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April 21, 1998

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The mystique of Mangamma

D Jose

Revathy in Mangamma
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It would have been another run-of-the-mill sob-and-sigh film in the hands of an ordinary film-maker. But with national award-winning director T V Chandran calling the shots, Mangamma has become a powerful tale on celluloid.

"I am presenting not a film, but a woman," that's how Chandran introduces his work.

The introduction aptly sums up the film, which is the story of an ordinary woman who has to fight for her survival. Mangamma represents the typical Indian woman for whom life is a battle with odds all along.

Chandran, who won the national award for best director in 1994, was inspired by a woman, Mangamma, he came across in Palakkad in the early 1980s. "What struck me most was the way she toiled without complaints. There was a strange calmness in her face," he recollects.

The woman's name stirred Chandran's creative instincts. Though the meeting haunted him into writing the script in 1986, he could not immediately find a producer. It was a dream come true when the National Film Development Corporation and Doordarshan agreed to jointly produce the film.

Although Chandran refuses to term the film his masterpiece, or even a dream project, he concedes that Mangamma has given him a lot of satisfaction. "It is a true tribute to the Indian women," he says.

T V Chandran Click for bigger pic!
Mangamma's storyline has nothing unusual about it. It has all the cliches of an ordinary film. The story unfolds with Mangamma, played by Revathy, setting out with her aged father (Thilakan) in search of job and shelter after she loses her younger sister in a tragic incident. They come across a kind teashop owner in a village, and decide to settle down there. Soon Mangamma loses her father. The teashop owner marries her. Her old lover who had promised to marry her on his return from military service lands up at the village and settles down without causing any trouble.

The village life loses its rhythm when a real estate developer descends there, with all powers at his command. He wants to evict the teashop owner and others who have no title deeds. What ensues is a clash, in which the police joins the side of the real estate baron. The teashop owner succumbs to police torture. An orphaned boy whom the man had adopted runs away and joins a revolutionary movement. Mangamma refuses to be cowed down, she fights on...

What sets apart Mangamma from other feminist films is the grit and tolerance that the main character exhibits. Mangamma has been portrayed as a down-to-earth woman capable of carving her own destiny.

"She is a no-nonsense woman," says Revathy, who expresses herself most impressed by the heroine's tremendous strength of character "It is a welcome relief for me since I was forced to survive through dance, looks, and the way I presented myself."

Revathy remembers she was quite sold on the film as soon as Chandran narrated the script to her. In almost all Chandran's films you see a striving to unravel the mystique of women. Mangamma is a continuation of that effort. It is, in a way, reminiscent of his Alicine aneswanam which was the sole Indian entry at the 1990 international film festival. The latter was more metaphorical.

Mangamma is a stronger character than Alice. While Alice, coming from a middleclass family, had more time to introspect, Mangamma cannot afford those luxuries because her main concern is her daily bread. Mangamma is never shown in a pensive mood in the film -- there are no slow tracking shots or close-ups of her.

"She is a combination of different women I have met in my life," Chandran says, "There are many Mangammas amongst us but we fail to understand them and their struggles because we look at them from a higher pedestal."

The role of women is also strong in Chandran's other films like Ormakal undayirikanam which won him the national award for the best Malayalam film in 1996, and Ponthanmada which brought him the best director's award.

Chandran is a film-maker who does not hide his political affiliations. He was influenced by the revolutionary zeal of the Left movement. While many of his contemporaries have almost faded out, Chandran's creative stream continues to flow despite the prohibiting cost of modern films. What keeps him going where others have failed is perhaps his refusal to allow his political predilections dominate his work. His concerns over the liberation struggle which brought down the first democratically-elected Communist government in Kerala, and the Emergency find reflection in this film as well.

Revathy in Mangamma
Click for bigger pic!
But the political elements in the story is inextricably woven into the main theme. The teashop owner's death in police custody and the decision by the orphaned boy to join the revolutionary movement describes the horrifying truths of the Emergency poignantly.

Chandran has blended all elements of a typical film into his creation. The music, songs and photography, are as powerful as his characters. Sunny Joseph who handled cinematography has imbibed Chandran's novel idea very skillfully. His approach to the film is direct -- there are no hidden meanings behind frames, no confusing symbols that one finds ever-so-many in the so-called art films. The film-maker has shown a rare insight into the way the characters think and live. And, thus, managed to make Mangamma delightfully earthy and honest.

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