Ace Sound
Designer Subhash Sahu was at Annapurna College
recently to give our students a week-long masterclass on the aesthetics and
nuances of sync sound. We caught up with him.
Tell us about how you got interested in cinema and sound?
Sound was not exactly an interest. It was acting. I
grew up in the rural regions of India, where theater was a very important, and
perhaps the only medium of entertainment. We used to have regular theater shows
in our village. I started taking part in these shows. The roles were small, but
I got to act and I was happy with that.
Once we moved to Bhubeshwar, in Odisha, I got exposed
to films. Though my father was dead against me watching movies, I used to sneak
out to go to movie theaters. I got inspired by the great actors like Amitabh
Bachchan, Rishi Kapoor and dreamt of making it big in the industry.
During my engineering days in Chennai, I worked on
Tamil films as a junior artist too. Once I was done with my formal studies, I
was clear on joining the film industry. I decided to join FTII in Pune.
I was aware that Mithun Chakraborty was from the
institute. I wanted to learn acting. But at that time, FTII didn’t have any
such courses, so I decided to take up sound engineering. Coming from an
engineering background, sound engineering was a more viable choice. At the end
of the day it was a film school and I could learn all aspects of filmmaking
including acting.
I did act in a lot of student films but I soon
discovered I lacked talent in acting and the field involved extreme struggle.
Sound seemed like an easier career choice. Thus was born the sound engineer in
me.
Did You Know?
The first Indian talkie, Alam Ara (1931), made the first use of sync sound in India and
subsequent Indian films were regularly shot in sync sound with the silent
Mitchell camera, until the 1960s. With the arrival of the Arri 2C, a noisy but
more practical camera particularly for outdoor shoots, ‘dubbing’ became
the norm and was never reversed.
What is the present status of sync sound in our country?
The status of sync sound isn’t that great in India.
Apart from Bollywood, none of the other film industries use it. Bollywood,
thanks to the influx of a new generation filmmakers, the entry of corporate
production houses and high Hollywood impact, has seen considerable development
in the department of sync sound.
The new generation of directors want to make realistic
cinema, unlike the traditional dialogue-and-song formula. Now 60 to 70 per cent
of our Bollywood films incorporate sync sound.