionately read The Shadow
Lines over and over again. 44, Lymington Road in West Hampstead, London is not just a
place that merely exists, it’s a mystery, a myth and an invented reality which also exists
in the imagination of the anonymous protagonist in the novel, who has already ‘seen’
this place through his uncle, Tridib’s, eyes, who has stayed in this place as a child and
has absorbed the minutest of its details. Through Tridib’s passionate recounting of 44,
Lymington Road and the other places around it- Mill Lane, Sumatra Road, West End
Lane etc., the protagonist in the novel as well as the readers, have invented each and
every corner of these places in their imagination
Our protagonist has now gotten an opportunity to come to London and pursue further
education in film making. He is haunted by the idea of searching for the actual place
in present day London. In his imagination he has already visited the place twice before
through the book, firstly through Tridib and secondly when the protagonist of the novel
visits it as a young man coming to London for education himself. One day he sets out to
actually look for the place, carrying a small digital film camera with him. As he steps out
of West Hampstead station, he notices a stranger, an English woman in her mid thirties
sitting in a roadside café by herself. The woman strongly reminds our protagonist of
May, Tridib’s love and one of the enigmatic female leads from The Shadow Lines. He
goes and tries to start a conversation with her. As their dialogue unfolds, she is intrigued
by the myth of 44, Lymington Road and they decide to step out of the café. As she starts
guiding him through all the places in the neighborhood that he refers from the novel, she
is astonished by how much the young man already knows without ever having been there.
The film juxtaposes their walk through the West Hampstead neighborhood of
today with the images of the same locality in two different visual textures from two
different time periods from the book, as imagined by our protagonist. The present,
the memory, the imagination and the intense anticipation of the actual encounter
all seamlessly gets interwoven in to each other in the narrative of the film. As the
narrative progresses we experience our protagonist’s excitement about shooting his
actual encounter with the place of his imagination but when they actually hit the place
the protagonist goes quiet. He decides to switch off his camera before entering 44,
Lymington Road. He wants to preserve the mystery of the place, which he believes each
reader of The Shadow Lines has to invent for himself. To each his own 44, Lymington
Road.
Shadow lines was a personal favourite of mine, till your other books namely hungry tide, glass palace and shadow lines eclipsed it.
I couldn’t understand Calcutta chromosome, hopefully the movie will help me understand the book
best wishes
That is such good news – may we have a spate of Ghosh films in the very near future!!!
I need a guiding book for The shadow lines.. can anyone help me to know
The shadow Lines is book which live in my memories always .Tridib and Tha’mma are like person who as my neigbour… its real excellent ….waiting eagerly to watch my imagin character in movie in future!!!