Sarvam Thaalamayam
A Film by Rajiv Menon
I finally got round to watching Rajiv Menon’s inspirational feature film Sarvam Thaalamayam (STM), a sensitive treatment of the subject of caste and elitism in the world of Carnatic music, the classical music of south India. It also highlights the sweet taste of success that passion and love for your art can bring against all odds, and despite chicanery and opposition at every stage.
The movie is about
the obsession of a young lad hailing from a dalit Christian family—mridangam
makers for generations—with learning to become a concert percussionist in
Carnatic music. Rejection and ostracism all round, with his parents and finally
even his compassionate guru joining in a shattering chorus of disapproval, almost
crush his dreams. He despairs of ever finding a teacher as great as his
erstwhile guru, but in a moment of epiphany, follows the selfless advice of his
godsend of a girlfriend and seeks teachings from the bewildering variety of
musics—folk, devotional, romantic, martial, festive—that India abounds in. The
miracle that reunites him with his guru who relents from his earlier orthodox
contempt for reality shows and trains him for one, and the boy’s eventual
triumph in the contest make for a memorable climax. In the finale, even a wily judge
opposed to him is moved enough by Peter’s extraordinary originality (inspired
by his eclectic journey of discovery) to award him a perfect ten.
The movie does not follow a hardline narrative. Nowhere is
caste even mentioned. Though we know from Johnson’s name that he is Christian,
we only learn he is dalit by inference—the community are known in the south to
be makers of the mridangam requiring the usage of the skin of cattle, and Peter
and Johnson Senior are served in plastic cups, not the usual glasses, in a
teastall. What I like even more are the lack of condescension in the manner the
screenplay treats the protagonist’s hysterical affiliation to popular film star Vijay’s fan club and the absence
of melodrama in scenes showing blood donation to child cancer victims and other
good deeds of the street fighters of the movie. Of humour, there is no
shortage. As when the venerable mridangam guru fails to suppress his mirth at Peter’s instant
recognition of Vijayadasami day. “June 22, sir, it is Vijay sir’s birthday!”
Even Mani, the most villainous character of the film is not all
bad. Here again, the director makes no attempt at showing ‘the villain’s’
transformation when he redeems himself in the final scene after scheming to get
Peter defeated by his disciple—one he stole from under his guru’s nose. He is
instead seen as won over by the sheer brilliance of the new champion’s
percussion. The loser, too, is a gallant runner-up, not an object of ridicule.
Rajiv Menon has extracted exceptional performances from an
ensemble cast coincidentally represented by the greatest diversity of caste and community imaginable. Nedumudi Venu breathes life into the role of eminent mridanga
vidwan Vembu Iyer, an unbending traditionalist wedded to his art, who can spot
talent no matter where it resides, while Vineeth as his senior sishya Mani jealous
of new arrival GV Prakash Kumar is unrecognisable from the matinee idol we have
known in the past, Prakash himself effortlessly straddles multiple
personae from Vijay fan through hip hop drummer to street fighter to obsessive
convert to the magic of classical mridangam and Kumaravel is effortlessly credible
as Johnson, the inheritor of a legacy of mridangam-making that allows him no
self-indulgence, no illusions about acceptance into the exalted world of
classical music. Sumesh Narayanan, an accomplished vidwan of NRI origin, brings
dignified credibility to his role. Shanta Dhananjayan and Aparna Balamurali
quietly lend substance to their roles as the women who intervene strategically
in Peter Johnson’s journey towards fulfilment. Vocalists Unnikrishnan, Sikkil Gurucharan and Srinivas play delightful cameos as judges at the reality show. The music direction by AR Rahman
is impeccable and appropriate scene for scene, shot by shot. The Carnatic music
segments are totally authentic, with no attempt to woo the box office.
The main reason why I took so long to watch STM was that I
mistook it to be a new avatar of a Rajiv Menon-made documentary on mridangam
maestro Umayalpuram K Sivaraman, which I had seen a few years ago. I was
delighted to see UKS’s name in the credits to STM. His inputs and personal
example are clearly evident in the film. Sivaraman did impart his art to his
dalit mridangam maker’s son, didn’t he?
I think STM is an important step towards inclusiveness in
classical music. Elitism and casteism are indefensible in any walk of life, but
to paint whole generations of classical musicians as blatant perpetuators of
discrimination and indulge in strident name-calling would seem to be just so
much posturing rather than a sincere attempt at reform. The enlightened among
our musicians, in both the north and the south, have embraced diversity in their
art as well as their fellow artists. STM ends on a positive note, which is not
to say that it offers easy redress to centuries-old injustice. Instead, it
suggests that together we can overcome rather than annihilate.
In an online or TV discussion, Rahman and Menon disclosed that the
film was originally tentatively named “Varalama?” the opening word of the beautiful
title song, apparently inspired by Gopalakrishna Bharati’s classic ‘Varugalano
Ayya’ from the movie Nandanar Charitam. While Nandan’s song in Dandapani
Desigar’s bell-like voice was a plaintive appeal to Nataraja to let him enter
the Tillai temple, ‘Varalama’ is a plea by an outsider to be admitted to the
exclusive sanctum of classical music. ‘Varalama’ more accurately describes the story
of Johnson’s yearning than ‘Sarvam Thaalamayam’, which stresses the presence of
rhythm in every aspect of life.
V Ramnarayan `
2 comments:
Brief but covering all aspects of STM.great presentation.
You have influenced me to see the movie.
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