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Sandhya Suri’s Stunning Santosh Representing the UK Has Made It To The Oscar
Sandhya Suri’s Stunning Santosh Representing the UK Has Made It To The Oscar Shortlist Of 15 Nominees. An Exclusive Conversation With The Lady Of The Moment.
British-Indian filmmaker Sandhya Suri’s Santosh representing the UK, has made it to the Oscar shortlist of the final 15 films. A chilling indictment of police atrocity,more bludgeoning in impact than Vetrimaran’s Visaranai, Santosh tears at the innards of our soul with its scathing portrayal of inhumanity.
Santosh works swimmingly on many levels. At the start it is the story of a young minimally educated woman who upon her sudden widowhood , gets her husband’s job as a police constable. Her first posting takes her to a remote town somewhere in Uttar Pradesh(the place names have been duly fictionalized ,and it’s easy to see why) where a 15-year old girl has just been raped and killed .
Santosh, played with a transfixing authenticity by Shahana Goswami, finds herself at the vortex of a caste and communal incongruity that gives her all time in the whirl to discover her conscience.
Rest assured, this is not an elemental cop-discovers-soul kind of drama that we have seen infinitely.There is something uniquely binding about the conflicts of interest that Santosh Saini exerts on her conscience. Her movement into the deepest darkness, and then a beam of light that shoots through her hurtful hemisphere , is arrived at with an unsettling quietude. Luisa Gerstein’s background score is nihilistic . It is used not to punctuate but to define the scenes.
Besides Goswami, and Sunita Rajwar who plays Santosh’s worldweary senior and co-conspirator , there is a third hero in Santosh: cinematographer Lennert Hillege captures the ominous bustle of a hybrid society in a furious flux without fuss.Some of the most tense moments in the narrative are shot with such livid luminosity (for example, the lengthy chase to nab the alleged culprit in a dingy ill-lit lodge ) one forgets to breathe.
Ironically, the more visceral the visuals get, the more ‘cinematic’ is the impact of Sandhya Suri’s extraordinarily evocative excursion into the heartless heartland of lawlessness.
There so much to appreciate in this austere humbug-free stare at ‘Free India’ where the powerful are free to inflict every variety of injustice on the powerless.
As Sharma says wryly to Santosh, “There are two kinds of untouchable in India : those who nobody touches, and those whom nobody can touch.”
Touche!
As Sharma, Sunita Rajwar who has made a living out of being a laughing stock, does a jolting about-turn as a crabby cop who has many dirty secrets. Rajwar is pitch-perfect but the cigarette smoking could have been avoided: the actress hold and puffs like a novice. Also the lesbian suggestion could have been avoided. They don’t add anything to the grim moral turpitude .
My two favourite sequences in Santosh both have a nosering in it: once when someone gifts it to Santosh and then again at the end when she gives it to a random girl on the station. Traditionally the nose ring has always been seen as symbol of oppression. Here it is a tool of liberation.Santosh plays the dirty-cops game with no redemptive graph as such. It is not a film about finding one’s soul. It is about wondering why it gets lost in the first place. Understandably director Sandhya Suri is over the moon. “What to say apart from very happy and honoured! I don’t know honestly how it happens but it is gratifying as an artist to make a film one is proud of, not compromise for sake of commerciality, but end up with something which is still engaging to audiences and is recognised, in my case, by both India and the UK. And of course, the police and institutions of India have not arisen out of a vacuum.My main wish for the film is for audiences to see it. We had an amazing summer run of three months in French cinemas and close to 150,000 cinemagoers see it, which is big for a non-French film by a newcomer. Having robust distribution in India and the UK is the next step. And so so important for me.”
Sandhya Suri’s stunning saga of police brutality and the bonding between two female cops rings so true. But Sandhya iterates that Santosh is not based on any one incident. “This is not a film about one true case. It comes from the daily horrors, particularly against women, which we continue to read about, which seem not to abate and for which justice is not always served. For a long time I had been searching for a meaningful way to talk about violence against women. I was in India researching and working with various NGOs when I came across an image. There were nationwide protests following the Nirbhaya gang rape case and this was an image from Delhi of a huge crowd of angry female protestors, faces contorted with rage, and a line of female police officers, forcing them back. One of them had such an enigmatic expression I was fascinated by her. What a gulf between her and those protesting, what power her uniform wielded and what powerlessness not to feel safe as ordinary women. To explore this violence and her power within it felt exciting. Once I started to research female police constables I learnt of the government scheme of ‘appointment on compassionate grounds’ in which eligible dependents of deceased police officers can inherit their jobs. During my research I spent time with many such widows. Some had previously led very sheltered lives never even leaving the house without their husband or a relative until they started their police training. I was struck by the journey: from housewife, to widow, to policewoman. That was a journey I wanted to write about and one I wanted to watch. Quite early on in the film’s life I had interest and even offers of finance from private investors. I had turned these down because I didn’t feel that the film was ready. Whilst the film is so strongly character driven, being a film based in the police, it still falls into a genre and coming from documentary I was initially cautious about that. It was very important to me to ensure that everything in the film was researched in great detail, that I could stand by each thing in the film and know it had firm roots, not just in terms of documentary research (of which I did a lot, both in person and in collaboration with police anthropologists) but also in terms of Santosh and her journey. Hence its long gestation. For me a good film is also a sum of all its details, so layering those details in was important for me in regards to the film’s authenticity.”
About the casting of Sunita Rajwar and Shahana Goswami in the two main roles of cops , Sandya says, “Sunita was perfect for Sharma. It would have been very easy to choose someone with a more threatening or intimidating feel .We see this female archetype often in Hindi cinema .But what I love about Sunita is that she brought us a really human Sharma. Her face delivers so much vulnerability. I loved that layer she brought to her. Sharma I feel is ultimately unknowable; what she knows, how much she even believes her own rhetoric is up for debate and Sunita played that beautifully. As for Shahana, Sanjay Bishnoi at MCCC who was the casting associate I worked closely with on finding the leads, suggested her on the last day of casting after seeing the film Zwigato. We had not originally thought of her, as she was slightly out of the age range of Santosh, but when she walked in, she had just what I was looking for; the right mix of hardness and sweetness, anger held within restraint, energy and a hunger I always saw in Santosh, a wanting for something more. She delivered all these things so superbly. I find her utterly iconic in her uniform and in this role. I very much hope she is recognised for her brilliance here.
Santosh portrays a moral ambiguity to the police procedural wherein even the protagonist Santosh becomes a part of the corrupt system. Regarding this moral toxicity Sandhay Suri explains, “The film for me was always about a type of place… a small backwater town where violence, corruption, misogyny, casteism and religious intolerance just linger casually in the air. It’s not pointed at, it’s just … there… What is it like to be surrounded by that, to breathe it in daily? I knew it wasn’t going to be a story about a good cop in a bad system but rather a morally murky universe and Santosh finding her particular shade of grey within it. Earlier in the film I think she believes, or is led to believe by Sharma that there are only two ways to be as a woman; like her or imprisoned and unwanted in her domestic space. In the film Santosh tries to find out her own way.”
The nosering as symbol of power as well as subjugation runs across the stunning film.
Explains the incredible director, “In the beginning of the film Santosh’s in-laws comment on how inappropriate it is that the widowed Santosh wears it. After that she does not have it on until her mentor Sharma slightly forcefully pushes it in and tells her it’s her right to wear it . Even the cobbler comments on her lack of toe rings. Her body is constantly observed. At the end of the film I feel that Santosh has learnt a lot from Sharma, for good and for bad, she has no further need for her psycho-feminism BUT that little girl on the platform, in Macho Gahr, alone in the night, it feels as if she might need a little piece of that as well as of course, the monetary gain that it could offer. And so it brings closure to this chapter of Santosh’s life.