20 September,2022 10:07 AM IST | Mumbai | Athulya Nambiar
Dahan poster
"YES!", said in unison the writers of the latest Disney+Hotstar outing 'Dahan- Raakan Ka Rahasya' when asked if it is time that the Hindi industry invests more in its writers considering that the audience understands content much better today. Writers Shiva Bajpai, Nikhil Nair, and Nisarg Mehta, who hail from different parts of the country joined hands and minds to create a mythical world of horror keeping in mind the structure of Indian mythology. After spending years cracking the code for âDahan' while solving creative differences with "boxing gloves", with director Vikranth Pawar playing referee, the trio came up with a script that the director calls "perfect".
While the show is currently streaming on Disney+Hotstar, ahead of its release, the writers and director of âDahan' in a zoom call with Mid-day.com spoke in length about the thought and process that went behind creating this world.
THE FIRST THOUGHT:
Shiva Bajpai: We were chatting with Vikranth (Pawar) and he said that there is this really interesting intersection when you just drive off the highway between rural India and urban India. What if there is some sort of clash that came about where development met something that was traditional and where would we go with that? So we just started rolling from there, about how this would become a narrative, and then we came upon âDahan- The Rahasya of the Rakan'. So that was the first thought that we had when we started creating the world. I think the second was the character. We see a lot of IAS, IPS officers, and government servants (on-screen). We never look at a single mother in that role; trying to straddle these worlds.
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Nikhil Nair: The first couple of months, I think we spent a lot of time without even getting into the plot of it. We thought of what was lacking in the recent horror stories and the things that scared all of us when we were kids. Coming from the pre-internet age, we heard stories about places and people which necessarily did not have a point of origin. That kind of makes it even scarier. We wanted to capture that and we realised that this place needs to have a lore, nothing in the template of a western story. It had to be very Indian, it had to be very grounded in our realities, the kind of stories we have heard from. So I think that was the first step in creating something that's truly horrifying because I think what is scary is what can't be explained and lore usually cannot be explained; it can only be narrated and you have to take it for what it is at face value. That was I think the starting point for us and introducing these real, relatable characters in this ordinary bizarre world.
UNDERSTANDING MYTHOLOGY
Nisarg Mehta: Our research was more on the kind of stories that we grew up listening to and hearing, and they are not specifically restricted to just mythology. You grow up in a part of the world where there are certain stories that exist, nobody knows what the origin is and those are the stories that just stay with you because those stories are so universal and it takes the form of lore or a folk tale. Even today, all those things it talks about, the themes that it explores are relevant, even to us here sitting in Mumbai or in any metro city. So that was our effort, to make it relatable to everyone who is going to watch the show. It's not something that is happening in one part of the world. Yes, it is happening in the back of the beyond, but all those things are so applicable to us as well.
Shiva: We looked at a lot of world mythology and we understood that mythology has a way of telling a story. We sort of started understanding how mythology is and how it relates to our story. We really wanted to root it in India, because actually there is a part of the story that actually happened. Nikhil was on a train and the train conductor told him a lore. So then we incorporated that into the story.
'TOO MANY COOKS SPOIL THE BROTH' OR 'MORE THE MERRIER'? ANSWER - BOXING GLOVES!
Creative differences are bound to come up when you are creating a piece of art. So how does one overcome it?
Vikranth: I think they throw things at each other.
Shiva: We had boxing gloves.
Vikranth: I have tried to be the referee in some of the matches and it is quite fun.
Shiva: Sometimes Vikranth had to put on the boxing gloves himself.
Vikranth: I just had to blow the whistle and be like 'timeout'. The referee's job is what I did.
Shiva: Actually, Vikranth gave us so much leeway to write this that at some point we had written for the moon and Vikranth was like guys, "ye thoda sa jyada hai, thodasa kam karo (This is a bit too much, tone it down)".
Nisarg: Vikranth has spoiled us. We try to work with other studios, execs, and other producers, it's just that Vikranth gave us a free hand. We were able to spread our wings and fly in directions that we shouldn't have also. He allowed us to do that.
Vikranth: Every director wants a script that is slightly not perfect so that the director can make it something that everyone is really proud of. These guys came up with a script that is so nice and taut, and multi-layered. I looked at it and said, âhow do I even start to do this?' I would definitely not recommend anybody to give them the freedom that I did, then it backfires on you.
WHY RAJASTHAN?
Shiva: I only write about Rajasthan. It's a really good mix of modern and mythological and also one of the few places in India where it is sparse. There can't be a crowd, then you are missing the spookiness. I also spent a lot of time filming and living in Rajasthan.
Nisarg (hails from Rajasthan): Yes, a lot of it came from where I grew up; first-hand experiences I have had. In my ancestral place, there is a mataji ka staan, behind the house, where every Navratri a normal-looking guy, mataji unmai aati hai (gets possessed), and then he goes about telling people stuff that he's not supposed to know. He's helped people. It sounds like superstition or supernatural but he has helped people and told people in the family about things nobody is supposed to know. You see that and your logical brain tells you that there is something off about this and it can't be true. Because there is a lot of old structure, some maintained and some not well maintained, there are stories associated with that place and many lands like ours. With time, lores and folk tales start getting associated with that place. In fact, I had met Sourabh Shukla while we were working on another film a couple of months ago and that film is also set in Rajasthan and after the narration, he looked at me and said, 'why do you have to route every story in Rajasthan'. (laughs)
Also Read: 'Dahan': Saurabh Shukla shares his belief and experience about supernatural things that happen around universe
THE WRITERS' WAY-
Content forms the core of any show or movie and the audiences have a better understanding of the plot and characters today, largely owing to the exposure to global content. So is it time to invest in writers?
Nikhil: We got a lot of time to write this and it shows. Simultaneously we have all been working on different projects. For âDahan' we got a healthy couple of years and then rewrites and I think that was crucial. We created a world that was densely packed with lore characters and plot without losing that balance. Personally, I have not worked on a show that has given me this much leeway, and hopefully, it shows. It comes with time with the investment in the writer, and I think Vikranth was very particular about it and we were very happy that it happened. This show has been evidence to that; you invest in writers.
Shiva: There was no template to this show, this world. We created this world and someone has to trust you because you are writing something that doesn't exist and have to see it the way you are seeing it. The audience gets fresh content because there is nothing like it. So I think content is becoming something that people are gravitating towards.
Nisarg: It is also about who you are and the body of work you have done. The good thing about working on this project was that we never kind of felt a sort of hierarchy between Vikranth and us. He never put his foot down and said that he will have his way. Ultimately, we write something and hand it over to him and when he is making it, it's in his hand right? I joke about it a lot of times and in the last dialogue draft that I had sent to Vikranth just before the shoot, I had written in the email saying âAb Tumhare Hawale Watan Saathiyon'. But that kind of comes from a place of mutual understanding, tuning with the team that you're working with, and then if you get respect, then you also respect the other person's opinion. I think as long as there is room for conversation things are good.