In a
period of 20 years, the BBC has taken the travel-documentaries to
almost every part of the globe with a viewership of hundreds of
millions
One of the most successful pro-grams BBC Television has pro-duced in
recent years has been a series of travel-documentary films that
criss-crossed the globe and were called the Great Railway
Journeys of the World. The first series was commissioned in 1979
and consisted of six railway journeys around the world. One of them
was The Deccan from India. The success of the programme led
the BBC to recommission a second series in 1982 which once again
featured a train journey from India called The Line of Dreams.
In 1998, once again, there was an Indian journey called East to
West.
The Great Railway Journey documentaries filmed in India is the
work of one man, Gerry Troyna, who has been the producer and
director of all the three films. Once a BBC staffer, Troyna is now
an independent filmmaker who has had an enduring love affair with
India that began with The Deccan. Why did he choose the
Deccan? Troyna recalls: “The decision to go on the Deccan route was
born out of a frustration of seeing India in the North only — Taj/Shimla/Delhi.
So we decided to go south because of wanting to be different.”
And different he certainly was, in the treatment and conception
of the film that is laced with the sparkling wit of the playwright
Brian Thompson, the traveller-narrator. With Brian, we embark on the
journey from the cathedral-like Victoria Terminus or the VT in
Bombay. Taking different trains and travelling in different classes,
Brian goes through Pune, Guntakal, Mysore and Ooty finally ending
his journey a week later at village near Cochin where the backwaters
meet the sea.
“Nothing in the imagination can quite prepare you for the pure
shock of India,” declares Brian in the opening sequences. Yet, as he
meanders southwards, he comes to marvel at this country, and of
course, the Railways.
Perhaps because he now encounters the “real” India of teeming
millions — coolies, coffeewallahs, booking clerks, line
inspectors, ticket collectors, guards, signal men, waiters, fellow
passengers, and of course children. It isn’t surprising that Brian
concludes the film by saying: “If ever there was a country in which
the common people determine your view of it, then India must surely
be that country.” ‘The Deccan’ was showered with plaudits and
prompted the Guardian to write that The Deccan had
re-invented the genre of the travel documentary.
Then came the second series that con-centrated on the narrow-gauge
railways that were, once upon a time, built to serve remote and
inaccessible places, linking the ‘frontiers’ to the colonial powers.
Titled Great Little Railways, the second series told the
story of some of these charming “little lines” and explored the
landscape through which they passed while introducing some of the
people who either used the railways or help run them. Gerry Troyna
chose a perfect journey in Rajasthan — a meter-gauge line between
Jodhpur and Jaipur. This journey on the Marudhar Express was called
The Line of Dreams.
Compared to the reality of the Western world, where the “little
lines” hauled by steam had been long abandoned, it was nothing short
of a dream that here in India it not only continued to exist but
actually carried passengers to several small towns along its route!
Obscure stations between Jodhpur and Jaipur, which normally flash
past in a fast train, come to acquire their names and become
destinations like Merta, Makrana, Phulera, Sambhar etc.
Travelling this route, Troyna introduces us to characters who
seem to live in the world of their dreams. Take for instance,
Maharaj Swaroop Singh of Jodhpur who, even while playing cycle polo,
seems to be reliving the dreams of his royal past. We follow twelve
year old Kailash, the young busker who makes a living by singing in
the train, often travelling without a ticket! Although his pockets
are empty, his heart is full of Bollywood heroes and heroines. Then
there is O.P Dixit, the inimitable Ticket Inspector, who lives out
his fantasies of being a detective while apprehending “ticketless
travellers”. Between O.P Dixit and Kailash are some of the most
endearing sequences in the documentary as one tries to catch and the
other dodges, changing compartments in a moving train! We also get
to meet Mr. Mandis, a retired Anglo- Indian loco-driver who
poignantly reflects on the glorious days of the colonial past and
actually says: “I look back to those days like a dream. Just like a
dream.” Troyna too, was not untouched by the experience and
concludes the film with “India is the oldest dream and the dream
lives on.”
In 1998, Troyna got to make his third Great Railway Journey film
in India with Ian Hislop, editor of Private Eye who takes a
journey across the subcontinent in the 50th year of Indian
independence. Beginning at the Metro in Calcutta, Ian journeys
westwards to Jaisalmer, discovering the legacy of the British as he
goes along. After all, the Railways were one of the biggest legacies
of the British in India. He travels on India’s most prestigious
train — the Rajdhani Express to Delhi and a southbound people’s
express to Agra. He also takes a slow train to Ajmer and finally
boards the luxurious Palace on Wheels that takes him to Jaisalmer.
Besides the British legacy, in his journey from east to west, Ian
discovers that this is also a journey that India is taking itself as
it arrives at the end of 20th century. As the sun sets over the sand
dunes, he says that modern India is looking west beyond Britain to
America but feels confidant that if Indians could survive “the
Mughal Empire and the British Raj they would probably survive the
MTV and the Yuppies too!”
Besides sheer story-telling, one of the most striking features about
Troyna’s films is his use of music, which seems to blend and merge
with the moving images. This is the result of a creative partnership
that he immensely enjoys with the composer. He rarely uses library
music although if an indigenous piece has a unique relevance e.g.
A.R. Rehman’s Vande Mataram during the 50th year of India’s
independence, then he would not hesitate to use it, as he did in
‘East to West’. But usually he prefers to have his music specially
composed and this process begins early in the post-production stages
of the film. Troyna has worked with some of the leading musicians
like David Bowie, Brian Eno and Terry Oldfield amongst others.
This is never more evident than in filming on the Indian Railways —
a complex and vast organization, which sometimes finds it hard to
cater to the demands of a foreign filmmaker like Troyna. But despite
the Railway bureaucracy and its sometimes crazy requests, like
filming from a bogey travelling in front of the Palace on Wheels,
the Indian Railways have always come up trumps. And in the end,
always found a way to work together successfully both for the film
and for the Railways themselves.