There are loads of scenes in the whole film where I haven’t used much of light,” says Tushar Kanti Ray as he elaborates on his shooting style for the upcoming action thriller, D Day.
 Having shot visually appealing films like Dhobi Ghat and Shor in the 
city amongst others, Tushar has now lent his expertise to the 
high-octane entertainer. The ingenious cinematographer speaks to 
Pandolin about recreating Karachi in India, shooting in the Rann of 
Kutch, working with Hollywood’s finest action directors and the 
techniques involved in the making of  D Day.

The artist with the camera – Tushar Kanti Ray
ow did you approach the shoot of an action thriller like D Day?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The artist with the camera – Tushar Kanti Ray
ow did you approach the shoot of an action thriller like D Day?
From the first day itself, when I met 
Nikhil and we discussed the script, the story and the wholesome approach
 to the film, he wanted the film to have an almost voyeuristic look. 
When I say voyeuristic I’m trying to say that there is a person who is 
standing and watching it happening, there is not much of an involvement 
from the camera, the camera is a viewer. I guess this was something that
 we started with, but we drifted and we drifted for good while the 
shooting was happening and we started realizing the style of the film. 
We had some other films in mind for the referencing, the initial 
references happened with a documentary called ‘Secret Pakistan’ by BBC. 
So we watched that and a couple of other films and got the initial 
design in mind.
How have you incorporated Nikhil Advani’s vision with yours?
When a DoP meets the director, the 
director is already living with the script for a long time, he has a 
visual understanding and I would like to take this opportunity to 
mention that Nikhil is a very visual director, so atleast at the 
beginning of the film he knew exactly what he was talking about. But 
again as the collaboration started we both started realizing something 
else, which was not something completely different but going ahead from 
that, so we got into that mode. If you see there is a lot of involvement
 of the camera happening, there is a kind of, I wouldn’t say dancing, 
but there is a choreography that happens between the camera and the 
actors throughout the film.
When I say voyeuristic I’m trying to say that there is a person who is 
standing and watching it happening, there is not much of an involvement 
from the camera, the camera is a viewer. 
Have you employed a specific color palette to distinguish between the various moods and locations in the film?
Most of the film is set in Karachi and 
there are some portions of India too. For India we have tried to keep it
 as real as we could and even Karachi so to say. But in Karachi there 
are different locations and we did a lot of research on it, on how the 
place should look, so our production designer – Sukant Panigrahy, me and
 Nikhil, as a team sat on it, exchanged notes and decided what should be
 the look of the space, what kind of color and so on. There is no 
particular look and color as there were so many locations and we were 
concentrating on each location separately and trying to be as 
naturalistic and realistic as possible to give the real feel of that 
kind of space. The costumes also happened brilliantly, and I am sure 
when people watch the film, one will wonder if we have really shot in 
Pakistan or recreated it in India, I think that’s a great achievement 
that we managed.
What format have you shot the film on? What kind of angles have largely been used?
We shot on Alexa with a Gemini recorder 
which gives you ARRIRAW 4:4:4. There is no particular type of framing or
 lensing, I would say, the scene, the space and the actors were the 
guiding factor. For example, if you see Arjun, you will get to see a lot
 of dynamic shots being framed for him. He’s a mercenary, a soldier, a 
person with lesser emotions though there are some emotional parts in the
 film, but he is not a family man and basically focuses on the mission 
and that is his top priority. He has been shot accordingly and we have 
tried to shoot him as dynamically as we could. While if you see Irrfan, 
he is a family person, going through a lot of turmoil as he is very 
concerned about his family. He loves his son and his wife but he is also
 very concerned about the project to happen, so he is in a state of 
confusion. So while shooting him you don’t see too much of dynamism, 
mostly eye level shots, not a lot of wide lensing or too many beautiful 
things happening on the side of Irrfan.
 Driven by the scene, the space and the actors
How much of steadicam and handheld have you used? 
Almost 95 per cent of the film is shot 
handheld. There are some steadicam shots used for a few hours of a day, 
where we initially thought that the steadicam would do wonders for the 
shot that we wanted to have but later realized that it was probably not 
the best idea to go with but that also worked.  There are some Jib 
shots, because in some places we wanted the camera to be on a higher 
side , so these shots had to have immediate operation. Otherwise, 95- 98
 per cent is handheld.
The film has largely been shot in 
Ahmedabad. Can you throw some light on the kind of locations used and 
why? Have you’ll largely shot exterior or interior?
Around 50 per cent of the film is shot 
in Gujarat – Ahmedabad and the Rann of Kutch. We had some references for
 Karachi and different places of Pakistan, so we were trying to get 
locations that looked like Muslim dominated areas where you get to see 
skullcaps, a masjid or dargah around, the eateries are of that kind, you
 get to see a lot of women wearing burkhas and so on. We were trying 
because if you get those then naturally your production designing starts
 falling in place. There is a lodge that we shot in as we wanted to have
 a lodge which is not convenient at all for a person who is living in 
luxury to go and stay in that place. There is a barber’s shot in Mumbai 
and a beautiful house, Irrfan’s house that we found in Ahmedabad was 
very close to a dargah we shot in. It’s an old and beautiful dargah and 
was fascinating to shoot there. All these locations are very close to 
the reference pictures we had. We did not have any sets really except 
for the wedding sequence at the beginning of the film that we had to 
create. We have shot around 35-40 percent exterior and the rest 
interior.
Some of the scenes have been shot on 
challenging terrains. Did you’ll face any challenges while shooting 
there? What sources of light have you used for these shots?
Those scenes were shot in the Rann of 
Kutch and there was no lighting used. 90 per cent of the scenes are shot
 with available light. And it is a beautiful location, you can just go 
with the camera and start capturing, it is so beautiful. The biggest 
challenge was to reach there as it is time consuming; the roads were not
 in best condition, getting things over there was difficult for 
production. But otherwise shooting was managed quite well.
There are many smaller locations that we had to choose because they were
 giving us the right feel and I was very happy to shoot in those 
locations without using much light. 
Can you tell us about the lighting design of the film? 
There are loads of scenes in the whole 
film where I haven’t used much of light be it exterior, night exterior, 
day interior etc. I had a light package including a couple of 6ks, 4ks, 9
 bank Dino, and lots of smaller lights which I could place anywhere I 
wanted. If you see Irrfan’s house it is a very tiny location, even the 
barber’s shop and the lodge are all small locations. There are many 
smaller locations that we had to choose because they were giving us the 
right feel and I was very happy to shoot in those locations without 
using much light.
With Arjun Rampal
What was the thought process employed
 while shooting the songs of the film? Which was the most challenging or
 interesting song to shoot?
We were extremely adamant as a team that
 we didn’t want to shoot a song which didn’t make sense to the film. 
Those days are gone in Bollywood, fortunately. Most of the films today 
are using songs in a nicer way. We need to agree that we cannot really 
chuck all the songs out of a film because we have a history behind it, 
our audiences love to hear songs and songs form an integral part of any 
film in Indian history. But we really wanted all the songs to work for 
the film, to take the story ahead.
There is a portion where Arjun is 
falling in love with Shruti. The discussion about this love aspect in 
the film started from the beginning and I didn’t want to drift away from
 my style of shooting and lighting from the rest of the film, this part 
couldn’t just look very different from the rest of the film. So we had 
to get into a design which looks as a part of the film and still looks 
beautiful as we wanted to see moments between two lovers. It was 
fantastic production designing done by Sukant and his team for the 
particular place and there was a lot of lighting involved for this bit.
How was the association with the 
action coordinator? Since there are various stunts in the film, could 
you tell us about the kind of rigs you have used? Any special rigs that 
you’ll fabricated?
We haven’t really used any special rigs.
 Tom Struthers was there and we had all become his students and learnt a
 lot from him. We all knew that to begin with it is going to be a 
handheld film, and it cannot happen like any Hollywood film action as we
 didn’t want that. We wanted the action to be as normal and naturalistic
 as possible. Irrfan is a barber for the last 9-10 years and Arjun is a 
soldier, so they can’t fight alike. Irrfan couldn’t have fought as well 
as Arjun. There was a training happening with Irrfan but Tom and Irrfan 
too didn’t want to fight as a soldier. If I started shooting that with 
the understanding of a classic Hollywood action film it would have 
actually fallen in a different space. The camera angles were different 
and Tom was continuously telling me what angle would help to capture a 
particular action. Those things were kept in mind, otherwise it was all 
very organic.
The multi-camera set up used to capture the blasts is something you 
cannot avoid. I normally don’t like using multi-cameras but in such 
scenes, you need to use multi-cameras to capture as many angles as you 
can. 
What technique have you used to show the various bomb blasts in the film? 
Most of the blasts that you see have 
been done in real locations. Tom and the entire team worked really hard 
to create realistic blasts. We were capturing it on more than a single 
camera most of the time and in VFX we would try and enhance it 
sometimes. There is a car blast happening and it has not been touched by
 VFX, it was beautifully done on location. There are some blasts that 
have been enhanced by VFX but some haven’t been touched at all. The 
multi-camera set up used to capture the blasts is something you cannot 
avoid. I normally don’t like using multi-cameras but in such scenes, you
 need to use multi-cameras to capture as many angles as you can.
What was the most challenging aspect of the film and how did you overcome it?
Initially it was a little challenging 
because you want to give the actors a free hand and don’t want to tell 
them to hit a particular mark. I really appreciate when Nikhil told me 
that this is a very important part for our film.  So in the beginning it
 was a little challenging for me and my focus puller as well as it was a
 handheld film and I chose to shoot full open, chose to shoot with as 
minimum lights as possible. But then we started growing with it, I 
started realizing that it is also helping me as the camera is on my 
shoulder and I can do whatever I want to do. So they were doing their 
thing and I was doing my thing and at the end, it was fantastically 
jammed together.
 Creating a visual choreography
How was the overall experience of working with the cast of the film?
I think it was a great learning 
experience. Sharing the same space with Rishi Kapoor Sir is amazing 
because of the experience that he comes with. An actor of Irrfan’s 
caliber teaches you so many things. Being the DoP, you are the first 
person who is watching the film and you get to see a person who is doing
 absolutely nothing and giving you all the emotions. It was fascinating 
to work with Arjun too who has a great physique and has done some 
brilliant action. Working with everybody for that matter was a great 
experience all together.
What was the shooting schedule like? Where has the post production been done and who was your team? 
We shot around 58-59 days. The post 
production was done at Prime Focus. Sunny Singh was the colorist and he 
is absolutely brilliant to work with. He added to the film amazingly, 
without him, the look would have been totally different. Merzin Tavaria 
is the VFX head at Prime Focus and there were lots of other people 
involved. I didn’t have a gaffer per say. I had a great team which 
included Jignet Wangchuk who was the first AC. We are working together 
for some time now and he is a delight to work with. Rangoli Agarwal was 
the second AC, Rais Ansari was pulling the focus, Pradeep who was the 
best boy from Monalisa was promoted to the gaffer by the middle of the 
schedule and he did a good job at it.
Photo Courtesy: Emmay Entertainment
Posted 
      July 18, 2013                        by                        Esha Verma                        in                                                
                               E-Zine.