Newspaper Boy (1955 film)

Newspaper Boy

A promotional poster of the film
Directed by P. Ramdas
Produced by A group of students
Written by Story:
P. Ramadas
Screenplay:
P. Ramadas
Dialogues:
Nagavally R. S. Kurup
P. Ramadas
(uncredited)
Starring Master Moni
Master Narendran
Neyyattinkara Komalam
Nagavally R.S. Kurup
Master Narendran
Kumari Madhuri
Master Venkiteswaran
Kuriyathi
Music by Songs:
Vijayan
A. Ramachandran
Background score:
Mahatma Sangeethamela
Cinematography Madhavan Nair
Edited by K. D. George
Production
company
Adarsh Kalamandir
Distributed by R. S. Pictures
(Cochin & Malabar)
Variety Pictures
(Travancore)
Release dates
  • 13 May 1955 (1955-05-13)
Running time
130 minutes
Country India
Language Malayalam
Budget 175,000 (US$2,600)[1]

Newspaper Boy is a Malayalam–language Indian film released in 1955. It is the first neo realistic movie in the language.[2] The film, a drama of stark realism, narrates the life of the common man on the street. The film is noteworthy in that the entire production programme from script-writing to direction was controlled and executed by students. The group of students were from Adarsh Kalamandir and was written and directed by P. Ramdas. The screenplay was based on a short story written by Ramadas himself.

Though the film had a shoestring budget of 175,000 (US$2,600), featured mostly amateur actors, and was made by an inexperienced crew, Newspaper Boy was a critical success. Influenced by Italian neorealism, the film is also remembered for being the world's first commercial film made by students.[3]

Plot

Set in Kerala of the 1950s, Newspaper Boy focuses on the lives of Appu (Master Moni), the young protagonist of the film, and the members of his impoverished family. Appu's father Sankaran Nair (Nagavally R. S. Kurup) earns a meagre living as a worker in a printing press. He is easily exploited in his work – he cannot even muster the courage to ask his employer for overdue wages. Nair's wife, Kalyani Amma (Neyyattinkara Komalam), takes care of their three children, Leela (Kumari Madhuri), Appu and Balan (Master Narendran). Kalyani Amma helps her husband by taking up the job of a housemaid in rich Madhava Menon's (G. R. Nair) house. She is treated like a slave by Menon's wife Lakshmi Amma (Adoor Pankajam). Extreme poverty forces Leela to stop her education. However Nair manages to provide education to Appu, his only hope.

Adding oil to the fire, one day, Nair injures his hand during his work in the press. He could not go to work for two-three weeks. The employer fires Nair from the job during this period. He offers Nair the payment for those days, but Nair refuses it, although his family is in dire need of money. Nair tries to find another job but in vain. He cannot even pay the house-rent. House owner Kesavan Pillai (Veeran) asks Nair either to pay the rent or to leave the house. Soon Nair dies of extreme poverty and illness. After his demise, the family sinks even deeper into poverty. The whole family is now on Appu's shoulders. Appu finds no way to save his family from this situation. Kittummavan (Kuriyathi), a kind-hearted neighbour, is his only help. Kittummavan asks his son Raghavan (P. Ganga) to take Appu to Madras and find him a job.

Appu leaves to Madras, where he gets the job as a servant in rich Sreedhara Menon's (Madhavan) house. Menon's wife Kamalamma (Omana Madhavan) behaves brutally to Appu, even worse than Lakshmi Amma behaved to his mother, and he had to leave the job soon. Appu desperately wants to return to his home. He wanders in the street searching for a job to arrange money for his return. He befriends with Pappan (Master Venkiteswaran), and both of them take small jobs to earn money for Appu's return. Meanwhile, Kalyani Amma, who is suffering from tuberculosis, is thrown out of the house by Kesavan Pillai. Leela and Balan begs for help from Madhavan Nair. He gives them ten rupees and asks them not to come again. Raghavan informs Appu his mother's condition and arranges money for his return. Kalyani Amma dies of illness before Appu reaches. The film ends with Appu taking up the job of a newspaper boy to look after his brother and sister.

Cast

Production

Development

P. Ramdas once read in Filmfare magazine that Raj Kapoor was India's youngest film director. Ramdas, who was 18 then, dreamed of making a film and told his friends that he would soon take this honour.[4] One of his friends, S. Parameswaran, who studied with him at University College in Thiruvananthapuram, was also passionate about movies. The idea to make the film was born out of Ramadas's and Parameswaran's desire to make a movie "of the beaten track."[5] They were heavily inspired by the themes of Italian neorealism, which had already created waves in the Malayalam literary circles. The two young minds wanted to bring this new wave to cinema too. Ramadas was sure his own short story "Compositor" would be the best option to start with.[6] The story was first published in Mahatma Malayala Masika, the world's first magazine run by students. It was later included in the book Thalirukal, published by Mahatma Publishing House.[7] Movies of V. Shantaram also inspired Ramadas and Parameswaran to make such a "different" movie.[5] As they had little knowledge about the technical aspects of cinema, they became regular visitors to the erstwhile American Information Library in Thrivananthapuram and read as much books available on cinema.[6] Ramadas travelled to Madras, the then centre of South Indian filmmaking, and collected an 8mm Kodak Baby Browny Movie Camera using which he later filmed two short films, Footpath (which was filmed from Thrissur) and Life for Film (which was filmed from Kanyakumari), which all helped him to gain some knowledge in professional movie-making.[8]

Ramadas wrote a "film treatment", by making certain changes in his short story, and developed it into a complete script by 1953 September–October.[9] The story is retold from the perspective of a twelve-year-old boy in the screenplay. The story's central character is Lonappan, who was renamed as Sankaran Nair in the screenplay. Nair's son Appu is the central character of the film while this character has little importance in the story.[9] Ramadas approached popular writer Nagavally R. S. Kurup to write dialogues, who agreed on a payment of 1000. Kurup submitted his work soon, but was rejected by Ramadas, stating that it was written in a typical Travancore accent but the story is taking place in Thrissur. Ramadas himself rewrote the dialogues in the Thrissur-slang of Malayalam.[10] He planned to film the movie in May 1954, after his exams, and booked a floor of the erstwhile Merryland Studio in Thiruvananthapuram for indoor shooting.[11]

The film was produced by Adarsh Kalamandir, a subdivision of Mahatma Memorial Association, founded by Ramadas and his friends in 1945 as Balasangham.[12] The ever-growing enthusiasm of the students found the Association venturing into a field hitherto undreamt of by the student population of the world.[13]

Casting

P. Ramdas wanted to cast amateurs and new-faces in all the departments of his film. K. C. Ponkunnam (K. C. Francis) was assigned to write the songs, Kanthaswamy was chosen as the art director, and Vijayan and his brother Ramachandran as music directors. All of them were members of Mahatma Memorial Association and had a long-term association with Ramadas through the plays he had directed.[14] V. Balakrishnan, who played woman characters in all of Ramadas's plays, was given the job of costume designing.[14] Krishnan Elaman, Balakrishnan and K. D. George, all of them from Merryland Studios, were chosen for sound recording, makeup and editing respectively. Ramadas's and Parameswaran's relatives were also given some jobs, like production control, lighting etc. P. K. Madhavan Nair, who was an assistant cinematographer in Malayalam films till then was chosen as the director of photography.[14]

The lead character Appu was inspired by a twelve-year-old newspaper boy Ramadas had met somewhere in a journey to Ernakulam.[6] Ramadas and Parameswaran visited almost all schools and orphanages to find a suitable face but failed. Appu's role was at last given to Master Moni, who was introduced to Ramadas by Nagavally R. S. Kurup.[14] His original name was Narayanan Pillai and was a relative of Kurup.[14] Appu's brother Balan's role was given to a four-year-old boy named Narendran.[14] Another major character, Sankaran Nair, Appu's father, was inspired by a press worker named Cheekutty. Ramadas approached Cheekutty to play this role who instantly rejected, which was later taken by Kurup himself, who had previously acted small roles in movies like Sasidharan and Navalokam.[14] A theatre actor named Jagadamma was originally cast in the role of Kalyani Amma, Appu's mother, but was later replaced by Neyyattinkara Komalam.[14] Other major roles were played by the members of the association or by their friends.[14]

Filming

Ramadas knew that his Kodak Baby Browny would not be useful to film a feature-length movie. So he imported an Avery camera and a Ferrograph tape-recorder from England. The camera was found useless for professional movie making and was not used for the film. The tape-recorder was used to mix sound in the film, a too pre-mature way which would later be criticised by various mainstream critics.[8] As planned earlier, Ramadas was able to commence shooting in May 1954 itself. The camera-switch-on ceremony was conducted by Colonel G. V. Raja on 5 May 1954 in Merryland Studios.[1] Indoor sequences were completely filmed from Merryland using a Michelle camera while outdoor sequences were mainly filmed from Thrissur and Madras.[15] The realism-influenced train sequence, inspired by a scene from Akira Kurosawa's Rashomon, was filmed from Ernakulam South railway station.[15] Ramadas was ready to go for any number of retakes to get the right output from the cast. For instance, he wanted to shoot the scene in which Kittummavan explains his son about Sankaran Nair's condition in a single shot. To get what he had in mind, Ramadas needed seven takes.[15]

Dialogue-dubbing was not common then and live sound recording was to be used. The Ferrograph tape-recorder was used for mixing much of the background sound. Shooting was finished in early 1955.[8]

Release

P. Ramdas was approached by various distribution companies while filming itself, but he rejected all the offers since he was sure that they would interfere in the making of his dream film. Ramadas could not find a distributor after the production for a long time.[16] Later, Ernakulam-based R. S .Pictures and Kottayam-based Variety Pictures agreed to distribute the film in Kochi-Malabar and Travancore respectively. The distributors gave them 50,000 on the condition that if the film did not fetch the amount within a year Ramdas had to pay back the difference.[1] The total production cost of the film was 1,25,000, which along with the amount charged by the distribution companies for print and publicity, will make the total budget of the film 175,000.[16]

The film was screened in New Delhi on the special request of the Government of India for various Central Government institutions. The film released on 13 May 1955 in eight theatres in Travancore-Cochin and Malabar states. In Thrissur, it was screened at the Jose theatre.[17] The film, made at a budget of 175,000, was panned by audiences who were not interested in seeing "their own lives onscreen", and ultimately became a big box office failure. Ramadas as well as his colleagues were bankrupt after the film's failure.[1]

Critical reception

The movie opened to good reviews from various critics with many of them appreciating Ramadas for taking up such a risky and experimental film. However the film received criticisms as well, mainly for its editing, sound mixing and music.[18] A reviewer from Bombay Chronicle said that it was pleasant to find a film that was not "only 'progressive' in abandoning set formulae, but progressive" in how it did realism. The intent was said to be serious, but without bitterness underneath. The reviewer also complimented Newspaper Boy for its universality.[19] Sunday Standard's reviewer said the film is praiseworthy, and lacking amateur quality despite being made by students; the reviewer also commented on the film's emotional nature.[20] A critic from Blitz said that the film's title is picturesque, and the film itself was "wonderful". The critic also said the film was thought-provoking, not only about its heartwarming but "disturbing" theme, but from its being produced by students.[21] Reel-News said that the direction was excellent and the acting was livened by its young stars.[22] A review by Screen India stated that the unusual part of the film was its lack of usage of "the usual box-office devices."

Reviewers from the South also praised the film. Jayakeralam weekly said that the film was excellent and well-directed.[23] A review byDeenabandhu said that the film presented the everyday life of a middle-class family with complete realism.[24] A reviewer from Kerala Kaumudi compared the direction to that of the best non-Indian pictures.[23] A review by Sakhavu said that those who "forget art and culture to make money" were hit hard by the film.[24] A review by Deepam said that the producers of this film, Adarsa Kala Mandir (Temple of Art), have justified their name by this film. The beauty of Kerala, according to the reviewer, came through with no disruption of the plot.[24] Writer-producer Rajinder Singh Bedi said that it was well-presented, well-directed and well-photographed, and wished that it would open "the eyes of our producers, in Bombay."[25] Film Divisions director V. R. Sharma stated that it marked a refreshingly new approach in Southern Indian film-making due to its realistic nature. He praised the acting, and said that the film's makers "can justifiably be proud of their achievement and deserve every encouragement."[25] I. K. Menon, Secretary of the Indian Motion Picture Producers Association, said that the realism of the film was unbelievable, with a correct portrayal of everyday life in "Kerala without any exaggeration or colour merely to entertain, as is usual in films."[25]

Songs

The songs are composed by Vijayan and his brother A. Ramachandran, both of them members of Mahatma Memorial Association. Background score was by Mahatma Sangeethamela, a subdivision of the Association. There are eleven songs in the film, and the playback singers include Kamukara Pusushothaman and Santha P. Nair. Ramachandran, one of the composers, says that all the songs were for a specific purpose, such as showing the passage of time. He adds his amazement about important singers agreeing to sing for them. The re-recording was done by Ramachandran alone, without his brother Vijayan, due to illness; he was not able to transfer the songs to better recording media due to inexperience.[1] Lyrics were penned by K. C. Poonkunnam and P. Gangadharan Nair. Three traditional poems were also used.[26] Nine songs were recorded from Merryland Studios, while the songs "Chirichukondeevazhikku" and "Pazhaya Yugangal" were recorded from Udaya Studios and from a studio in Madras respectively.[26] Malayalam film music was copied from Hindi and Tamil film songs in those times. Ramadas wanted to change this system and in Newspaper Boy, all the tunes are original and follows the folk traditions of the State. Different from the films of that time, majority of songs were used as montage songs that appeared in the background of the film.[26] Audio rights were bought by a newly formed Bombay-based company named Bulbil. But the company closed down before the film's release and no records were released.[26]

  1. "Kallilum Mullilum" — T. A. Kumaresan, T. A. Lakshmi
  2. "Devi Sarweswari" — Shyamala
  3. "Naranayingane Janichu Bhoomiyil" — P. Ganga
  4. "Omanathinkal Kidavo" — Santha P. Nair
  5. "Thekkankaatte" — Lakshmi
  6. "Maveli Naadu Vaaneedum Kaalam" — Kamukara Purushothaman, Santha P. Nair, Lakshmi, Vijayan, Ramachandran
  7. "Udayagiri Chuvannu" — P. Ganga
  8. "Enthinu Kanneerennum" — Kamukara Purushothaman
  9. "Chirichukondeevazhikku" — Ramachandran
  10. "Pazhaya Yugangal" — Vijayan
  11. "Thellakalathuninnu" — Kumaresan, T. A. Lakshmi

Awards

Merchandise

Malayalee Indian director Pradeep Nair made a 24-minute documentary film titled Oru Neorealistic Swapnam (A Neorealistic Dream), which detailed the making of Newspaper Boy. The film was produced by V. S. Rajesh with credit from the Public Relations Department of Government of Kerala, and was conceived for Film Buff.[28][29]

The film's screenplay was published as a book by DC Books in July 2008. Noted screenwriter John Paul edited the book. The book consists of the script (rewritten by P. Ramdas since the original screenplay was lost), the original story, the songbook, reviews and memoirs.[30]

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 B. Vijayakumar (20 May 2005). "`Newspaper Boy:' a flashback to the Fifties". The Hindu. Retrieved 2010-12-28.
  2. "P Ramdas, Pioneer of Neo-realism in Malayalam Cinema, is No More". The New Indian Express. 28 March 2014. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  3. "Cinema History Malayalam Cinema". Malayalamcinema.com. Retrieved 2008-12-30.
  4. Paul, John 2008, p. 24
  5. 1 2 Paul, John 2008, p. 43
  6. 1 2 3 Paul, John 2008, p. 44
  7. Paul, John 2008, p. 87
  8. 1 2 3 Paul, John 2008, pp. 45–46
  9. 1 2 Paul, John 2008, p. 53
  10. Paul, John 2008, p. 54
  11. Paul, John 2008, p. 58
  12. Paul, John 2008, p. 29
  13. "Newspaper Boy". Bombay, India: Eve's Weekly. 7 July 1955.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Paul, John 2008, pp. 58–61
  15. 1 2 3 Paul, John 2008, pp. 72–78
  16. 1 2 Paul, John 2008, pp. 77–78
  17. "Making of a landmark film". The Hindu. 15 May 2005. Retrieved 2010-12-28.
  18. Sudarsan (4 June 1955). "ന്യൂസ്പേപ്പർ ബോയ്" (in Malayalam). Madras, India: Jayakeralam.
  19. "Amateur film group proves brains are better than big-budgets". Bombay, India: Bombay Chronicle. 12 June 1955.
  20. "Newspaper Boy: Review". Bombay, India: Sunday Standard. 19 June 1955.
  21. "Blitz salutes students who produced a film and made history". Bombay, India: Blitz. 18 June 1955.
  22. "Splendid effort by Kerala amateurs". Bombay, India: Reel-News. 1955.
  23. 1 2 Paul, John 2008, pp. 231
  24. 1 2 3 Paul, John 2008, pp. 233
  25. 1 2 3 Paul, John 2008, pp. 232
  26. 1 2 3 4 Paul, John 2008, pp. 70–72
  27. 1 2 Paul, John 2008, pp. 259
  28. Vijay George (22 July 2005). "Reflection of harsh realities". The Hindu. Retrieved 8 January 2012.
  29. Paul, John 2008, p. 208
  30. Paul, John 2008, p. 7

Bibliography

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