South Asian Cinema and Indian Cinema

advertisement
1
COM 329, Contemporary Film
Study Guide, Chaudhuri textbook
NOTE: See PowerPoint on “Bollywood” for links related to the points on this handout
South Asian and Indian Cinema
Chapter 7: South Asian Cinema
[NOTE: Although this chapter is titled South Asian, it is almost entirely devoted to India]
►137-“Bollywood is tipped to become the West’s next Asian crossover phenomenon after Hong Kong
cinema”
►137-“Ray or rubbish” refers to the clear distinction between India’s “art”/“parallel” cinema and its
popular film system (commonly referred to as Bollywood); Ray is Satyajit Ray, the late great filmmaker
regarded as a national treasure [but whose films most Indians decline to watch]
►137-“Parallel cinema”—art cinema that embraces intercommunal tolerance
►138-Popular cinema evolved from the Indian epics Mahabharata and Ramayana, classical and folk
theatre, and early 20th century Parsi theatre
►139-History of popular Indian cinema extends back to 1896, with a three-studio system by the 1920s
►140-Despite issues of regional, religious, and language (“mother tongue”) differences across India,
there emerged an “all-India aesthetic” that assured the attraction of popular Indian film across all of
India and to other regions of the world (e.g., Middle East, East Africa)
►140-No official role of the government in popular Indian film industry, except for the National Board
of Censors (legacy of British colonialism)
►141-Angry Young Men films associated with a young Amitabh Bachchan
►142-Indian popular film narrative structure as nonlinear, episodic—plots within plots and many
flashbacks
►142-Role of intertextuality in popular Indian films
►142-Music in popular Indian film a hybrid of light classical Indian music, popular music, and Western
orchestral
►143-Playback singers and role of soundtracks in marketing Indian films
►143-“Big B”—Amitabh Bachchan
►143-The star system in Indian film
►144-MTV-type dance sequences in Indian film
►144-“Parallel cinema” or “New Indian Cinema”—songless, starless, and low-budget
►145-Satyajit Ray—founder of parallel cinema; his 1950s “Apu Trilogy” a great inspiration for
filmmakers to follow; influenced by Italian neorealism and French poetic cinema (e.g., Jean Renoir); his
films covered a wide range of genres and issues
►145-Government-established Film Finance Corporation (1960)--which became the National Film
Development Corporation (NFDC, 1980)--and the National Film Institute (1961) were set up expressly
to support parallel rather than popular cinema in India
►146-Parallel cinema of the 1970s and 1980s belonged to the Third Cinema model of radical collective
filmmaking; since then, two types of parallel cinema have been apparent—(1) “Middle Cinema,” which
combines parallel cinema themes and popular cinema devices to appeal to a broader audience, and (2) a
cinema of auteurs, which has flourished in Bengal and Kerala
►147-“Tollywood”—Bengal film industry based in Tollygunge, South Calcutta
►149-South India films—gaining ground on “Bollywood” (i.e., Hindi-language popular Indian film);
languages are Tamil, Malayalam, and Kannada
►149-Mani Ratnam—key South Indian filmmaker; works with music composer A. R. Rahman [who
won an Academy Award for the score of Slumdog Millionaire in 2009]
►150-Sri Lankan cinema—strong links with South Indian cinema
►151-“Lollywood”—Pakistan’s main film industry, based in Lahore
►152-Bangladesh’s capital Dhaka a film-producing center
►152-Bangladesh’s “short films” underground movement
2
Chapter 8: Indian Cinema
►156-With increasing international releases, Bollywood now has three audiences: (1) the core
audience of the Indian poor, (2) the South Asian diaspora around the world, and (3) India’s middle class
►157-The diasporic Indian (NRI, “non-resident Indian”) has moved to the center of the Bollywood
narrative in recent years [NOTE: The book does not emphasize the role of “Desis,” children of
diasporic Indians who also serve as an important focus and an important real-life film market.]
►158-Key films emphasizing Bollywood’s culturally unifying role—Lagaan (2001, see also Close
Analysis on p. 166), Mani Ratnam’s “Terrorism Trilogy,” Roja (1992), Bombay (1995) and Dil Se
(1998; see also Close Analysis on p. 171)
►158-The Bollywood Romance—the dominant genre of the 1990s, replacing the action and revenge
dramas of the 1970s and 1980s; characterized by a love triangle, love based on friendship, an
examination of the “arranged love marriage,” NRI characters, foreign locations, a style reminiscent of
MTV and advertising, with conspicuous consumption and product placement
►158-The Bollywood Brat Pack—many directors, and stars, are offspring of influential industry
professionals (movie dynasties), including Karan Johar (Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham, 2001)
►160-The exception to the Brat Pack phenomenon is Shah Rukh Khan, who emerged from a very
humble background
►159-“Chiffon and roses” brand of Bollywood romance focusing on super-rich lifestyles, introduced by
Yash Chopra
►159-Role of wholesome family entertainment in Bollywood
►159-Star system—most Indian films are “carried” by the male star (e.g., Shah Rukh Khan), but some
female stars are noteworthy (e.g., Kajol, whose off-screen personality is distinctively post-feminist)
►161-Endorsement of global consumerism in Bollywood films—malls as temples of consumerism
►161-Mani Ratnam—a distinctive background, his use of real political conflicts in his trilogy; his
Bombay was the first Indian popular film to include a Hindu-Muslim marriage
►164-Indian expatriate filmmakers—two women (!!)--(1) Mira Nair (trained abroad, including with US
documentarist D. A. Pennebaker; films include Salaam Bombay (1988), Monsoon Wedding (2001),
which the book says is reminiscent of Dogme 95 (!)); and (2) Deepa Mehta (worked in Canadian
television; films include her “Elements Trilogy” Fire (1996, see also Close Analysis on p. 169), Earth
(1998), Water (2005))
Download