Slumdog Millionaire – Oscars ultimate recognition?

With its
mixed
c a s t ,
t h e
muchf
e t e d
and hyped film is also British
director Danny Boyle’s paean to
Mumbai, India’s edgy metropolis
of extremes and Bollywood, the
world’s most prolific film industry.
The technically well-done
portrayal of the city’s stifling and
colorful squalor and its people has struck a chord with the western audience.
These awards hold significance in wake of arguments that so far Hollywood has
ignored the Hindi film industry, which churns out maximum number of movies
every year in the world. Our movies had been given shoddy treatment for a long
time for being song-dance melodramas.
The presence of both rich and poor strata of the society in a relatively peaceful coexistence is a peculiar characteristic of India. One does not negate the presence of the other. Indian arts have preceded the western arts by thousands of years and it is not the recognition of a 300 year old nation that a 5000 year old civilization should be so desperate for.That frenzy and pathetic desire for validation is the real poverty facing us today. Of course, the Oscars for A R Rahman and Resul Pookutty are well-deserved.Though Rahman has given better music in the past and this was certainly not his best. Recognition to our technicians, musics and all those who contribute in making the cinematic wonder is any day welcome.
Slumdog Millionaire incorporates most of the elements typical to Indian cinema
yet suddenly the West has latched on to it like fish to water. With its success, it
seems as if all things Bollywood or at least, from India, are catching fire in the United
States. Indian food is no exception, with new attention being focused on that type
of cuisine. Indeed, Indian flavors are playing a starring role in more and more
kitchens and restaurants here. Besides Bollywood dance has suddenly become a
huge hit with Americans loving to gyrate on hep Hindi movie songs while they shed
loads of pounds in the process. These can be called positive influences of movies
like Slumdog, which help connect the western audiences with true Indian culture
and traditions.
Directors make movies for two reasons mainly – it’s a cinematic representation
of what he feels strongly about or it’s a commercial venture for him. Slumdog certainly
falls in second category. But aren’t there plenty of filmmakers in Hindi film
industry who have made films for both reasons.When Amitabh Bachchan said that
this movie portrays Mumbai or India’s dark underbelly he was right.Westerners
have sold India’s poverty in the past too. But the true test will be when people here
also buy the Indian traditions, family values, culture equally. Say if a Sooraj Barjatiya
production manages to run packed houses in major theatres or a Lagaan bags an
Oscar. Our filmmakers need not consider the Oscars as the ultimate recognition of
their work. The more than one billion audience which waits every Friday for the
new releases, many of which are the Jamal Maliks
who don’t mind shelling their hard earned money
for three hours of retreat into the fantasy world
created by our dream merchants which takes them
far away from their realities of life.
- Editor



