The celebration of 100 years of Bollywood needs to be
reviewed from a subaltern perspective. The general assumption that cinema is a
normal mode to produce anecdotes to satisfy the entertainment quotient of the
people should go through a critical scrutiny. Films as artistic expression
cannot be devoid of their politico-ideological objectives. Hence, from a Dalit
perspective when one enquires about their space during the past one century of
the film world, only a handful of non-decrepit, obscure examples are presented.
Caste as a peculiar Indian reality is an acceptable fact but it is often cast
away by the Bollywood filmmakers.
Bollywood’s first decade after Independence responded quite
significantly to the modernist-socialist outlook. The rich and social elites
were presented as insensitive towards the poor, selfish in their endeavours,
greedy at their core and also violent with animalist instinct. The poor, city
dwellers and village commoners were lovable, honest and stood in defence of
ideals. Raj Kapoor as the humble city dweller of Awara (1951), Dev Anand as the
unemployed charming youth in Kala Bazaar (1960) and Dilip Kumar as the rustic
and raw struggler of the village in Naya Daur (1957) became the mascot of the
common people’s aspirations. The nationalist hope that the newly born nation
has to pass this transitory phase to achieve the ideals of modernity was
promisingly reflected in this decade. It created that duality between the ‘good
versus evil’ as the concrete contestation between the rich and poor and
sensitively defended the aspirations of the downtrodden. Further, at instances,
the issue of caste became a part of the popular narrative in films like Ganga
Jamuna (1961) and Sujata (1959) but only to supplement the popular reformist
logic of the ruling classes. Otherwise the poor of the popular Hindi cinema
remained with the abstract ‘commoner’ identity away from caste considerations.
Away from the realistic optimism shown in the earlier
decades of the Bollywood cinema, the 1960s narrowed down its concerns to the
emotional ghettos of the upper-middle class people. The decorative and bulging
style of the city rich, Western attire, foreign locations and cosmopolitanism
gripped the narratives making Shakti Samant and Pramod Chakravarthy household
names. (Gooptu 2012) The bourgeois hero was a romantic lover, good hearted and
indulged mainly to satisfy the burning emotional quench. In the times of Shammi
Kapoor and Rajesh Khanna as the spokespersons of Bollywood, it was difficult to
assume that popular cinema could notice the other wretched world. Caste was
completely blacked out as if the socialist dreams were already fulfilled within
the first decade itself. However the upper caste names, brahmanical cultural
rituals and Hindu aesthetics were portrayed as the natural assets of the entire
nation.
With the beginning of the ‘Amitabh era’, since the late
1970s, a shift took place from the sensible social portrayal of the unequal
society. It further shifted towards a very imaginative space centred on the ‘angry
young man’ hero. The ‘superstar’ could singlehandedly solve the personal and
public anguishes with a fist of fury and appeared as a ‘prophet’ hero.
(Dasgupta, 2006, p. 22) He primarily contested the issues of poverty,
corruption and lawlessness but hardly showed any concern to deal with the
social maladies such as caste discrimination or women’s empowerment. It was
reflective of the fact that the idea of Heroism needed a peculiar social
background (upper caste) and hence no-body (including Govind Nihalani), during
this age of ‘anger and frustration’, even imagined to portray a realist Dalit
protagonist fighting against social and capitalist ills.
From the late 1970s onwards, the idea of dominant
metanarratives was critically scrutinised to seek equal and visible space for
the values and notions which were historically marginalised and socially
suppressed. In the postmodern context, the public discourses and social ideas
were reimagined to provide meaning and substance to the obscure peripheral
subjects. The qualitative participation of people from the margins into the
mainstream discourses significantly transformed the conventional values of the
collective life and also helped in building a more secular and tolerant milieu.
Hence, in contemporary times, especially in the Hollywood cinema, women,
coloured men, queer subjects, physically challenged individuals have gathered
prime locations and capacity to emerge as distinct and independent characters
of film narratives and thus have helped in the democratisation of cinema in a
considerably positive way. However, such democratic credentials are not visibly
present in the popular Hindi cinema.
The popular rhetoric that cinema is the mirror of
contemporary society which depicts the dominant changes taking place in the
societal milieu is an untenable claim. Especially when it is judged in the
background of postmodern socio-economic and political spectrums, which have
democratised the forms of knowledge and have argued that the realities are
fragmented, subjectively oriented and distinct from each other; Bollywood
cinema remained dominated by upper-caste normativity. The growing
socio-political struggles of the socially marginalised groups during the 1970s
and 1980s to claim their legitimate rights in public spaces have not become a
narrative even in a single mainstream film.
The Bollywood films are superficial attempts to mystify the
socio-political realities. The marvellous fictional narratives are distantly
separated from the quotidian complexities of the average person. It cunningly
avoids itself from indulging in the hard questions of social reality and in
most of the cases imposes a structured narrative meant to address the emotive
and psychological concerns of the Hindu social elites. Hindi films are written,
directed and produced by a dominant set of people that celebrate the tastes and
values of upper class-caste sensitivities. Even the film critics, historians
and scholars have studied cinema as an art aloof from the rugged conflicting
social realities. The experiences of caste discrimination and exclusion have a
negligible presence in the narratives of the Bollywood cinema.
The ‘parallel/new wave cinema’, on the other hand, showed
some efforts in bringing the lower caste subjectivity on the silver screen. The
social questions of feudal exploitation, caste violence and Dalit repression
gathered remarkable momentum. In this realm, however, even the ‘realistic
cinema’, which is celebrated for its actual narratives and commitment towards
presenting a naked truth to the audience, contented mainly in showcasing the
superficial populist stereo-types of the marginalised lives and hardly entered
into the core debate of social realities. The Dalits are presented as
submissive animate selves, degraded and destitute with almost no hope for a
better future. Similar to Karan Johar’s designer NRI lifestyle, the parallel
cinema is also content with a designer reality and addresses those social
questions which will not make its audience uncomfortable and agitated.
The post-liberalisation period since the 1990s witnessed
that the filmmakers mostly endorse simple market ethics by locating
sensationalism and entertainment as the ideal vehicle to reach their targeted
audience. Hence, they have distanced themselves from their social
responsibilities as an artist and crafted a cinema genre having a wider global
appeal. Hindi cinema was termed as the quasi-mirror image of Hollywood and it
happily adopted the new nomenclature as Bollywood. (Rajadhyakshay, 2003) The
heavy investment in the exhibition industry brought the niche ‘multiplex
culture’ and thus marginalised the single-screen business. Films were
specifically made to cater to the tastes and sensitivities of the upper middle
class audiences, who have the capacity to spend three times more than the
average filmgoer. (Deshpande, 2001) Hindi films, which earlier used to respond
to the ‘desires and concerns’ of the average Indians, now categorically mean to
propose a specific kind of surreal taste of the escapist nature.
In the contemporary cinema, it seems that the possibility of
experiments has increased; however its commercial logic still governs the art
form. Hence, even a serious filmmaker like Prakash Jha mistreats a sensitive
issue like reservation under an upper-caste moral tutelage to retain his
audience in his commercial flick Aarakshan. Certain films must have improved on
the technical side of the artistic form (Gangs of Wasseypur or Shanghai), but
their capacity to promote an artistically made film with an equal commitment to
portray social ills, is still a distant dream.
The representation of Dalit persona and his/her ideological
and moral characteristics reflect the Gandhian visualisation of the ‘Harijan’,
that is, dependent (Sujata 1959), submissive (Damul 1985) and suitable to the
ethics of socio-cultural Brahmanical values (Lagaan 2001). The Dalit movement
which has impacted the socio-political churning in the most impressive way and
produced a robust independent ‘Political Dalit’ has almost no representative
narrative available in the mainstream Bollywood films.
Bollywood in the most visible way is devoid of creative
freedom, honesty and the passion to break the conventional norms which
eventually can produce a radical art form.
The popular Bollywood cinema is the apt example of such fake
world. In most of the cases, it lacks rational contemplation and capacity to
break the clutch of commercial logic. Hence its engagement with the darker side
of societal behaviour is just superficial. It is so much distanced from the
real world that the film scholars theorised the ‘fantasy’ of the Bollywood as
the basic theme which governs the film makers and audiences alike. The dream
merchant tag is the celebrated nomenclature here as it subtracts the normal
quotidian life to present an opium fused narrative. The invisibility of caste
or Dalit protagonist on the silver screen reflects such narrow and bogus
commitment to cinema as an art form.
MAINSTREAM, VOL LI, NO 20, MAY 4, 2013
References
Dasgupta, Susmita (2006), Amitabh: The Making of a
Superstar, Penguin Books, New Delhi.
Deshpande, Sudhanva (2001) “The Consumable Hero of
Globalised India”, Popular Indian Cinema Through a Transnational Lens, Raminder
Kaur and Ajay J. Sinha (eds.), Sage Publications, New Delhi.
Gooptu, Sharmishtha (2012), “The Underrated Sixties in
Films”, The Times of India, August 6, New Delhi.
Rajadhyakshya, Gautam (2003), “The ‘Bollywoodisation’ of
Hindi Cinema: Cultural Nationalism in the Global Arena”, Inter-Area Cultural
Studies, 4(1): 25-29.

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