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master kishan
24. Jan 2006 at 05:47
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Master Kishan

Mark Lawson talks to 'the world's youngest film director' on the line from Bangalore.

Master Kishan has acted in 24 films and over 1000 television episodes, and has made his first feature film C/o Footpath. And he is all of ten years old.


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The Sunday Times January 22, 2006

Director, 9, calls shots in Bollywood

Dean Nelson, Bangalore

THE director is barking orders from the edit suite as he cuts a shot featuring Jackie Shroff, a leading Indian film star. It could be an everyday scene of Bollywood folk making their movies — except the director is a nine-year-old boy.

Master Kishan, as he is known, has already been in 24 films and appeared in more than 1,000 episodes of a popular television soap opera. He is now fulfilling another dream: becoming the youngest director not just in India, but the world.

“I am different from other children, because this is the age for children to play,” admitted Kishan, now aged 10, last week, sitting in his director’s seat, his feet not quite touching the floor. “I like playing, but not as much as other children.

“I don’t know if the film will be successful, I hope it will be. I have a good feeling about it.”

Dressed in a black corduroy shirt and dark jeans, he looked like any affluent middle-class Indian child. Later at a local cafe he ordered coffee and mysore pak, a buttery sweet pudding, while fielding approaches from admiring fans.

Kishan, whose favourite actors are Arnold Schwarzenegger and Amithabh Bachchan, a Bollywood superstar, began his acting career aged four after his friends urged his parents to send him for an audition.

He was given a part in Goddess of the Village, a fantasy adventure, before landing a leading role in Papa Pandu, a daily Bangalore soap. He wrote a hit song for a film at the age of six and has sung on others.

Kishan’s father Shri Kanth, a tax official, said his son had been obsessed with cameras since he was a toddler. “We noticed that when the camera was on him his behaviour would improve,” he said. “After he started working on the soap the staff would complain that he asked too many questions about this shot and that shot.”

Kishan’s transition to director began after he talked to children selling newspapers beside a busy road in Bangalore. When he asked them why they were not at school, some replied they were orphans, others that they would be beaten if they went home without any money.

Kishan was so moved that he wrote a short story about his encounter. “I want them to go to school and I hope the film encourages them to want to go,” he said.

With the help of local journalists, he turned his story into a screenplay, C/o Footpath, about a Bangalore boy drugged by a woman who uses him as a prop to beg on the streets.

Shroff came on board after meeting Kishan. When the boy started to describe the project he was so impressed that he asked for a part.

“He said he was also ‘C/o footpath’ — that he had been a nobody,” Kishan said.

Shroff, who has waived his fee, has been impressed by Kishan’s skill as a director. “He is constantly thinking about his next shot, constantly innovating to make it better,” he said. “He is sure about what he wants from his actors.”

Ironically, Kishan’s commitments mean he has attended school for only 10 days a month during filming. His secretary collects school notes to help him keep up.

Kishan nevertheless shows little sign of missing classes. He speaks good English and Kannada, the local language, and understands Hindi and Tamil.

The film, shot on a modest £100,000 budget typical of the local film industry, has caused such a buzz that distribution rights have already been snapped up. It is being dubbed in at least two other Indian languages.

Meenakshi Shedde, a film critic, said Kishan had scored a major coup in recruiting Shroff and Saurabh Shukla, another well-known actor. “The boy must be talented to have this kind of help,” she said.

To date, Kishan’s film work has earned him £15,000 — a significant sum for a small boy. Kishnan said he enjoys being famous, except when middle-aged women pat his cheeks.

Shrikanth, however, worries that his son is missing childhood and recently invited his friends to bring their children on a beach holiday so that Kishan could play. He was surprised to see him building row after row of sand castles.

“When I asked him why he was building them in rows, he held his hands up to make a frame and said it was to give the shot depth,” he said. A child psychologist friend has reassured him his son is fine.


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Re: master kishan
Reply #1 - 24. Jan 2006 at 06:47
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That's an awesome story...  I hope some of his work makes it to Western audiences.

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Re: master kishan
Reply #2 - 24. Jan 2006 at 12:47
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I've never seen an addition to someone's glasses like that before  Grin
  
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Re: master kishan
Reply #3 - 26. Jan 2006 at 06:47
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the master was on uk tv!

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Re: master kishan
Reply #4 - 20. Feb 2006 at 04:20
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The Times February 09, 2006

Meet the new mini-moguls

By Kevin Maher

Children making films? Well, they are the ones with the money

In a dimly lit basement in a deserted house in the picturesque town of Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex, nothing is quite as it seems. For a start, the white-faced zombies are only actors taking part in a key scene in the home-grown British horror film The Cellar Door. The set-piece severed hand too is just a well-placed prop, while the entire 21-person film crew, complete with camera and sound departments, make-up, wardrobe and effects, are in fact children. Film-makers, yes, but children all the same. The average age on The Cellar Door set is 10.

The recent story about a 10-year-old Indian cineaste called Kishan Shrikanth who was directing his film debut, Care of Footpath, was greeted with paternalistic good humour. And yet, as the local Cellar Door production illustrates, Shrikanth may not be such an aberration. For The Cellar Door is part of a series of pint-sized productions sponsored by First Light Movies, an exclusively kiddie-focused film initiative bankrolled by £1.1 million of lottery funds.

The initiative fosters film-making talent between the ages of 5 and 18, and First Light organises screenings and festivals, including an annual star-studded West End awards ceremony (last year’s judges included Jude Law and Stephen Fry). It’s also a chance, says First Light’s chief executive officer, Pip Eldridge, for the children involved to prove that they’ve got “an incredible grasp of the visual language of film, and can easily come up with creative ideas that are far better than most adults”.

It’s hard, Eldridge says, to alter public perceptions of children behind the camera as anything other than freakish oddities or novelty news stories. They’re either pre- pubescent Guinness record holders, such as the Dutch Sidney Ling, who was only 13 when he directed his first feature film, Lex the Wonder Dog, in 1973, or they’re established industry prodigies, such as Steven Spielberg, who repeatedly refers back to his adolescent 8mm productions as evidence of a predestined career path.

The truth today, Eldridge says, is far more prosaic: “Most of the kids we see are just amazingly sophisticated when it comes to the film-making process. Because they’ve grown up with the internet, TV, film and digital, they’re completely au fait with the technology and they can go through complicated visual ideas at an incredible speed. But in the UK we still have this view that kids should be seen and not heard, and they certainly shouldn’t be jumping around film sets.”

There are encouraging signs, however, of a revolution in moppet movie power around the globe. Hana Makhmalbaf, the latest critically adored auteur in the Iranian Makhmalbaf film dynasty, was only 10 when her first short film, The Day My Aunt Was Ill, was screened at the Locarno Film Festival. She was just 14 when her feature debut, Joy of Madness, premiered at the 2003 Venice Film Festival. She has since worked as an assistant director to the 37-year-old Iranian film-maker Marzieh Meshkini on the surreal Afghan road movie Stray Dogs (which opens here on March 17).

Makhmalbaf says that her age is her secret weapon. She says that unsuspecting subjects, from camera-shy women to imperious mullahs, allow her into their circle because they think that she’s “just a kid making a video”.

Similarly, the Miami-based child documentarian Chaille Stovall has become a veritable mini-me Michael Moore on the nonfiction film circuit because of his ability to get close to unsuspecting power players. He was 12 when he interviewed George W. Bush for his own election documentary, 2001’s Party Animals. The image of Bush staring bemusedly down at his diminutive interviewer was politically charged enough to thrust Stovall into the national spotlight. He has since interviewed the Dalai Lama for a documentary on Buddhism.

Elsewhere the popularity of Jonathan Caouette’s award-winning movie memoir Tarnation and Darren Stein’s amateur video collection Put the Camera on Me reveal the wider creative avenues stimulated by kids behind the camera.

But it’s not all about a selfless creative revolution. The $158 billion (£90 billion) that is spent annually in America on products and services for under-18s is just waiting to be tapped by a child-friendly, child-focused industry.

It’s these sorts of figures, and in particular the increasing spending power of 8 to 14-year-old “tweenies”, that is driving child-friendly studios such as Disney and Nickelodeon into a kiddie-courting frenzy. The makers of everything from The Chronicles of Narnia to television shows such as Fifi and the Flowertots are in a “constant dialogue” with preteen focus groups and child consultants.

“Everything we do is kid-tested and kid-approved,” says Andy Goodhand, the head of research and planning at Nickelodeon UK, which has its sights set on the country’s £3 billion tweenie market. “The most important thing we do is get feedback from the kids,” he says. “The whole focus of this organisation is geared around the kids. Our brand positioning is: ‘If kids ruled the world’.”

In the meantime, before today’s children eventually rule the world, there are plenty of gruelling hours to be spent both on and off Shoreham film sets for budding cine-enthusiasts. All they ask, Eldridge says, is to be taken seriously. They’re not joking about what they do, so why should we? Although, she adds, stifling a giggle: “It’s really something to walk on to a film set and see an eight-year-old up a ladder shouting, ‘OK, now, move the camera a little to the right! Yes! Just right! That’s perfect!’ ”

Those crazy kids, eh?


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