Synopsis
Celluloid Man is a tribute to film archivist and obsessive cinephile
P.K. Nair, a man whose childhood fascination with cinema finally led to the creation of the National Film Archive of India. In a country where film preservation was once regarded as irrelevant, Nair's has been a long, hard fight to preserve precious fragments of India's film heritage that would otherwise be lost forever. Comparable to France's late, great "man of cinema", the noted film archivist
Henri Langlois, Nair has also influenced generations of Indian filmmakers by introducing them to new worlds through the prism of cinema.
"India's is partially an oral culture, many of the great stories are preserved in people's memories, but
Celluloid Man shows that, in the movie world, Nair wanted to change that. He wanted to make a physical memory bank, a depository of film prints, a place you had to cool and dust. It's the physicality of his story that is striking: the long taxi rides to the relatives of Phalke, the country's first feature
director, to see if they have any rolls of film in their home; the bang on the door at 3am because a filmmaker must see
Pasolini's
The Gospel According to Matthew there and then; the stripping of miles of 35mm negatives to harvest their silver to make jewellery. It's a pre-digital epic.
Like all epics, Nair's story has revelations. One of its first is his arrival in Pune, where the great old Prabhat Studios were, in 1961. Walking through the ageing sound stages, he says that he 'entered the space' of cinema in that year. He shows us where a pond could be made on the studio floor, and the great cranes which still work and, in doing so, we can almost see how cinema
took him in its arms. The 'studioness' of movies is the magical, otherworldly property that many of us first fell in love with and which caused our cinephilia. As much as anything,
Celluloid Man is a story of cinephilia.
It is, of course, an Indian story. Nair rightly says 'We are a film conscious nation', though India is more like a continent than a nation. Many of the great Indian film people –
Gulzar,
Ramesh Sippy (who made
Sholay),
Shyam Benegal,
Mrinal Sen,
Adoor Gopalakrishnan – are here, talking about Nair. Each is a world of cinema, a hyperlink to film styles, stories, cultures, times. If you know their work, see this film, if you don't, see this film. If you've seen
Kaagaz ke Phool, or if you haven't, this movie is for you. It captures how each part of India has its own films, based on its own language, and also 'All India' Hindi cinema, what we now call
Bollywood, which floats like a cloud about the country." –
Mark Cousins