Monday, June 9, 2014

Filmistan: Only connect!

Nitin Kakkar’s Filmistaan could have very well carried the Forsterian subtitle to Howard’s End, “Only Connect”! Alluding to one of the most renowned studios in which some of the biggest Bombay blockbusters have been shot, Kakkar literally deploys it as a metaphor for an ‘affective’ site (read, territory) of connection, which is invisible in the geopolitical map of two warring nations. Bombay Cinema’s immense power to ‘connect’ people across ethno-territorial borders is the driving force of the narrative, with film-buff Sunny Arora as protagonist. Starting from the font of the title (that recalls Sholay) to songs, music and dialogues, Filmistaan unveils populist Bombay Cinema’s far-reaching impact on the masses, notwithstanding their location, race, or ethnicity. And, what’s extremely interesting is that Filmistaan very cunningly merges two very different genres of films: the realistic framework is often undercut by the over-the-top melodrama, Bombay Cinema is famous for. Sunny Arora, is pathologically ‘filmy’, and even in the most anxious moments, he breaks into songs, dialogues and mimicry of Bombay stars. The basic mantra of Bollywood -- ‘Entertainment, entertainment and entertainment!’ (as Vidya Balan so seductively puts it in Dirty Picture) – is what saves Sunny from dying in the hands of his captors.

The film refers back to several Partition narratives and cross-border terrorism stories, in which the aam aadmi becomes the unsuspecting victim of mindless fundamentalism. The concept that borders are but shadow lines which many micro-histories of individuals have time and again revealed is also the crux of this film. But, it reiterates the concept in a unique way, by identifying Bombay Cinema as an affective medium of emotional bonding; that nothing is really different on the both sides of the barbed wire is reinforced through the identification that takes place in appreciating films from Bollywood. Aftab and Sunny become mirror images of each other, and their friendship is appropriated into Bombay Cinema’s much-celebrated trope of male-bonding: Sholay, Sangam, Namak Haram, Dostana, Saajan, so on and so forth. The ending of the film while strengthening this bond, also recalls such blockbusters as Gadar: Ek Prem Katha that reached a resolution through a high-strung dramatic act amid a riot of bullets. The film ends on a tragic note, for it establishes the Hindustan-Pakistan rivalry as a continuous phenomenon, which began with the Partition (and even before that) and has never found a closure since then. As Aftaab and Sunny run towards the fenced borders with bullet shots following them from behind, the end titles begin to roll, underscoring the impossibility of a closure.

Filmistaan while celebrating stardom and glamour, also, very ironically, shows how a good film can be made on the strength of a good screenplay only, not on the strength of stars. None of the actors are known faces, yet all of them perform brilliantly. Sharib Hashmi as Sunny is a very intelligent casting; he brings to his characters the ‘feel-good’-ness of a crazy film-buff and a simple human being, with a big heart. Inaamulhaq as Aftab is also extremely powerful, giving Hashmi a stiff competition in several frames. Kumud Mishra and Gopal Dutt bring to their characters the cold-blooded ruthlessness that often makes shivers run down the spine.

A highly watchable gift from Shringar and UTV Motion Pictures, Filmistaan is one of the most important films which has released very timely...on the occasion of celebrating 100 years of Indian Cinema.