Manasanamaha
A young man muses on the nature of love, recounting his three relationships… backward. He reminisces not from start to finish but the other way round, making the audience, surprisingly, look forward to the happy beginnings. This short, romantic, reverse film conveys an important message that people focus on negative outcomes instead of the happy times they experience in every journey.
DIRECTOR'S STATEMENT
Focusing On What Matters Most
"Manasanamaha" roughly translates to 'Salutations to the mind' in Sanskrit. The film is an ode to the process of making memories and how they define our perspective. In order to communicate this to the audience, I chose to narrate this story in the first person perspective over the usual third person perspective. Of course it would be biased, but I felt it would also make it more human, full of errors and emotions.
When I started visualizing the film, I wanted it to have its own language, be it the structure, compositions, colours, cinematography, editing or even the narrative. A lot of work went into the cinematographic and sound editing techniques to evoke the sense of nostalgia the character feels while reminiscing. Use of a custom-made helmet rig for the POV shots helped set the tone, as did the fluid watercolour shots to bookend the different chapters of the story.
The idea at the heart of this film is that the endings of love stories can be happy or sad but the beginnings are always happy. With this in mind, I decided to literally narrate a story in backwards to end it on a happy note.
- Deepak Reddy
