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Sustaining sensibility

June 23, 2012 04:54 pm | Updated 04:54 pm IST

Anjali Menon is a writer to reckon with in Malayalam film industry

Director, Anjali Menon Photo:Vipin Chandran

Raconteur Anjali Menon is excited, her Malayalam films Manjadikuru and Ustad Hotel are releasing June 22 and 23 respectively in Kerala. Manjadikuru had already won her an award for the best film at the International Film Festival in Kerala and also one as a best debutant Indian director.

She has written and directed Manjadikuru and written for Ustad Hotel .

Ask her what makes Malayalam cinema so interesting and stimulating she says, “Of late we have new cinema emerging. Earlier we had wonderful set of movies in the 80s and 90s that were inspiring and that is where Malayalam cinema derived its reputation from. But after that we did go into a different trend and now is the revival of individual voices once again. It’s an exciting time right now.”

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The writer - director is one of the very few women working in movies. What can a woman do to a script? She replies, “You have to watch the film, both my films reflect our society and its values. I cannot say just because I am a woman that kind of sensitivity is important, even if it is a male writer that can happen, what counts is sensitivity. Ideas are always around me, I’m not a person with abstract ideas and look at cinema as an art.

I want to make films that artistes connect. When I watch a film I want to laugh, cry and get involved. I would like my audience to do the same. I love the fact that these 24 frames can move me and create that reaction in my brain. It’s a fascinating experience.”

Anjali is amiable and full of life and she adds the exuberance to the story telling as well. Did she always want to be a director? “I knew I would always tell stories, may be not as a filmmaker. I see a story in anything in a headline or an obituary. My son is nine-months-old and I’m waiting for him to understand what I’m saying.”

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How does she manage to have that smile throughout? “These are the little things that dreams are made of but all the tough part is wondering how to make it happen. I’m open to different cinema. I learnt to read and write Malayalam just purely for these scripts.”

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