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Remember the good old days?

rohit karn batra - July 27, 2005

The days when you could watch ANY Bollywood movie with your family and not be embarrassed or be worried about going to bathroom at choice moments or a calling a friend when a "bad scene" came on.

Come on, we've all done something like that! :)

I don't know what I would do if I were a kid today. To say bollywood movies have become increasingly bold and gratuitous is a huge understatement. I found an article which highlights all this quite nicely.

I think it's plain funny how these new "bold" movies do the most vulgar things without showing a lick of nudity.

The main question, in all this, is that is it a postive or negative thing that sexuality is becoming less of a taboo in contemporary Indian entertainment?

--

Is Hindi cinema becoming more uninhibited?
SUBHASH K JHA

IANS

Is Hindi cinema becoming more uninhibited or just plain brazen?

In two recent releases, "Kya Kool Hain Hum" and "Bachke Rehna Re Baba", all stops seem to have been pulled out to titillate the audiences with raunchy acts.

In "Kya Kool..." Tusshar Kapoor simulates the sex act with a cat while in the other film Paresh Rawal and Rekha appear to lose all sense of dignity and grace to do a Dada Kondke-styled raunchy comedy peppered with vulgar jokes.

While cheesy visuals and dialogues were earlier restricted to upcoming filmmakers, today several mainstream names are game for no-holds-barred bawdy films.

In director Govind Menon's "Bachke Rehna...", Rekha looks appreciatively at a man's private parts and comments on how "tandurust" (healthy) he looks. Sigourney Weaver doing the lascivious mama in the original "Heartbreakers" never looked so compromised.

Juhi Chawla recalls how she squirmed and sobbed when she had to enact a song with vulgar connotations in David Dhawan's "Andaz". In the same film when Anil Kapoor had to lisp double entendre dialogues, he did it without batting an eyelid. "But I frankly had no idea what it meant," Anil says in hindsight.

He can't claim the same now. In "No Entry", which brother Boney Kapoor has produced, Anil is part of quite a raunchy cast, all of whom are busy ogling, leering and making suggestive sounds of appreciation.

Boney Kapoor is also the producer of "Bachke Rehna Re Baba". His past flop productions have apparently taught him to butter his bread in the right manner.

Lara Dutta, who stars in "No Entry", was part of the sex comedy "Masti" (one of the first of the farcical films that has taken over our films).

Lara, stressing her innocence, says: "I didn't have a single vulgar action or word in 'Masti'. Nor have I done anything even remotely objectionable in 'No Entry'. My role is akin to Tabu's brassy Punjabi housewife's act in 'Biwi No.1'. Sometimes one ends up saying or doing vulgar things unknowingly."

Manisha Koirala, recounting her experience while shooting for a film called "Chuppa Rustom", says: "They shot an entire song with me from the strangest of angles, even changed the tune and lyrics after shooting. I ended up looking extremely vulgar on screen."

Manisha says that a lot of times stars end up doing vulgar things without their knowledge. This seems an unlikely explanation for what Tusshar Kapoor was seen doing in "Kya Kool Hain Hum". "The film is a sign of changing times," he says.

Sister Ekta Kapoor, known to produce wholesome family soaps, says the sequel to "Kya Kool..." would be even more raunchy and sexy. "Please stay out if you're churlish about sex comedies."

With prominent mainstream producers like Boney Kapoor ("Bachke Rehna Re Baba", "No Entry") and Ekta Kapoor ("Kya Kool Hain Hum") going in for raunchy films, there's widespread panic among the followers of aesthetic filmmaking.

Shraddha Pagare, who recently launched her production company Celeste-Moi, is at her wit's end.

"I'm an outside player in Bollywood. And I'm confused at the kind of films that work. On one end there's 'Parineeta'. On the other end there's 'Kya Kool...'. They are worlds apart.

"I'm planning to launch three new films. One featuring Sanjay Suri to be directed by Vikram Bhatt, another with Sammir Dattani to be helmed by Anant Mahadevan, and a third hard-hitting woman-centric subject about a wife who's declared infertile until she becomes pregnant through a man other than her husband. This is the kind of actors, filmmakers and subjects I believe in."

Bollywood's resident movie magnate Yash Chopra has the last word.

"Going by some of the films that have worked at the box office lately, it seems we filmmakers have a lot to worry about

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Posted by rohit karn batra at July 27, 2005 06:11 PM

Comments

HMMM...FOOD FOR THOUGHT. THANKS FOR SHARING.

Rohit: You've answered my "American" need to be educated regarding the intensely active and creative market that you all are so familiar with--that many of us here are dependent on you bringing to us.

There was a news clip here locally in Colorado tonight that spent some time showing how the community of Boulder is continuing to draw talent from Hollywood.

There has been a budding documentary-film industry growing in Boulder with fits-and-starts over the last twenty years, but...hoping you guys find yourselves eventually taking advantage of a potentially very lucrative and wide-open marketplace.

The film, "What the Bleep!@#$%^ (etc.) do We Know?" featuring the extraordinary teachings of Ramtha the Enlightened One was generated, in part, by one of The Ram's (Sai Baba I believe also has the Ram as a symbolic representation?) students--who was a local computer software designer for years.

I was saddened because the local news had a 15-second spot about the monsoonal floods, but quite a bit on the growing film industry here, and....the 400 million porno websites!

Anyhow--Thank You for putting this one up--It will provide an anchor of information for some of us to begin our true education of the creative filmmaking talent that can no longer be ignored by Hollywood, or anyone else who watches any kind of movie!

I have avoided "googling" some of your histories so far as I don't want your fame and recognition clouding my perception of your words as yet!

Thanks for bearing with all my tangents and answering to the genuine requests coming from so many in your growing worldwide audience! Dave

I think it can both be a positive and negative thing depending on intention. I don't think sexual content is wrong, after all it is a natural function of our bodies. When it can be wrong, is when it is used for lesser intention, such as titilation and cheap thrills.

I will give an example; A lot of recent Indian sex films, even though they do NOT show nudity or sex, can come across as quite smutty and cheap(I will not name any)

Whereas in Shekar Kapoor's Bandit Queen, there was a lot of nudity and sex, but it did not come across as smutty or cheap. In fact it was essential in creating that gritty realism and raw sembelance it needed to reflect Phoolan Devi's world.

I do understand, however, that sexual content makes it difficult to watch these films with your family. Which is exactly why these kinds of films should not be seen in the family - they should be seen by adults and only adults.

I think it is prudish to protest against sex in films on the grounds that they can't be seen in the family. Really, they should just accept that adults need their entertainment too and watch something more family-friendly. There is no dearth of family-friendly movies in India.

As for those who say sex is against Indian culture, they are obviously not cognizant of the fact that our ancients created the Karmasutra and need to mature in their views.

Rohit
In response to your "the rising - review", i have posted something, after it was dumped into the archives. See it if you can.

Great post! I'm looking forward for more. Soft voice over the net: http://www.pcmcourseware.com , Extensive methods for this

hi

I read your comments and totally agree with it.I teach and just today only had gone to see a movie what i was unable to understand the reason for raunchy numbers and the strange facial expressions being made in the movie.Vulgarity it seems have become a forte for indian movies and the way they are feeding the carnal desire of man is slowly but steadily becoming disastrous.It seems there is a rush to call oneself 'modern'by making these movies but sadly the makers do not understand that modernity does not mean showing sex or wearing threadbare outfits.

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