Updated On: 10 March, 2023 05:20 PM IST | mumbai | Johnson Thomas
Sen opens his narrative with a shot of a garbage-littered ground where rats and other rodents make merry

All that Breathes
Shaunak Sen’s awards-sweeping documentary on how man interacts with nature is a perfectly structured character study with amazing nature cinematography. Set in New Delhi around the time of the anti-CAA stir, the film brilliantly captures the backdrop of polluted air quality and politics while in the foreground we see a pair of siblings, Nadeem Shehzad and his younger brother Mohammad Saud, modest souls who have devoted nearly 20 years of their lives to caring for injured birds of prey referred to as black Kites - treating over 20,000 of them during that period. Nadeem and Saud live in a very rundown working-class, Muslim neighborhood and earn their living selling soap dispensers but their passion is rescuing injured Kites through their Wildlife Rescue organisation. Nadeem yearns to go abroad and make his efforts global while Saud is content to stay home and tend to those who need him most. Both are well aware that their contribution though crucial, has not made a dent on an ecosystem that is steadily going out of control. They have incorporated a new employee Salik, in order to augment their noble efforts but even they admit that there are more hurt birds now than even they can handle.
To bring home the point, we see Kites glide over the city’s horizons against a smog/smoke-shrouded landscape. Sen glides his camera in such a way that we actually feel that these majestic birds are actually drowning in a sea of smoke. His imagery is at once powerful and evocative. In fact, shots of Kites soaring in the sky overtake those of humans or any of nature`s other creatures. Sen’s camera is equally evocative in capturing everyday nature - we see a variety of bugs in a pool of water while from the reflection we guage humans walking past and in another we are made aware of wild pigs crossing as horses stand by.