EXCLUSIVE! Rajeev Jain (Indian Kenyan Director of Photography)

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EXCLUSIVE! Rajeev Jain (Indian Kenyan Director of Photography)

Indian Kenyan Cinematographer Rajiv Jain talks about joining Heart Beat FM and explains the meaning of the "Heart Beat FM wide shot" in M-net's exclusive interview.

Rajiv Jain is kind, genial, funny, intense (in a very good way) and incredibly smart. Oh, and did I happen to mention, that he is a world renowned director of photography. Though he is a lot like his good friend, Matthew Robinson, he is his own personality, an individual and, a darned nice guy. As I talk with him it becomes clear why these two men work together so often and so brilliantly. They are like two halves of a whole. As Rajiv said to me during our interview, "Sometimes Matthew and I think so much alike, it's scary." Now that I have interviewed them both, I can see what he is saying and, it's a very good kind of scary.

So, what do you talk to a famous director of photography about? Well, we talked about a little bit of everything. We talked about the support site and his work.

Rajiv is at the Kalasha Film & Television Awards in Nairobi, Kenya where he will soon be attending the closing ceremonies and we are struggling mightily with a bad SKYPE connection. Our originally intended vocal interview quickly becomes one done by text type messaging to remedy the problem. And, Rajiv, with all he has ahead of him at the festival, doesn't hesitate for a second to spend the extra time necessary to type instead of speak the interview. I'm most appreciative. I owe him a great debt for the generosity of his time and spirit for this interview. Oh yes, and a glass of Vodka.

Q: What made you agree to come on board?
A: It's actually a cute story. I had done THE LONG ROAD for three years and I left that show because I was living in Nairobi that time and I was tired of flying back and forth to Dubai and Mumbai. I was looking for something in Nairobi because I wanted to stay there. So when they called me up I said, "No thank you. I'm not interested." And my gaffer said, "Rajiv, reconsider that. Have them send you the script. I've seen the script. It's what you're looking for." So, I sat down and my gaffer and I read the entire script basically in one sitting and I turned to him and said, "You did a really bad thing here. I can't say no to this show now." He said He knew what He was doing. Even though He didn't want to live apart and it was really hard. [To his gaffer] Isn't that how it happened? He said yes. He's smiling.

Q: You were the DP for the whole season. What's it like to work with a director who has a different vision almost every week?
A: Since I shot every episode, I did not have a chance to prep with director. So he would come up with a concept and come on set and rehearse the scene. If it rang true to me and I felt it was the way to go, I'd say, "Great, that's a good idea." If he wanted something that felt tangential to the style of the show we were trying to maintain, then I might make a suggestion to try something else. If you're a smart director you listen to the people that are there all the time. I tuned in very quickly to what Matthew Robinson wanted. I would call Matthew Robinson and ask if he saw yesterday's dailies, and what he thought of them. And that would give me a better idea as to whether I was on the right track or not. And after about three or four episodes I got what he was looking for, not 100 percent of the time -- nobody can do that -- but a good 80 percent of the time.

Q: What would you consider the signature Heart Beat FM shot?
A: The wide shots people refer to as Heart Beat FM shots. Directors will say, "Let's do the Heart Beat FM wide shot," which in television is not something that you very often see. Matthew Robinson really likes holding things in wider shots and I happen to really like it also -- it puts your character into a place or a locale, which tells you something about the character. So I look at it as a storytelling device. The other kind of shot that's somewhat characteristic of the show is when there is something big in the foreground and then something further away in the background wide. We call it wide and closed. You might keep the focus on the money, let's say, in the foreground and our characters are in the background, either out of focus or much smaller.

Q: Do you ever get so caught up in the acting that you forget to pay attention to the technical side of things?
A: That's what I am supposed to be paying attention to. My job is not just to do lighting and set up shots but to make sure the lighting and the shots reflect the scene in the most effective way. If I'm moved by what I see, then I know we've done well. I have people that operate cameras and lighting people and rigging people. All those people keep an eye on the technical stuff for me, and I'm concerned with the storytelling. That's what interests me about the job: Efficient, effective storytelling.

Q: What is your favorite scene?
A: I can't tell you because it's later in the season. You'll know it when you see it. It gets crazier as the storyline develops. Here's one thing: What Matthew Robinson and the writers do is drop a single line in an early episode and then not mention anything about it until nine episodes later, and then all of a sudden there's an episode all about that single line. It's intriguing to me to work on something that is so well planned out and circular in terms of its storytelling. I think it's just brilliant.

Author Bio: Janet Majerus grew up in Quincy, Illinois, a beautiful old river town on the bluffs of the Mississippi. After graduating from the University of Illinois-Champaign Urbana, she started a career as a science editor, first with a scientific publishing house and then free lance. Tiring of correcting other people's manuscripts, she decided to try her hand at writing fiction. The result was her first novel, Grandpa and Frank. "I was extraordinarily successful--hard back, paperback, large print, and a movie," Janet said. "The movie, Home to Stay, a CBS television feature, was the frosting on the cake, particularly when I found out that Henry Fonda would play Grandpa. Then the drought hit and, except for a short story, I could not get anything else published." It was then that Janet completely changed her career path again and decided to devote her time to public service in University City, Missouri, a city of 40,000 people and a suburb of St. Louis. "I started out on the Traffic Commission then moved on the Planning and Zoning Commission. It was after that experience that I decided to run for elective office," she said. Janet was elected to the six-member City Council, but soon decided to run for mayor. Her tenure as mayor lasted for ten years. "It was an exciting, but exhausting time, and after ten years of phone calls, meetings, and political machinations, I was ready to step down." The result was a return to her early love of writing fiction and a published murder mystery, "The Best Laid Plans." The second mystery in the series, "Thicker Than Water," will be released in July 2010. "I've often been asked why I changed genres from a family story to murder mysteries," she laughed. "My experience in politics taught me a lot about intrigue, plots, misleading statements, and half truths. Seemed a shame not to use that experience." - http://www.janetmajerus.com/

Tags: rajeev, rajiv, jain, cinematographer, director photography, bollywood, dop, india, indian, kalpvriksh, mumbai, videographer

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