Fire In Babylon - Cricket Movie
Releasing September 21 in India
Caribbean Kings
(THANKS TO "THE HINDU" )
To modern cricket viewers in India, it can be difficult to associate the West Indies with success on the pitch. A soon-to-be-released documentary, however, hopes to change the way the team is looked at and show that our nostalgia is wholly justified
It was impossible to escape the impression last winter, at the end of
the West Indies’ tour of India, that the visitors’ defeat had
disappointed some of us too. There was no excessive glorying in the
victory for our side, no overzealous celebration; instead, every West
Indian success — however small — was seized upon, every marginal
accomplishment clutched at, encouragement sought in every half-decent
passage of play. It was almost as if some of us secretly wanted the West
Indies to win.
To those born beyond the late 1980s, this sentiment may seem
incomprehensible, but to earlier generations, cricketing heroes came
mostly in maroon. “Other than being great players, there was something
about them,” smiles K.N. Ramesh, 44 years old and one of the millions of
West Indies nostalgics the world over. “You could make out that they
loved what they were doing; they just radiated so much joy. It was
incredible.”
Between March 1976 and January 1988 — as Ramesh went through school and
college — the West Indies won 43 of the 91 Test matches they played,
losing only nine. The first significant stirrings of downfall were felt
at the turn of the decade, the aura slipping inch by inch before
crumbling with the series defeat to Australia in 1995 — their first in
close to 15 years. Since then, they have lost 85 out of 158 Tests
against the major nations (excluding Zimbabwe and Bangladesh), winning
only 26.
“You may rationalise and explain why they declined,” Ramesh sighs, “but
it doesn’t make it any easier to accept. Look at their body language
during the India series; it was as if they’d given up. It just hurts to
see a West Indies team like this. It really hurts.”
It cannot be said how much Stevan Riley’s Fire in Babylon will help the
likes of Ramesh’s son understand the genesis of their fathers’ and
grandfathers’ love affair with the West Indies cricket team — but it is
definitely a starting point. The documentary feature chronicles,
vividly, the human face of the struggles and triumphs. Among the
sceptical, that always stands a better chance of appreciation than
numbers.
Releasing September 21 in India, Riley’s project charts the rise of the
West Indies cricket team, from patronised ‘calypso cricketers’ to world
beaters. The film premiered at the London Film Festival in 2010, before
opening to resounding reviews in the U.K. last year. Executive Producer
Ben Goldsmith hopes the film will reignite interest in cricket in the
Caribbean and revive the West Indies’ fortunes (see interview). “We
complain that young cricketers in the West Indies are not focused on
what cricket means to the Caribbean and all they are doing is playing
for themselves,” said Michael Holding, whose role in the narrative is a
prominent one, in London last year. “What this film will tell them is
the history of West Indies cricket, where it’s coming from and that it’s
not just a sport.”
Fire In Babylon - Cricket Movie Trailer
The story begins at the end of the 1975-76 series in Australia, when
Clive Lloyd’s men return home disgraced, reeling from the 5-1 pounding
Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thompson had given them. “I remember Clive said:
‘never again’,” Viv Richards recounts in the trailer. “’If we can find
some fast bowlers, let us see how well they can handle it.’”
Although their famed quartet was to fully form only a couple of years
after the Australia debacle, in debutants Michael Holding and Wayne
Daniel, (Andy Roberts was rested for two of the four matches), the West
Indies offered a proper foretaste of what lay in the years ahead when
India came calling. With the series level at 1-1, in the final Test on
an unpredictable Sabina Park pitch, three Indian batsmen were hit and
injured. Outraged, the captain Bishan Singh Bedi declared with six
wickets down in the first innings, while in the second only five could
bat (two more players having picked up injuries while fielding). Opinion
was sharply divided. The tourists were furious with what they deemed
deliberately dangerous bowling while the home side said India was merely
whingeing.
SACHIN HEARS VIV RICHARDS ADVICE
Alvin Kallicharan
Despite the ill-feeling that the Jamaica Test seemed to breed, there was
little of it to be felt when the West Indies toured India in 1979.
Alvin Kallicharan led a team depleted by moves to Kerry Packer’s World
Series Cricket, but it was one that still managed to win 1-0. “Kalli had
a very good rapport with the Indian team,” recalls G.R. Viswanath, the
only batsman on this side, along with Sunil Gavaskar, to handle their
bowling with any degree of comfort. “So it was all very cordial. It
probably helped that they had one or two players of Indian origin.”
When Indian teams travelled to the Caribbean, they found they were
greeted well (too well by the local ‘East Indians’, in places like
Trinidad and Guyana, for the home team’s liking), with particular
respect for those who stood up to their bowlers. “When we landed there
in ’83, there was a Rastafarian waiting for us,” recollects Anshuman
Gaekwad, who had batted through pain in Jamaica. “He asked for me, Sunny
maan (Gavaskar) and Vishy maan (Viswanath). He waved at us but was
distraught when we said Viswanath hadn’t come (having retired earlier
that month).”
West Indian players too took to India, speaking warmly of the passion
for cricket they saw here. Richards, perhaps the most-adored West Indian
player in these parts, made his debut in Bangalore in 1974 — the first
Test match at the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium. V. Balendu Mouli, a retired
Karnataka umpire, has little trouble recalling images from that game.
“What a sight Lloyd was! He’d set his front foot down and pull the ball
from six feet in front of him; such was his reach.” A nervous Richards
made four and three with the bat, but held Gavaskar (diving, according
to Mouli, “like a goalkeeper”) and Farokh Engineer at short leg. The
catches, Richards later felt, probably kept him in the side.
A full-strength West Indies team returned in October 1983, exacting
severe vengeance for the defeat in the World Cup final in June. Holding
and the late Malcolm Marshall took 30 and 33 wickets in the series (the
latter surpassing Roberts’ 32 from 1974-75, till then the best returns
for a West Indian bowler in India), as the visitors won 3-0, two of
those Tests by an innings. K.V. Rajagopal, a veteran spectator of Test
matches at Kolkata, remembers with child-like delight Marshall’s nine
for 102 at the Eden Gardens on that tour. “He made the most of the early
morning mist; my God, what a terrific sight! I couldn’t even spot the
ball,” he exclaims. Yet, there was no great disappointment at India’s
loss. “It didn’t feel so bad because they were the West Indies. People
loved them; they played the game in the right spirit and they just
didn’t play for a draw. Greenidge, Haynes, Richards, Lloyd and those
bowlers — how could they play for a draw?”
Does part of the reason for India’s general support for the West Indies
cricket team also lie in their race? Maybe. But there was no
inconsiderable thrill among Indian supporters in 1976 when Lloyd’s men
crushed England 3-0. Fire in Babylon draws a link here, between the
exploits of the unstoppable West Indies team and cultural liberation in
the Caribbean. As their cricketers marched on, beating the world, West
Indians went to work with a pride they hadn’t known, and expressed
themselves in ways they hadn’t been allowed to. Babylon — the
Rastafarian term for systems of oppression and discrimination — was on
fire.
Andy Roberts, Michael Holding, Colin Croft and Joel Garner
The series had assumed extra significance in light of Tony Greig’s
threat on TV to make the visitors ‘grovel’. “If the West Indians are on
top they are magnificent,” he said on the BBC’s Sportsnight programme.
“If they are down, they grovel. And, with the help of Closey (Brian
Close) and a few others, I intend to make them grovel.” (The clip is
included in full in the film.) The West Indian players were gathered for
a team meeting in the hotel when they heard Greig’s comments. Once the
connotations of those remarks, from a player of South African origin,
became apparent, “that team meeting and every subsequent one on that
tour was made instantly made redundant,” wrote Richards, in his
autobiography, Sir Vivian. “This was the greatest motivating speech the
England captain could have given to any West Indian team.”
The bowlers — Holding and Roberts eventually finished with 28 wickets
apiece — unleashed their full fury on Greig, and whoever his unfortunate
partner happened to be. The England captain was bowled five times in
the series, making serious runs only at Headingley. Thousands of the
immigrant West Indian community poured into the Oval, from neighbouring
Brixton, for the final Test of the series. And what a show their heroes
put on! The tourists won by 231 runs, Holding taking a career and West
Indies-best 14 for 149, and Richards walloping his all-time high score
of 291. What was more, Holding bowled Greig in both innings, leaving the
crowd delirious.
“At one level, this was like your hero beating up the bully,” chuckles
Ramesh. And there was no better embodiment of this figure than Richards,
who made 829 runs in seven innings that series (“I was grovelling at
291; yeah Tony Greig — you got me out,” upon his dismissal at the Oval).
While his colleagues were spreading terror in the ranks of the
opposition, he had no worries facing any bowler himself. “Fast bowlers
are basically bullies who try to intimidate batsmen,” he wrote, in all
his withering, gum-chewing disdain. “My attitude was: don’t treat me
like that. I have a bat and you only have a ball.”
Hunting in a pack
In 1977 debuted Colin Croft and ‘Big Bird’ Joel Garner (“I don’t need no
mid-on and I don’t need no mid-off and all the batsman will need is a
stepping ladder”), thus completing a foursome of bowlers unalloyed in
their pace. “Way back into history, fast bowlers had always hunted in
pairs but never four at a time,” observed Dickie Bird, the pre-eminent
umpire of that era, in his autobiography. “[Clive Lloyd] brought in four
quickies, one at one end, a second at the other, and two more resting
at third man and fine leg waiting to take over. There was no respite, no
getting away from them. This was something completely different.”
The West Indies took the 1979 World Cup, before beating Australia,
England, India and Pakistan in Test series. In 1982, Marshall replaced
Croft; Roberts retired the next year while Holding followed in ’87. The
film closes at the team’s zenith, the 5-0 ‘Blackwash’ of England in
1984. Although nowhere near the peak of their powers in the nineties,
the West Indies remained unbeaten in a Test series till midway through
the decade, Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh delaying the inevitable.
No other team, Holding states, as the credits roll, dominated any sport
for 15 years. The West Indies may not have gone anywhere near the same
heights again, but those feats still remain staggering. “It smarts out
there that they really haven’t been as good,” Riley said in an interview
last year. “People kept talking about the decline and I had to remind
them that this was about the glory days.” The grief of watching the West
Indies wither, though, will never fade away, Ramesh believes. “Look, it
is a very personal bond you form with your boyhood team,” he states,
painfully. “I do not think that you will understand. You have never
watched Richards bat.”
More than just cricket
Ben Goldsmith, Executive Producer of Fire in Babylon, talks about the making of the film and its reception.
Where did the idea for the film come from?
I’ve always been a big cricket fan. Also, my sister Jemima was married
to Imran Khan and I grew up with Imran telling me lots of stories about
this West Indies team. So I told [producer] Charles Steel that we should
do this film, and so we went out and found a director. Imran was very
helpful in arranging interviews with the players.
The movie is more than just about cricket. But was there a fear that it would be perceived as just a cricket film?
We made a conscious effort to ensure that that didn’t happen. The story
is about independent island nations emerging from colonial rule and the
cultural revolution – especially in music – that took place in the
region. Cricket was simply the centrepiece of a much broader
emancipation process.
There has been criticism that Fire in Babylon tries too hard to fit
certain ideas into the narrative, that some aspects – particularly the
racial bit – have been overstated.
We wanted the film to be a story told by the protagonists, in their own
words, and this is how they chose to tell it. Maybe the film became more
political than it could have been but that’s how the players felt at
the time. It meant more than sport to them. But there was no conscious
effort from the production team to make it political.
How was the film received in the Caribbean?
Oh, they absolutely loved it. We’re now trying to get as many people
there to watch it as possible. It’s part of the school curriculum in
Jamaica, Antigua and St. Lucia. So kids will watch it, and we hope
they’re inspired by it and it triggers a revolution. The current players
liked it too. Tino Best credited Fire in Babylon after he played that
record knock (95, highest score by a no.11 in Tests), and Darren Sammy
and Chris Gayle have referred to it.
Why is it releasing in India a year after it opened in the UK?
It was purely logistical. We wanted to find exactly the right partner
for it. India has a similar history, although independence came much
earlier. So we hope people will be able to relate to it.
THANKS TO
"THE HINDU"
"THE HINDU"
YOUTUBE
WIKIPEDIA
WIKIPEDIA
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