ABHISHEK
LAW
Let
me put out the disclaimers first.
1) I am no film critic
2) I know nothing about film intellectualisms
3) What I speak and write here is completely from logic and I am trying to support
that with articles in newspaper reports I have come across.
Now
that I have taken the weight off my chest, time to go ahead with the knife and scalpel.
I
do not know what the value of Bengali cinema is. But, that 2016 has NOT been a
good year for the industry is quite obvious. I do not need to be a rocket
scientist to see it.
The
problems that I see is quite obvious and I do not know why people (film-makers)
are ignoring the elephant in the room. Perhaps they are blind.
Let
me borrow a line from an online article in The Wire (I am modifying it as per my liking here) :
“Good (Bengali) films are few and far between especially in 2016. There are some exceptions in previous years like like Nirbashito, Phoring, Cinemawalla, Byomkesh Pawrbo,
Bhooter Bhobissyot to
name a few. But it is otherwise a uniformly bleak scenario.
(https://thewire.in/45861/bengali-cinema-is-moribund-and-smug-in-its-comfort-zone-2/ )
Frankly speaking, except Shiboprasad Mukherjee's Praktan and Srijit Mukherjee's Zulfikar; there are no success stories. (I'm ignoring the detective flicks.) Commercial ventures like Love Express, Prem Ki Ta Age Bujhi Ni, and the likes fell face first.
(https://thewire.in/45861/bengali-cinema-is-moribund-and-smug-in-its-comfort-zone-2/ )
Frankly speaking, except Shiboprasad Mukherjee's Praktan and Srijit Mukherjee's Zulfikar; there are no success stories. (I'm ignoring the detective flicks.) Commercial ventures like Love Express, Prem Ki Ta Age Bujhi Ni, and the likes fell face first.
Coming
to the pain points:
Content, content and content
The
one thing that I am most dejected about in Begali cinema is total and absolute
lack to content. For one, most of the commercial movies being dished out
nowadays are southern re-makes. Blatant, frame-by-frame copy-paste of southern
hits and flops.
Now, the Hindi movie channels mostly air southern hits/ flops half the
time; albeit dubbed. And these are said to be the top grossers for channels. So quite obviously, will the audience not already have seen a Bengali remake of
a southern hit?
I
mean, lets assume by the time a Rowdy Rathore is re-made and shown across a
Bengali cinema hall, it will be aired, re-aired and would have become stale on
say a Max. Why would I even spend, Rs 100 to see this movie then when I know
what it is all about?
Bengali movie producers still feel southern re-makes to be a hit formula. But trust me, it
will be a shortcut to success. In the long run, the audience will be more
discerning and will be vociferously rejecting these films.
On content, if original one fails to interest movie-makers, then, there is an entire clutch of Bengali novels that can be successfully replicated. There are a host of authors who would more than gladly script a movie for a director / producer, if they are paid handsomely. Stop taking the short cut.
Here
are two links supporting my arguments:
But,
star power you say will help you sail through? Well this brings me to the
second point.
Absence of Faces
The
biggest problem that Bengali cinema faces nowadays is absence of faces. Heros /
actors are type-cast, type-cast and type-cast till the point they end their carreers.
Take
a cue from John Travolta guys. He did “Saturday Night Fever”. And after that have you even see him play a dancer or a similar character? I do not recall. Please
correct me, if I am wrong. He played the unsympathetic villain / negative character in Broken
Arrow; and a
perfect character artist in the Nicolas Cage co-starrer Face-Off. Look at the variety he brought to the audiences.
But
here, well we all know a Dev or Jeet will keep playing the same role of dancing
around trees and making “villains” fly in the air. An Abir or a Parambrata will
continue to be a “thinking man’s hero” (whatever that means nowadays). A
Kanchan or Subhasis regaled to play comedians; and absolutely no scripts for
mature actors like Saswata or Kaushik Sen or for veterans like Paran
Bandopadhyay.
Thanks
so much dear producers and directors for treating us to the same Abir or
Parambrata in every second “urban genre” movie; or a mumbling-bumbling Dev or Jeet or Ankush or someone else in “mainstream movies”.
Switchovers
This
brings me to the third point : switch-overs.
Directors,
producers and every one claim that they make films for the “urban genre” or for
the “mainstream”. And, pray, tell me what are the two categories? No
one knows.
But the so called definition seems to be multiplex audiences and those going to single screen movies theatres. Automatically, the nature of movie making changes.
But the so called definition seems to be multiplex audiences and those going to single screen movies theatres. Automatically, the nature of movie making changes.
One
makes movies for Mr Sophisticated (filled with intellectual references which
even Mr Sophisticated does not understand) and the other is for “Montu
Chaiwala” (who also does not understand what is pushed down his throat except
objectifying the heroine and glorifying the hero).
But, is it not possible for directors and story-tellers (which brings me back to the
first point) to make a movie that appeals to Sophisticated and Montu both?
“Stop
talking nonsense. It cannot be done.” Seems like a logical escapist argument.
But, doesn’t Bollywood do this almost all the time?
The
lines between a Manthan and Sholay are slowly being blurred with movies like
Gangs of Wasseypur or Badlapur appealing to both urban and single screen
audiences?
Regular definition of a hero is routinely being challenged and broken down in Bollywood. Or else why would an Irrfan Khan, Manoj Vajpayee and Nawaazuddin Siddiqui make the switch and find acceptance? Actors like Naseeruddin and Om Puri and even Amrish Puri have done this in yesteryears.
Regular definition of a hero is routinely being challenged and broken down in Bollywood. Or else why would an Irrfan Khan, Manoj Vajpayee and Nawaazuddin Siddiqui make the switch and find acceptance? Actors like Naseeruddin and Om Puri and even Amrish Puri have done this in yesteryears.
And
Hollywood has
simply blurred these lines ages ago. Or else how does and Argo find commercial
success with a “commercial movie actor” like Ben Affleck?
Closer
home, in Bengali cinema, detective flicks are always finding an audience
irrespective of directors and movie making hitches. But that isn’t a long term
solution.
Here is another link to support my point:
It
is high time for Bengali cinema to script is own standalone success story.
Script goes haywire
So
what is that actually ails Bengali movie makers? This brings me back to the
first point of content and linking it with scripts.
Let
me be frank, almost all Bengali cinema has been heavily relying on ‘sex’ as a
theme. Here is another case in point -
But
does ‘sex’ work without a good script and in complete absence of content? Take
a look at some of the recent films which are named in this article and ask
yourself how many you have seen. My intelligent guess (most guesses are mostly
lucky) is a majority is not on your watch list and a large number of names are
unheard of.
Either
we are in serious dearth of good scriptwriters or we simply take audiences as
idiots. No wonder that most movies fail. There will be no major producers
taking risks in a failing industry and the power will be centred in the hands
of a few or Ponzi scheme drivers running the show in the coming days.
Of
course, these few producers will keep telling you that film has made money. You
never have a trade source to tell you whether the film actually made money or
not.
(PS-
Just like no reporter says that he has done a bad story or claims that all
major breaks are by him.) So best answer is to ask yourself whether you have
seen the movie and what is your reaction to it.
Poor Time Slots at Multiplexes
Apart
from politicising the film industry, there is one point no one seems to talk
about. The poor time slots that Bengali films get in a multiplex.
Chances
are; if you have not caught hold of a Bengali cinema in the first two-to-three
days, preferably the first weekend, then you have to file a missing complaint to
locate it. Or walk down Chandni to get hold of a pirated copy.
God
knows what stops Bengali cinema producers from taking to alternate mediums in
case of screening movies – through channels, D2H options, CDs and DVDs, netflixes, Amazon
Prime Video, YouTube.
However,
in case of multiplexes, the best slots are allotted to Hindi movies (and not
even Hollywood ).
Unless it is a big banner producer from Bengal
(he / they who cannot be named here) then obviously they are given some better
slots. But otherwise, “Bhagwan bharose” (God help us).
For
example, I am still struggling to find a good slot for Chiranjeet starrer
“Kiriti Roy”. Preferably, one after office. Most slots are afternoon ones.
Really, who will go to watch that movie on a weekday then?
Sometimes,
I feel, there should be some contract with multiplexes to ensure better slots
for regional cinema. Preferably prime time slots. Or these multiplexes are
simply fined exorbitantly. (I know it sounds ludicrous. But, sometimes you need
to use a stick to tame the arrogant mule.)
I
don’t know whether you have read this long list of criticisms and shortcomings.
But, for Bengali cinema to survive, it has to introspect; realise what is wrong
and take a truthful call on the course to rectification.
The
sad state in Bengali cinema today is (borrowing yet again from the previous
Quint article) : “No
one wants to call the emperor’s naked bluff and instead cheers to his misery.”
(Views
are personal and CAN be DEBATED.)