National Award-winning art director Anees Nadodi on building a chapel for the Malayalam film ‘Kappela’
The Hindu
Anees Nadodi looks back on designing the set for the Malayalam ‘Kappela’ that won got him the National Award
When the 68th National Film Awards were announced with production designer Anees Nadodi’s name on the list for the best production design for Kappela, he was on an outing with his wife at Marine Drive in Kochi. “When we got the call, we did not even know what award it was. I did not know that the National Awards were to be announced,” he says over the phone from Malappuram, where he is visiting his mother after the announcement.
“My younger brother called and asked me if there was another production designer with the same name. When I said no, he told me I had won the National Award!”
Phone calls started pouring in. “Even then it did not register. I checked with friends in the media to confirm the news. It took another 24 hours before it finally sank in.” Almost all films are sent in for consideration for various awards, there was no reason for him to expect an award.
An interest in drawing and applied arts led the 32-year-old to quit his job as a journalism teacher in Malappuram to pursue a career in art direction. Sudani from Nigeria was his first film as an independent art director; Varathan, Thamasha, Luca, Kanakam Kamini Kalaham and Mahaveeryar are some of his other films.
Anees’ design sensibility is low-key and restrained, keeping a set real. “Choosing a film like Kappela implies that the jury looks for many aspects and pays attention to the details that go into designing a set,” he says. He explains what went into designing Kappela’s ‘kappela’, an abandoned chapel of Mother Mary, which is a sanctuary of sorts for Anna Ben’s character. It is a set that is close to his heart.
Built from scratch on the edge of a cliff at Poovaranthode, a small village nestling among nutmeg plantations in Wayanad, it was constructed with the help of carpenters and welders. The design team built an 18-ft. ramp on which the set was built.
“Musthafa, the director, wanted it to be on that particular cliff because the landscape is stunning. The kappela had to be on the edge like a protrusion onto the landscape. We sourced plants and foliage found on the higher reaches of such hills and ‘planted’ them there for authenticity. Since these would wilt soon, we would get these plants only after everything was ready and the camera set to roll,” Anees reminisces. For the other sets, he sourced items locally from the villagers, for a real feel.