A look at the stalking heroes of Bollywood over the years
8:09 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta
Right now, the world can't stop talking about the Indian male psyche. Bollywood tells you that a Raanjhanaa or Tere Naam is extreme, but what about dudes who grew up on the standard `stalker' template of filmi romance?
Aarushi Nigam (BOMBAY TIMES; March 19, 2015)
NOT DERANGED LOVER, BUT REGULAR FILMI SWEETHEART THE PROBLEM?
Bollywood's formula of romance is so simple, there's been no need to change it in half a century. Boy sees girl, decides she's the one (who needs to ask?), and then on, does whatever is in his power to have the epiphany appear to her too. Follow. Sing and dance. Besiege existence. Embarrass in public, be a drama queen. Gently (or not) threaten with suicide. And whatever else is the truth of the universe, `no' does not mean 'no'. And soon, Cupid strikes her too, because love rewards the dude who tries the hardest or borderline harasses you, not the guy who respects your decision and leaves you alone.
Girls walking in a huff, boy strolls behind, singing, dancing, or, if he's Shammi Kapoor, just being Shammi Kapoor. She looks back, pouts, and turns around with a flounce. You could dress them up in decade-appropriate clothing and replace Rafi with Kumar Sanu, but the template of the 'wooing song' remains unbroken. Hindi film romance has survived on the serenade, the shadowing of a lady as you open your soul to her in song while she appears to not give a s**t. That's essentially what Shammi Kapoor did in his hits show up everywhere and shake it, and not let the lady shake you off, whether it was Kashmir or Paris.
Shammi fans might be bunching up their fists, but hear us out. Yes, serenading is not the same as stalking, and which heart wouldn't melt at the sweet, sweet persistence of those blue eyes? (That's another problem that needs to be addressed, that nice girls have to do some itrana before saying yes). But the moral is clear persist, and you shall have it. The lyrics of many classics sound from mild besharmi to a full-blown creep-fest when removed from the angelic faces they were coming from. Maana janaab ne pukaara nahin, kya mera saath bhi gawaara nahin yes, I'm uninvited, but can't you put up with me? Aaja aaja, main hoon pyar tera, Allah Allah, inkaar teraaa, ho oh come my sweet, your refusal is a mere technicality . Badan pe sitaare lapete hue....zara paas aao, toh chain aa jaaye. Ugh. Imagine that from a roadside perve.
FIRST NO, THEN YES
The 'naa mein haan' philosophy basically screwed up generation after generation's comprehension of the whole battle of the sexes thing. 'Tera peechha naa main chhodunga soniye' is a very twisted declaration of eternal love, but we suspect no woman was offended because they were all in love with Dharmendra at the time. 'Koi haseena jab rooth jaati hai toh aur bhi haseen ho jaati hai', 'Hum toh tere aashik hain sadiyon purane, chahe tu maane, chahe na maane' here, bullying someone into having feelings for you was the height of romantic. In other places, it would get you arrested (Dharmendra gave a subtle nod to that possibility when he sang 'bhej de chahe jail mein, tera peechha na...').
And with Rafi, Sultanpuri and Co passing on the baton, it got pretty bad in the 80s and 90s. The 'jaan-e-tamanna' and 'janaab' gave way to 'laal dupatte wali'. The loving gaze and five-foot distance between girl and prancing guy was replaced by pretty semi-mauling stuff pulling her dupatta, spinning her around, dropping her to the ground, hauling, pushing, and basically lots of manhandling. The (embarrassing) 90s college capers were one big lesson in treating women like inanimate objects to win their affection ('khud ko kya samajhti hai, kitna akadti hai', 'khambe jaisi khadi hai', to the erudite 'a aa eee, o, o, oh. Mera dil na todo').
In Deewana, Shah Rukh Khan grabs weeping widow Divya Bharti at very possible 'intense' moment and forcibly colours her on Holi. Raja Babu has Govinda camp outside Karisma's house for seven days. The 80s-90s how-to-get-a-girl formula was sorted stand outside her house, stalk her as she walks to college. While at it, sing a song about how arrogant she is for saying no. After all, kab tak roothegi cheekhegi chillaegi? Ek din haseena maan jaaegi.
The noughties got a little better because the real-life dating game finally showed up on screen, but with our 90sSouth remake obsession, the hero's back to being a semi-lech and the heroines are back to it being their thing. So Shahid Kapoor wants to do gandi baat with Sonakshi Sinha, while in Mat Maari, as she rains abuses like 'kutta' on him, bizarrely , they're only leading him on (next time you tell a guy to FO, maybe that's why he was smiling), and even more bizarrely, his resolve becomes a turn-on for her. Chulbul Pandey thinks it's perfectly all right to tell a girl to 'pyar se le lo warna thappad se bhi de sakte hain', while Phata Poster warns ki 'tera peechha karoon toh rokne ka nai'.
A smoking scene comes with a dozen warnings, but 50 years of selling a singular idea of romance have so embedded this, we don't even realize it's dangerous. It's a prototype, one that countless Janardans like Ranbir Kapoor try to use a la Rockstar.
Bollywood, time to give the girls a say.
This entry was posted on October 4, 2009 at 12:14 pm, and is filed under
Bollywood News,
Dharmendra,
Phata Poster Nikhla Hero,
Raj Kapoor,
Ranbir Kapoor,
Shah Rukh Khan,
Shahid Kapoor,
Shammi Kapoor,
Sonakshi Sinha,
Vyjayanthimala
. Follow any responses to this post through RSS. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Post a Comment