Friday, March 4, 2011

Happily (n)ever after?

It’s exhilarating to look passively, on what tracks your mind trudges on after seeing a movie that displays a cornucopia of human emotions- dark and those which have no respectable place in this world. Not because these emotions induce you to a state of melancholy trance, but the glaring reality of their existence, and their denial in other mainstreams works and popular culture. The Hours – is a movie about three woman across generations, living out their lives, and making decisions on what to do with their lives thereof- live it in unhappiness, not live it at all, move on away, or throw parties to shield themselves from the emptiness. It doesn’t end on a joyous note, the last scene where Virginia Woolf drowns herself in a river, is mesmerizing, in its simplicity and lack of grandeur. The movies does not horrify me at any point, that is not Stephen Daldry’s intent. It makes the audience accept the decisions made by the characters, however unrealistic or preposterous they may seem. Moreover, the acting does not assault my senses, in fact, it is deeply ethereal, yet natural.
Coming to an actual assault on senses though, my mind is drawn to the movies I’ve seen courtesy the Indian cine industry. Somehow, I can’t think of a single movie where the finale of the movie isn’t dotted with giddy brides and obnoxiously handsome grooms riding into the sunset in their daddys Toyota Corolla or are seen making promises of an impending wedding. (It’s a glaring exaggeration! Is what you’re going to say. This is also where you refer me to movies like Rang De Basanti, Udaan, Tare Zameen Par, but let’s get real- these radical movies are exceptions rather than the norm.) So as I so rightfully mentioned in the parentheses, that’s it, that’s how 95% of mainstream Hindi movies end. Is this a representation of reality? Or is this shaping our reality? This issue of causality though confusing, is something worth a thought. I guess my thoughts diverge onto two levels now- firstly, why is that Bollywood adheres to this need to end movies with a couple getting betrothed? Perhaps their opinion of the audiences’ maturity and depth is excruciatingly low. Somehow, I am not surprised. People do treat movies like a popcorn crunching fest- a getaway haven of sorts, that makes the experience enjoyable only when their puny minds are not exercised. This is how the graphical representation would shout out bloody murder.



The second question is of practical relevance. Is a wedding the penultimate objective that any individual can strive for personally? Lets assume it is, and hence the Indian movie industries proclivity to absorb itself in wedding related hogwash. So if we are assuming that the movies are representing the actual state of the society, then the fact that comes to the foreground is even more appallingly shallow and well, my apologies, but blasphemous! Weddings are not the happily ever after that everyone makes them out to be. It isn’t my intent to sound deterministic or to belittle the institution of marriage (nor is this the account of an ugly, embittered 40 year old unable to find a suitable husband-as one may cognitively try to justify to himself or herself after reading this) however, I refuse to believe that this one event can cause me to believe that on crossing the threshold, on to the other side, life would be hunky-dory, I’d be ridden off all my foibles, and love will make all the issues disappear. Marriage has its merits (I do not attempt to elucidate this here though), yet the array of grandiose gestures surrounding it and making it out to be this pinnacle of happiness and delirium, need to be put to rest or squashed or well, whatever makes you happy.

5 comments:

  1. hmmmm... i have a theory to this.
    Bollywood is India's answer to massage parlors.
    let me explain.

    most humans enjoy the release of endorphins and such. now, in and around Hollywood, there's plenty of massage parlours, strip clubs, Las Vegas and dark chocolate for that.

    Bollywood on the other hand caters widely to an audience bereft of all of the above. the closest supplier of endorphins and other happy chemicals is TV, but its too small and you cant trash the floor with popcorn and soda in your own house without guilt or punishment.

    Bollywood thence, has the ultimate formula for non-thought-provocative entertainment. and trust me, those of us who DEMAND thought provocation could probably make a bucket list of such movies that one could not possibly watch entirely in multiple lifetimes. think about it. as for social repercussions, i think marriage is a good thing to show to a population of 1 Billion. if more movies showed that just sexual satiation is enough, we'd treble that figure in no time. ;)

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  2. Interesting theory that. Whilst I agree with you about Bollywood perhaps beings the only outlet for many individuals recreationally, but so is true for the American audience, which is not universally liberal. Go down to the southern states and you'd know what I'm talking about.
    And then I understand how there is a tendency to show Marriage as a substitute for copulation, and In India thats understandable. But the question still remains: why does it have to be that every story has to culminate in sexual/marital/romantic gratification? Romantic Comedies and "Chic Flicks" are like this sugar coated dose of mind numbing storylines, and create a reality that is un-real and unsustainable
    Disclaimer: I'm not against Romantic Comedies...Just against a gross inundation of such movies!

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  3. why most movies end in a predictable gratification? most people want to see that, so it's a numbers game where everyone's happy. for the smaller percentage of people who are critiques, connoisseurs and aficionados, as i said - there's still a long list of movies to have on one's bucket list that cannot be fully completed! as for discovering these, i personally love Flixster.com, IMDB, YouTube, Apple Trailers and such.

    here's my list: http://www.flixster.com/user/kaushalonline/ratings?sort=&offset=100

    the Flixster 'Rate Movies' game is both fun, addictive and great for discovering new movies!

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  4. I'm not sure if that's what people want. We must not forget Durkheims words in that, the collective conscience yields mores different from the individual psyche. Whats acceptable (in terms of liking) can be unquestioned if the collective conscience permits it. I think everyone is capable of loving good cinema, perhaps they need to question the status quo to get more of it.
    However, thanks for the link, I will check it out!

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  5. I love that you made a graph, that's cool! Good to see you're still blogging, I have a lot of entries to catch up on , it looks like.

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