With a career spanning three decades, Kannada director Girish Kasaravalli has long been recognised and respected as one of the foremost filmmakers of independent cinema in India.
In Mysteries of the Mundane, John Hood presents an intensive discussion on Kasaravalli's work-including his diploma film. feature films and two documentaries. Kannada literature, cultural traditions and an abiding love for folk-theatre have shaped Kasaravalli's storytelling and influenced his visual style. His films present microcosms of Karnataka and are firmly rooted in themes specific and local to the region: however, their poignant exploration of the commonplace shows that within the local, specific culture lie values, struggles, dreams and aspirations that are truly universal.
Across fifteen chapters, the author closely analyses and interprets Kasaravalli's films as text, examining their stories, plots, characterisation, visual language and aesthetics, and commenting on their socio-political symbolism and significance. He highlights Kasaravalli's ability to find deeper meaning in the mundanity of the everyday, which makes his films so inventive and exceptional, so imbuing them with a global appeal.
This book will appeal to readers with an interest in Indian culture and its art cinema, in particular, as well as students and scholars of cinema/ film studies courses.
JOHN W. HOOD has spent most of his life studying Indian culture. He has written extensively on Indian art and independent cinema and is the author of The Films of Buddhadeb Dasgupta, The Essential Mystery and Beyond the World of Apu, among others. He is also known as a translator of Bengali literature.
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