
Author: Naremdra Panjwani
Publisher: Rainbow publishers
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: 296
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8186962727
Description
Cinema is not just a visual medium; it is also an emotional medium. This emotional dimension is what makes some films-like Kismet, Aawara, Baiju Baawra, Pyaasa, Mother India, Mughal-e-Azam, Mere Mehboob, Sholay, Amar Akbar Anthony DDLJ-our films.
Each year a few films become mega-hits in India (and Pakistan) because we all choose to see them, and some of us more than once. M F Husain the painter was famously quoted as having seen Hum Aapke Hain Kaun 62 times in 1994-95, but a million other viewers (in Mumbai, Chennai, Calcutta, Lucknow, Lahore, London & New York) can be found each year who too have known this madness for the pictures at one time or another in their lives-especially in their teenage years.
This book of essays explores the experience of Hindi movei-goers, especially that of small town teenagers in north-central India. The films uncovered here are those released in the period 1951-81.
We fall in love with some films because they speak to us, in words and images that seem to come from deep down in the national psyche. We don't know that they reside in that underground zone, until they have been brought to life on screen, and then we fall in love with them, especially their songs.
Cinema is a People's Art, in which both influence each other-making it a grand cultural conversation, in which filmmakers and viewers even come to blows sometimes. Love and Rejection, Life and Death are all part of this passionate relationship. Emotion Pictures reports on this great national dialogue-cum-pastime, which has now become an international one, with films like Gandhi, Salaam Bombay, Bend It Like Beckham, and Lagaan.
Contents
Preface
Introduction
A Small Town Goes to the Movies
Yeh Ishq Nahin Asaan
Cinema & the Language of Love
Ishq Azaad Hai!
Love is Free
Where do Heroes Come From?
Some Post-Gandhian Answers
Manliness in Movie-Made India
The City in Popular Cinema
Naya Shabar
The Industrial Metropolis in Cinema
Main Dil Tu Dhadkan
Cinema, Songs and Us