Welcome to The Queue — your daily distraction of curated video content sourced from across the web. Today, we’re watching a video essay on how pollution is changing the film industry in India.
Ostensibly, movies are an escape. This is and has always been one of cinema’s greatest promises.
Only, in one of the many lessons imparted by Mrs. COVID-19, this isn’t really true. Movies have an uncanny way of mirroring real life, intentionally or otherwise. As Latham Hunter notes in their dissertation The Celluloid Cubicle, “We allow, even crave, film to speak to us and for us.”
Like dreams, movies always contain a kernel of truth, no matter how weird, whacky, or surreal they may be.
The climate crisis is very real. Catastrophes like rainfall flooding are increasing in scale and scope, unambiguously underlining the devastating realities of what it’s going to be like living on an increasingly polluted planet. But some of the more pernicious environmental effects of climate change are decidedly less bombastic. As such, they have had far sneakier effects on daily life, and, in turn, movies.
If you’ve had the, uh, pleasure of living in the vicinity of a wildfire, you’ll know that the sky becomes really strange. The same is true for smog and pollution. The resulting visibility-reducing particulate matter greatly affects the ability of cameras to capture things like true-blue values and highlights.
The video essay below offers a fascinating and technically oriented breakdown of how air pollution is affecting cinematography in India. The essay does a great job of breaking down the technical realities of capturing outdoor shots in highly polluted environments. Which, unfortunately, may become more and more of a reality.
Watch “How Pollution Is Changing Cinema In India”:
Who made this?
This video essay on how pollution is changing the film industry in India is by Jyotishwar Singh. They are a video producer based in India whose work focuses primarily on Bollywood content. For more of Singh’s work, you can subscribe to them on YouTube here.
More videos like this
- For another look at Singh’s work focused on Bollywood content, check out this video essay on the editing style of Rajkumar Hirani.
- And for a sample of Singh’s work not focused on Bollywood, here’s their essay on how Spider-Man conveys emotions with only his eyes.
- Sam Hargrave’s Extraction is one of the Hollywood movies shot in India mentioned in the video essay. Here’s a different video essay about Extraction‘s use of a crazy long uncut take, and whether it qualifies as a gimmick.
- Here’s a Queue favorite, Accented Cinema, with a video essay on how the uninitiated can properly appreciate the all-time epic Masala classic Sholay.