Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Ooh, la, la … national integration


I don’t know about you, but when I came out of the movie hall after The Dirty Picture, I felt a changed man. I was not ashamed that I saw the movie alone, not in a corner seat, of course.

But when I went in I took all the precautions that one usually takes while going to see a dirty picture and this one was The Dirty Picture! I had a trench coat on, the hat was drawn low over my eye brows, my shifty eyes scanned the horizon for any familiar faces and so on, though all under a bright November sun shine.

I am not offering a review of the movie, besides saying that it was a through and through Vidya Balan’s movie. No space for any other name on the billboard. So completely she dominated the movie. But, I do have a few comments to make.

The movie was accepted even by the classes because, and only because it was ostensibly based on a real life. What I mean is, had the movie not been promoted as some life actually lived (half-lived or whatever), the reaction, I am sure, would have been unrelentingly hostile. Was Naseeruddin Shah roped in merely to confer more legitimacy on the movie? If yes, that move failed miserably because even as good as he was, his efforts were thoroughly overshadowed.

The movie would have been tagged porno (this is what I was afraid of and hence my elaborate dress-up and evasive actions as I entered the movie hall) were it not for Silk Smitha and the escape clause that came with her story. That is, to make the classes accept something, it has to be at least half-way real. Why can’t art, of whatever kind, go beyond the bounds of the moral universe the classes have cocooned themselves in, at least in the public space? Most fictions are that, fiction, are they not? The classes do not shun them, do they?

Whence this prudery? And, why this moral uppity when it comes to movies like The Dirty Picture that it will be accepted only if it purportedly portrays a real situation. Why is it that without a real life Silk Smitha, we could not have had a The Dirty Picture, and enjoyed the acting talents of Vidya Balan, that was acceptable to the classes? Beats me.

My second comment on the movie concerns the social set up as depicted in the movie. Silk Smitha was an exclusive Southern phenomenon. During her rise and subsequent fall, as I found out later, I was away in the US and was not even aware of her mass appeal. When I came back I have seen clippings of some song sequences of hers (in respectable TV channels, I must hasten to add). She was dark complexioned, and I can bet she would have abraded the sensibilities of much of the audience in North India. They, coming in for titillation, would have found her severely off-putting.

But in the movie Vidya was not dark except in her pre-Silk, not-yet-glamorized days. The street scenes were obviously from Tamil Nadu (even had they been shot elsewhere in a studio), street food, people wearing dhotis the South Indian way, the ladies lined up at the water tap with colorful plastic Kodams and so on. The word Amma (Do you remember the days when film glossies used this word with clenched noses to describe the matronly chaperons on the film sets, particularly of Southern stars?) so pervades the movie to ensure the cultural geography is never misunderstood. And, every one speaks Hindi and not a single eyebrow was raised.

These days there are quite a few Telugu movies that are shown on some Hindi channels (dubbed) and these must grate on one’s nerves – the astounding level of failure of lip synched dialogues. On top of that, the cultural background is totally divorced from the linguistic milieu. Yet The Dirty Picture has transcended that divide, as far as I could see.

This is something I absolutely liked. The way the director located the story yet let it stay in the background. What he says is something like, “It really does not matter where in India the story happened. It just happened in India and that is it. I am telling it in the language I want to.”
We talk a lot about the globalizing India. I think this movie is one of the first to have shown what a nationalizing India is. Just a small observation.

This is the reason that when I came out of the movie hall, I had taken off my trench coat and lifted the hat at least halfway up my forehead.

Raghuram Ekambaram

P.S. By the way, I have heard that Silk Smitha started out rather as Silukku Smitha, which In Coimbatore Tamil means more like flirtatious, vanity-driven etc. Later on the ‘oo’ sound in Smitha’s name was stylized to Silk to mean silky smooth, I suppose.
The addition of a vowel at the end of a word (which is almost universal in Telugu, with ‘oo’ sound dominating) is the reason the current rage Kolaveri di has black-u, white-u etc.

12 comments:

dsampath said...

i thought that it was great movie..identity of a courtesan comes alive
and this has never really been dignified in the Indian setting.

mandakolathur said...

DS sir, thank you so much for that so relevant a comment about the movie ...

RE

New Nonentities said...

I had 2 reasons for not watching this movie:

(1) My Hindi is not great. And if the movie's dialogue is supposed to be made up of one-liners, then I was sure to miss most of it.

(2) I have always been a Silk Smitha fan. Even recently, when my whole family was watching the old Mallu movie "Sphadikam" (a Mohanlal movie with SS in a 'bit-role'), it was the women-folk at home who exclaimed: "She oozes oomph." Now, whatever Vidya Balan might manage through and through, her face cannot manage that.

I do view the casting of Vidya Balan as Silk Smitha quite similar to casting me as Cary Grant.

Of course, if I am wrong, I am ready to eat your hat and trench-coat...:)))

mandakolathur said...

Arjun,

My trench coat and hat are safe!

Unfortunately I was away in the US when SS was reigning! Silly me!

My Hindi is also not all that great. But when I have a chance to wear my trench coat, why would I let go of that opportunity? :)

If you are Cary Grant, I am a 5' 1" version of Gregory Peck!

RE

Indian Satire said...

Raghu,

I had seen enough of Silk Smitha Pron during High school and college days so did not go for this one :P

palahali said...

Good to read about movies from you. I enjoyed the writing too. I have not seen this movie. And neither I have seen SS in action. But I do agree that VB may do justice to the role. About complexion; I think we have gone along too long saying that northerners are fair. I dont think an average UP or Bihar person is fair complexioned. And most bengalees are also not fair. I think it is actually western part of India that has more fair complexioned people.- Mangalore,Goa,Konkan,Gujerat,Rajasthan, Punjab and JK.
Sorry not been able tpo read most of your posts. will do so on a rainy day

palahali said...

Good to read about movies from you. I enjoyed the writing too. I have not seen this movie. And neither I have seen SS in action. But I do agree that VB may do justice to the role. About complexion; I think we have gone along too long saying that northerners are fair. I dont think an average UP or Bihar person is fair complexioned. And most bengalees are also not fair. I think it is actually western part of India that has more fair complexioned people.- Mangalore,Goa,Konkan,Gujerat,Rajasthan, Punjab and JK.
Sorry not been able tpo read most of your posts. will do so on a rainy day

mandakolathur said...

Pala, among the fiar skinned, I would hold up Punjabis at the top amongst Indians besides some of the Northeasterners, beyond Assam. The many people from Uttarakahnd that I know in Delhi are quite fair but when they return from holidays to their native villages, they return quite dark, all sun tanned. Yes, Konkani people are fair, but not pale. They have a helathy blush. I was just carrying along the stereotype. I truly wanted to focus on the implicit cultural incongruities in the movie narrative.

Unfortunately not many had taken note of, not even the filmcritics.

RE

Tomichan Matheikal said...

I feel sad I didn't watch the movie. Your certificate means much to me. I will make it a point to watch it as soon as I get a chance.

I read the review in the Hindu and did want to watch it too. But time didn't permit. Now you've given me another reason to watch it.

mandakolathur said...

Thanks Matheikal ... I did not see anyone even mention the cultural incongruity that was so completely subsumed by the story line.

I think you will enjoy the movie, with or without the trench coat!

RE

Rituparna said...

i liked the writing & good to hear that u watch hindi movies !!!

mandakolathur said...

Ritu, that is how I have learnt Hindi! What about the contents?

RE