Oscar entry "Chhello Show" hits theatres, makers list challenges to make "a film about films"

Ahmedabad | Friday | 14th October, 2022

Summary:

Ahmedabad, Oct 14 (PTI) As Gujarati film "Chhello Show" (Last Film Show), India"s official entry for the Oscars 2023, arrived in theatres on Friday, its writer-director Pan Nalin recalled how the project was born out of one of his visits to Amreli to meet his father when he learnt about a cinema projectionist eking out a living by selling vegetables.

"Chhello Show", which will represent India in the best international feature film category at the Oscars, is set in rural Gujarat and follows the story of a nine-year-old boy who begins a lifelong love affair with cinema when he bribes his way into a rundown movie palace and spends a summer watching movies from the projection booth.

Talking to reporters here, Nalin spoke out challenges that came in the way of shooting the film in natural locations in Amreli, including encounters with lions and leopards, and the process to find the lead character played by a child actor, Bhavin Rabari, that made them go through 3,000 auditions.

Amreli district houses parts of the Gir National Park and Wildlife Sanctuary.

During his visit to Amreli around a decade back, Nalin"s father told him about Mohammad Bhai, a cinema projector with whom he had struck a close companionship in his childhood due to his own obsession with cinema.

Nalin was born in Amreli district where most of the film has been shot.

"When I met Mohammad Bhai, he was selling vegetables on a pushcart.

I was really really touched by what happened to him.

This man spent his entire life in projection rooms talking about cinema," said the filmmaker who has helmed award-winning movies like "Samsara", "Valley of Flowers" and "Angry Indian Goddesses".

Hundreds of mechanical projector operators like him went out of job when movies went digital because they lacked knowledge of English and computers, Nalin said.

Mohammad Bhai"s story together with his own childhood experience while growing up in villages around Dhari in Amreli district and his obsession with cinema which led him to often skip school to watch films became the main plot of the Oscar-bound film, he said.

Sharing challenges in shooting the film, Nalin recalled how the cast and crew encountered lions and leopards.

"We were shooting in locations in Sasan Gir where lions used to come, and we had many close encounters (with wild animals).

There were also leopard attacks in the region.

When we were shooting in Samay"s house (actor Bhavin Rabari), two people were killed by a big cat.