
Mehra8217;s compliment kind of makes up for the flak Bhansali and Pradhan got for their overindulgent techniques in Devdas. 8216;8216;I put glitter on the trees to achieve the effect of fireflies. When the sun shines after rain, water drops on leaves glow. I wanted to capture that effect for the song,8217;8217; reminisces the 40-something.
For Pradhan special effects like those have nothing to do with Computer Generated Imagery. Remember the painted backdrop of the song Kuch Na Kaho in Vidhu Vinod Chopra8217;s 1942-A Love Story? Or the sensuous lighting in the love-making sequence in Chopra8217;s Parinda?
Pradhan8217;s camera work in RDB is comparatively subtle. He8217;s got the grammar of his craft8212;right from the hues, palette, lighting, camera speed and movement8212;down pat. But the most defining visual aspect of RDB is the way he shot sequences of the freedom movement. 8216;8216;Most people would8217;ve shot it in sepia tones. I visualised the scenes as if they were old black and white photographs that have turned yellow with time,8217;8217; he explains.
While growing up in Kalimpong, West Bengal, Pradhan never harboured any ambition of becoming a cinematographer. His father had a photo studio and he wanted to become a still photographer. The film camera first fascinated him at Pune8217;s Film and Television Institute of India FTII. That8217;s also where he met Chopra. Their long association resulted in trademark Chopra-Pradhan frames in Khamosh, Parinda, 1942-A Love Story and Mission Kashmir. 8216;8216;Vinod is a visually conscious director and when we work, our suggestions just merge,8217;8217; he says.
Pradhan rues missing out on Chopra8217;s forthcoming Eklavya. His involvement with RBD meant he couldn8217;t focus on yet another epic, and so it8217;s the first time Chopra is working without Pradhan8217;s lens. 8216;8216;I sincerely hope he misses me,8217;8217; Pradhan chuckles.
Curiously enough, since Pradhan graduated from FTII in 1975, he has shot only 20 films. After RDB, he has signed two films: Nanhe Jaisalmer and Siddharth Raj Anand8217;s next with Saif Ali Khan and Rani Mukerji. 8216;8216;I8217;m the kind who likes to think before I decide,8217;8217; he says.
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Quite as simplistic is his approach to cinematography. Pradhan doesn8217;t treat his work as rocket science and wants to keep it as simple as possible. His professional mantra: 8216;8216;Actors should move, rather than the camera. Lighting and composition should take centre stage to create mood and drama.8217;8217;
He says he8217;s partial to indoor shoots and his favourite aspect in the filming process is lighting, 8216;8216;the most stressful bit8217;8217;.
One can only imagine the stress on the sets of Devdas, where lights were brighter than the Milky Way. He still has no idea how many lights he used to shoot Madhuri Dixit8217;s kothi in the film. 8216;8216;I don8217;t know that, but I know we used 40 generators of 75 KW each,8217;8217; he recalls. But the cinematographer knows how to defend his OTT stance in the film8212;8216;8216;You can8217;t decide where to stop. There8217;s no Lakshman rekha in lighting. Sometimes you go beyond the normal and then come back,8217;8217; he shoots.
He did come back in RDB. No wonder Mehra believes, 8216;8216;We should freeze Binod8217;s DNA.8217;8217;