Transcript Slide 1

Mirch Masala: Bollywood
Cinema from 1950s onwards
Professor Nilufer E. Bharucha
University of Mumbai
The Beginnings…
• Cinema came to India almost as soon as it had
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been pioneered in the USA and in Europe
The first films were shown in India on 7 July
1896 at Hotel Watson in Bombay.
They were Arrive d’un Train a la Gare de la
Ciotat and La Sortie de l’Usine – just six months
after their world premiere in Paris.
The first films made in India were short
newsreels which started in 1897, such as The
Races in Poona, A Train Entering the Station in
Bombay.
• Soon films were made on extracts from
popular plays and on traditional dances
and music.
• By the first decade of the Twentieth
Century, feature films from the West were
being shown in India.
• Almost 1,313 silent films were produced in
India in 22 years from 1912-1934, on
religious, social, political and historical
subjects.
• The first feature film made by an Indian
was Raja Harishchandra in 1913 by
Dadasaheb Phalke.
• This film told the story of Harischandra, an
ancient king of the mythical city of
Ayodhya, who was supposedly born of the
Sun and was an extremely truthful man.
• This film introduced the genre of
mythological films in India which enjoyed
a very long popularity.
• This genre looped over the colonial
present to a pre-colonial Indian past.
• This film also introduced the various
‘codes’ which Indian cinema has followed
ever since.
• These being –
the battle between good and evil
the ultimate victory of good over evil
• The very Indianness of this film also
paved the way for an Indian rather than
westernised Indian cinema.
The run-up to the first Talkie:
• In the 1920s and 30s, Indian cinema spread
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from Kohlapur – Phadke’s HQ – to the metros,
Bombay, Calcutta and Madras
The studio systems were introduced and
dominated the film-making scene till the 1950s
Also born in those decades was the ‘Star
System.
Thus right from these early years Hollywood
influenced Indian cinema.
The Introduction of Realism
• The 1920s saw the introduction of realism in
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Indian cinema
Baburao Painter’s Savkari Pash (An Indian
Shylock) 1925 was a film that condemned
wicked moneylenders exploiting the poor rural
and also the urban people.
Such social films appealed more to the
sophisticated section of the Indian audience
which was not particularly attracted to
mythologicals.
The Western Collaborations…
• Early 1930s saw several global collaborations
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between UFA Berlin, a British company and
Frantz Osten
Most successful between Frantz Osten, a
German director and Himanshu Rai, the Indian
film maker
Fed the western market for Indian exotica
Prem Sanyas (Light of the Orient) 1925 ran for
ten months in London
Shiraz, 1928, a Mughal romance
Parpancha Pash (A Throw of the Dice), 1929,
had the first kiss of Indian cinema. Story about a
good and bad king who stake their kingdoms on
a game of dice.
Films full of dance, duels, spectacle
The Arrival of Sound…
• Alam Ara first Indian Talkie 1931, four years after first
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American talkie
A historical which starred Zubeida, Vithal and Prithiviraj
Kapoor
Shirin and Farhad a lavish musical also 1931
Indrasabha, 1932 had 70 songs
Anarkali 1935, the legendary love story of the Mughal
Prince Salim and the dancing girl Anarkali
Kisan Kanya (Peasant Girl) 1937 first colour film, dealt
with peasant revolt
Formulas for Success
• Music became the defining code for films all over
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India
Repeat value as a result of the songs
Reinforcement of Moral values – good versus evil
Spectacle dances, duels
Lost and Found
Conflict between rich and poor
Love and Romance
High Tragedy and Emotionalism
Sex and Glamour
Postcolonial Cinemas
1950s The Golden Age
1950s saw different kinds of cinemas
Neo-Realistic : Bimal Roy
Socialist
: Raj Kapoor
Nehruvian
: Mehboob Khan
Modernist
: Guru Dutt
Bimal Roy : The Neo Realist
• Do Bheega Zameen 1953. Richly textured black
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and white cinematic language. Iconic scenesthe rickshaw race
Devdas 1955. High Tragedy and Emotionalism.
Rise of the cult of the tragic hero Dilip Kumar
Sujata 1959. Social Reform. Banishing
Untouchability. Nutan as actor par excellence
Bandini 1963. Woman Centred. Critiqued
Exploitation of women. Nutan again
Raj Kapoor: From Socialism to
Glamour
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Awaara 1951
Shri 420 1955
Jagte Raho 1956
Jis Desh Mein Ganga Behti Hain 1960
Sangam 1964
Mera Naam Joker 1970
Bobby 1973
Satyam Shivam Sundaram 1978
Ram Teri Ganga Maili Ho Gayi 1985
Celebrating India…
• Raj Kapoor’s early films celebrated newly
independent India
• Mera Joota Hain Japani… song
• Created the persona of the tramp – the
subaltern
• Romanced the lady – Nargis
• The trope of the lady as object of romance
and desire
Mehboob Khan: Nehruvian Dream
• Mother India 1957. Iconic film on Nehruvian India
• Showcased the Nehruvian Dream
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Agriculturally self-sufficient
Industrially progressive
Economically successful
and Literate India
Wrote the nation across the body of the woman
Re-worked the Nation as Goddess symbol
Bharat Mata – Mother India
Guru Dutt: Modernist Disillusionments
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Critiqued the failure of the Nehruvian Dream
Used Modernist tropes of the nation as a wasteland
Cult following in cinematic circles
Pyaasa 1957
Kagaz ke Phool 1959
Chaudhvin ka Chaand 1960
Saahib Bibi aur Ghulam 1962
Created a muse in the actress Waheeda Rehman
Committed suicide in 1964, aged 39
The Duttian Techniques and Tropes…
• Guru Dutt specialised in the aesthetics of
failure. Failure a major trope
• Used self-reflexion as a narrative
technique
• Innovated camera and sound techniques
• Used lighting as a language
• Used silence as a sound
The Big Heroes of the 1950s and
60s…
• Dilip Kumar the tragic hero. Historical Star. Devdas,
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Andaz, Mughal-E-Azam
Dev Anand the light romantic hero. Stylised actor. Also
later film maker. Guide, Hare Rama Hare Krishna
Raj Kapoor the comic romantic hero apart from being a
film maker. Sapnon ka Saudagar, Around the World in
Eight Dollars, Teesri Kasam.
Rajendra Kumar. The Jubilee Star. Romantic Hero.
Manoj Kumar the patriotic hero. Purab aur Paschim,
Upkaar.
Sunil Dutt. Hero and film maker
Dharmendra. The Macho Hero.
Ashok Kumar. Senior Actor. Acted from 1940s-1980s
The 1950s and 60s Big Heroines…
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Meena Kumari. The Tragedienne.
Nutan. The Realistic Actress.
Vijayantimala. The Dancing Star
Waheeda Rehman. The Excellent Actress.
Nargis. The Major Star
Suraiya. The Singing Star
Madhubala. The Ethereal Beauty
Asha Parekh. The Tom Boy
Sadhana. The Sophisticated Lady
1960s : Colour Glamour Escapism
• Technicolour, romance, glamorous locations
• New stars, new music directors, new locations
• Shammi Kapoor and the cult of the big, brash young
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Joy Mukherjee. The romantic hero
Glamorous, westernised heroines; Sharmila Tagore,
Babita, Saira Banu
Musicals set in Kashmir, Simla, Kulu
Junglee (1961), Love in Simla (1960), Kashmir ki Kali
(1964)
Foreign locations – Paris, London, Geneva, New York
in Evening in Paris (1967), Sangam (1964), Around the
World in Eight Dollars (1967)
Wafted the audience into an escapist universe away from
the poverty, shortages and hardships of the India of the
1960s.
The 1970s: New Directors New Films New
Stars
• Shakti Samanta. The Musical Melodramas. Aradhna
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(1970), Amar Prem (1971)
Created the new superstar Rajesh Khanna
Hrishikesh Mukherjee. The Small Film Big Hits. Anand
(1970), Guddi (1971), Mili (1975), Abhimaan (1973)
Ushered in the girl-next-door, Jaya Bahaduri
Ramesh Sippy. The Big Films. Sholay (1972), Seeta aur
Geeta (1972), Shakti (1982).
New stars Hema Malini, the Dream Girl, Amitabh
Bachchan, the Angry Young Man, Rishi Kapoor, the
Romantic Hero
A mix of middle class realistic cinema and major masala
films
Hema Malini: Female Superstar
• First major female superstar
• Earned the same amount or more than
her male stars
• Called the Dream Girl
• First film Sapnon ka Saudagar (
The Rajesh Khanna Phenomenon
• Rajesh Khanna the romantic rage of the
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1970s
Hairstyle, clothes, watches, shoes copied and
worn by fans
Girls and women ‘married’ his photographs
Commanded a huge price
First real superstar of Hindi Cinema
Became stylised in his acting
Best films Anand, Aradhna, Roti, Bawarchi,
Amar Prem
Replaced by Amitabh Bachchan
Amitabh Bachchan:The Mega Star
• Started small with Saat Hindustani (1969)
• Catapulted to fame with Zanjeer (1973)
• Competed with Rajesh Khanna in Anand and Namak
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Haram
Came into his own with Mega hits Deewar and Sholay in
1975
1977-82 major hits Amar Akbar Anthony, Muqaddar ka
Sikander, Trishul, Don, Mr. Natwarlal, Coolie
Come-back in the 1990s with Shehshah, Agneepath,
Khudah Gawah
Return to Stardom in 21st Century – Kabhie Khushi Kabhi
Gham, Sarkar, Baghbaan, Cheeni Kum, Last Lear
Married to Jaya Bahaduri; Son Abhishekh; daughter-inlaw Aishwarya Rai
Linked to Rekha
Hema Malini: Female Superstar
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First major female superstar
Earned the same amount or more than her male stars
Called the Dream Girl
First film Sapnon ka Saudagar (1968)
Major hits Seeta aur Geeta, Sholay, Charas, Jugnu, Lal
Patthar
Directed Dil Aashna Hain (1992)
Come-back with Baghban (2003)
Bharat Natyam Dancer
Member of Parliament
Married to Dharmendra – two daughters
The 1980s-90s: GenNext
• New Film-makers:
Govind Nihalani, Ardh Satya, Aakrosh, Tamas, Hazaar
Chaurasi ki Maa
Shyam Benegal, Kalyug, Mandi, Trikal
The Making of the Mahatma, Sardari Begum
Ketan Mehta, Maya Memsaab, Mirch Masala
Muzaffar Ali, Gaman, Umrao Jaan
Mahesh Bhatt, Arth, Saaransh, Daddy, Dil Hain Ke
Maanta Nahin
Prakash Jha, Damul, Mrityudand
Shekhar Kapoor, Masoom, Mr. India
• New Actors
Shabana Azmi
Smita Patil
Naseeruddin Shah
Om Puri
Sanjay Dutt
Madhuri Dixit
Anil Kapoor
Sridevi
Amir Khan
Salman Khan
Sharukh Khan
The Women Film makers…
• Vijaya Mehta, Rao Saheb, Pestonjee
• Sai Paranjape, Sparsh, Chashme Badoor,
Katha, Saaz
• Kalpana Lajmi, Ek Pal, Rudaali
• A Feminist reading rather than a Feminist
methodology possible
• Woman centred films
Diasporic Indian Film makers…
• Distance, Nostalgia, Time warp, Periscopic
point of view
• Meera Nair, Salaam Bombay, Mississippi
Masala, Monsoon Wedding, Vanity Fair
• Deepa Mehta, Earth, Fire, Water
• Gurinder Chadha, Bhaaji on the Beach,
Bend it Like Beckham, Bride and Prejudice
Cross-Over Films
• For NRI and Wider Global Markets
• Formula remains, melodrama toned down for
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non-Indian tastes
Family values, glamour, love, conflict,
emotionalism
Finding wider audiences
Hindi films had audiences in the Arab World,
Central Asia, Soviet Union, Eastern Europe
New audiences in Western Europe and the USA
• Aditya Chopra, Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge,
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Mohabbatein, Dil to Pagal Hain
Karan Johar, Kuch Kuch Hota Hain, Kabhi Khushi
Kabhi Gham
Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Black, Devdaas
Aamir Khan, Lagaan, Rang De Basanti, Taare
Zameen Par
Shahrukh Khan, Hum Hain Na, Om Shanti Om
Rakesh Roshan, Kaho na Pyaar Hain, Koi Mil
Gaya, Krrish
Shekhar Kapoor, Elizabeth, The Four Feathers,
Elizabeth, the Golden Age
The Actors of the 21st Century…
• Global faces, glamour quotient
• Aishwarya Rai. Miss World. Diasporic Films.
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Mainstream Hollywood. Provoked; Pink Panther;
Bride and Predjudice; Mistress of Spices
Rani Mukherjee, Black, Veer Zaara, The Rising
Preity Zinta, Kabhi Alvida Na Kehana, Last Lear
Saif Ali Khan, Parineeta, Omkaara
Hritik Roshan, Koi Mil Gaya, Krrish
In Conclusion…
• The journey from 1897, to 1913, to 1931 to the
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21st Century has been momentous
Bollywood from a Wannabe-Hollywood has
begun to find its own space in the realms of
World Cinema
Diasporic film makers, Crossover film makers
making dents in not just the NRI but also global
markets
However, the major time-tested formulae remain
intact, songs, spectacle, romance, glamour,
fights, emotions and family values