Thursday, February 21, 2013

Centenary of Indian Cinema (Part II)



Continued from Part I








As the Indian Cinema entered into the retro phase with the resurgence of the Manmohan Desai’s and the Yash Chopras, the inception of college romance took place. The formula turned out to be such a tremendous path-breaking success that it has made some of the most dumb and decadent directors into millionaires. Loads of clichéd dialogues and chessy antics were commonplace during this era. “Meri mummy ne tumhe chai pe bulaya hai” was considered a blast of oxygen. Girls in shimmering colors with tons of make up and gallons or glycerine romancing boys (some of who resembled uncles) donning bell- bottoms and over-sized aviators, singing in public places; hands-hands; what a gala time it was. Though, on one side, there was the urbane Rishi Kapoor- Neetu Singh pair which was considered poster couple for any sexually starved couple those days, on the other side there was a simpleton ,boy-next-door Amol Palekar trying to succeed in his “pyaar ka izhaar”  but in vain. Hearts broke, marriages annulled…”yeh hamari izzat ka sawaal hai”. The period saw some welcome changes in not only the idealogy regarding love, sex and marriage from the film makers but the audience also was broadminded to digest movies like Silsila and Kabhi Kabhi with the former based on extra-marital affairs. The boy fighting the girl’s father, bodyguard followed by unrelenting rona dhona and than fortunately happy endings. The Kashmir ki Kalis either eloped with their Dharam Veers or in a sudden turn of events, the family complied..”beta, tumhare pyaar ne meri aankhe khol deen” *where’s my tissue paper*…

As the Indian cinema turned 75, the cynosure shifted from colleges and conventional locales like Switzerland to slightly more unconventional ones like Bangkok, Mauritius and Greece. Searching their long lost loves, our leading lovers crossed all boundaries and restrictions , crossed harshest of terrains to eventually win the war of love. If earlier the directors used the mingling of flowers to symbolically portray love, this era witnessed full fledged sensuous scenes burning the reels on fire. Liplocks and getting heavy on the bed were no longer a taboo and love scenes became the usp of a successful love story. Films like 1942, a love story; Chalte Chalte, Saathiya and the entire shebang were cute love stories which are exponents of the risky ishq! With Yash Chopra donning the director’s hat, it was the time to finally witness the evolution of the Indian love story plots take a prudent turn. The erudite veteran made DDLJ, Dil to Paagal hai, Veer Zaara and more recently Jab tak hai Jaan. Though the latter did not have that strong script, all these movies put one perennial doubt to rest: when it comes to love story, no one knows it better than Bollywood. Chopra’s protégés ala Karan Johar (kuch Kuch hota hai, SOTY) and Farhan Akhtar (Dil Chahta hai) brought an urbane angle to love, there is an entire fresh crops of young directors who have the baton to make this emotion the backbone of the filmdom. 

What started with the Dilip Kumars and the Dev Anands with the Wahheda Rehmaans and the Sharmila Tagores, passing on to the Shahrukhs and the Kajols and now with the Ranbir apoors and the Katrina Kaifs, relationships hovering over love as portrayed in our cinema have changed a lot. Scripts change, the protagonists change, the times change, but is there anything as timeless as love?
As  Anupam Kher aptly says to Shahrukh Khan(in DDLJ), beta yeh mohabbat hai, ye naa badli thi, naa badlegi…..

Udit Bhatia


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