Making a Song and Dance of It
By Kamal
Sunavala
In
the past three months, I have noticed that somehow the
task of explaining and defending India to Czechs in Prague
has fallen to me. It started with someone in a pub asking
me what I thought of Bollywood. And was it really as crazy
as it looked? I replied politely that I didn’t live in
Bombay but in fact, in Prague and I wouldn’t know the first
thing about Bollywood since I am not engaged with the film
industry in India in any way. But you’re a writer, the
rude man insisted, out of a stupid sense of disassociation.
With the Czech Business Weekly, I replied. And not all
writers who are Indian by nationality are automatically
penning three-hour-long drafts for movies. By now I was
thoroughly irritated and wanted to simply be left alone
with my gin and tonic and my book. He wouldn’t give up,
as manic people are apt not to. I find these Bollywood
movies really silly, he said. They’re not real, he accused.
I nodded, without replying, hoping that he would go away.
Look at Czech films, he said proudly, they talk about real
issues. I rolled my eyes heavenwards and started to smoke
straight into his face, hoping he would get the point.
But he persisted. He was obviously some sort of self-professed
intellectual who spoke English with a trace of the strange
Florida accent that many English-speaking Czechs have.
And all this dancing and singing in the films, he laughed,
what’s that all about? Who really behaves like that? Indians,
I replied. I’ve been to Delhi, he said, and I didn’t see
anyone dancing and singing there. People have jobs, I replied.
They dance and sing at weddings and festivals and on college
campuses; did you go see any of those? He assumed a haughty
manner now; I think it’s ridiculous that an art form which
concentrates on melodrama is so popular in the world today.
People have no taste. No wonder there are no Hindi films
playing here, he said with some sense of having won an
argument that didn’t exist in the first place. I could
have sat there and defended the Indian film industry. I
could have told him how wrong he was and how adored Bollywood
films were all over the world, so much so that Hollywood
sat up and took notice and collaborations with Bollywood
were on the rise. I could have told him that the Hindi
film industry has catered to every single segment of India
and Indians living abroad in an entertaining format and
had talented people who came from seven generations of
artistic ancestry and continue to reveal their talents
on and off-screen with thoughtful and provocative cinema,
right along side the song-and-dance flicks. I could have
explained to him that Czech cinema has absolutely no standing
anywhere in the world, in fact, distributors abroad refuse
to take on Czech films because of the overall poor quality
of production and stories that never tap into the immense
power of human emotion. I could have told him that his
own government refused to pass a bill in Parliament that
would increase state support to film development. I could
have told him that it’s not enough to circulate a myth
that Czechs are great at filmmaking and not acceptable
to take pot shots at other countries that have factually
proved their box office powers in countries as far flung
as Poland and Mexico. And I could have definitely told
him that since 2003 there has been a Bollywood film festival
held in Prague every October, where eighty percent of the
ticket-buying folk are Czech.
But instead I asked him a
simple question. What do you not like about Hindi films?
He instantly replied: too much emotion.
I rest my case.
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