Rarely does one come across a successful debut film producer, director, actor and screenwriter who is self-deprecating, pragmatic and critical of his own work. Adnan Sarwar is all of that and more. He talks of his successful debut film about a forgotten boxing legend, Shah, with wonderment as he is aware of its technical shortcomings, and at the same time isn’t amazed by the positive reviews it received. He says he gets uncomfortable when people shower praise on him.
Adnan sat down with with Icon to discuss his latest venture, Motorcycle Girl, with the same forthright honesty. Excerpts follow.
Your first movie Shah was about boxing and your second also has to do with a sporty kind of a personality, a motorcyclist. Any particular reason for this focus on personalities from the world of sport?
Filmmaker Adnan Sarwar has now come out with another off-the-beaten-track film, Motorcycle Girl. Icon sits down with the director to pick his brains on the unusual subjects that he chooses for his films and his experience of working in his latest project with some renowned names from the entertainment industry
No. I am simply attracted to stories of human achievement. It just happened that I came across these two amazing stories.
You had said in an earlier interview for this very newspaper, after the release of Shah, that your next film won’t be a biopic. Yet, Motorcycle Girl is.
Someone recently called me ‘The Biopic Guy’ in an interview which I thought was hilarious. The truth is that I just want to tell good stories. My team and I were working on another film when I came across Zenith Irfan’s story. I am an impulsive artist and I knew that I had to make this film before anything else. So we postponed the project we were working on to make Motorcycle Girl first. The next one will not be a biopic.
How was it filming Motorcycle Girl in the northern areas of Pakistan? Did you face any major difficulties?
I think the major difficulty we faced was the fact that the oxygen level is very low in Khunjerab and none of us were equipped to handle it. They say that you should not remain at that altitude for more than 45 minutes at a stretch, and if you want to really push it, then maximum one-and-a-half hours. We worked non-stop for four hours as we were shooting on a very tight budget and our team was very small, and we had to divide tasks. The result was that all of us started to suffer from hypoxemia, a condition in which people first start getting aggressive, and then disoriented.
When people from my team would get sick, I would send them down one at a time in the car to lower altitudes, so the car kept going back and forth. It reached a point when it just became too dangerous for us to remain there and continue shooting. Normally, when shooting teams go there to do commercials they have ambulances, doctors, oxygen, etc. with them. Due to budget constraints, we had no such luxury. It was very traumatic for all of us and it wasn’t right of me to put my team through this ordeal, but I had no choice. Connectivity in those areas was another major problem — we were pretty much cut off from the rest of the world.
But didn’t you have a better budget this time round unlike Shah?
I had more than double the budget of Shah but that still didn’t amount to much. Realistically, my film’s budget was less than that of a 30-second commercial by a big corporation — which is under three crore rupees. And in order to be able to afford that, as no one was willing to take up this film, I had to sell half my company. It was like selling part of me, so from now on whatever I do will be part-owned by someone else. But regardless of this, even though I had offers for big budget movies, I knew working on this film would make me happy.