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Thursday, January 1, 2015

PK 1.1.2015 - Who is really offended with ‘PK’?

This is precisely what I wrote on December 23, 2014, http://theghousediary.blogspot.com/2014/12/pk-film-biggest-box-office-hit-is-also.html " 

The insecure right wing religious and political leaders of Hinduism, Islam, Christianity and Sikhism may not like this film initially, but will see its value in building cohesive societies where everyone can be safe and live his own life as he or she deems fit.   It is one of the best films made highlighting the value of "knowing-each-other" mitigates the imaginary conflicts. 


This piece is a good analysis of the film.

A few additional links are added at the end of the piece


NTOLERANCE: “The cultural climate has changed now.” Picture shows a theatre screening “PK” in Mumbai. Photo: Vivek Bendre
The Hindu
NTOLERANCE: “The cultural climate has changed now.” Picture shows a theatre screening “PK” in Mumbai. Photo: Vivek Bendre

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/comment-on-pk-movie-controversy/article6745645.ece
d

OPICS
cinema
Hindi cinema
controversies (cinema)
religion and belief
Once the Censor Board has cleared a film and the people want to watch it, no one has the right to pull the film from theatres

Centuries ago, a Hindu named Vatsyayana wrote a treatise which, if filmed, would never get past the Censor Board today. The erotic imagination of another Hindu named Jayadeva, whose Gita Govinda depicts an intensely physical aspect of Lord Krishna, is something you want to introduce to Alok Sanjar, the Bharatiya Janata Party MP from Bhopal who recently remarked that frequent sex can drastically reduce a person’s lifespan. And yet, here we are again, having to defend Hinduism from those who seem to think that the slightest hint of humour or heresy can bring crashing down a religion that has stood strong for millennia. I refer, of course, to the controversy around the Hindu director Rajkumar Hirani’s movie “PK.” The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) wants it banned, and its members, along with those charming chaps from the Bajrang Dal, have taken to tearing up the film’s posters and halting screenings. The reason? According to VHP spokesman Vinod Bansal, “PK” “keeps making fun of Hinduism.” Members of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board have also demanded that the Censor Board remove some scenes in the interest of maintaining “communal harmony.”

For a moment, let’s forget “PK” and turn to a stretch in “3 Idiots,” Mr. Hirani’s earlier blockbuster with Aamir Khan. Anxious about an examination, students of an engineering college resort to prayers. The narrator tells us sarcastically, “Today was Results day… time to make a deal with God.” And indeed, “deals” are made. One student performs an aarti, to the accompaniment of a tinkling bell, in front of a wall filled with pictures of Hindu deities, and mutters, “God, take care of my Electronics paper. I’ll break a coconut.” Another student bows before a cobra, promising a litre of milk a day if ‘Nag Devta’ will help him clear his Physics paper. A third is seen stuffing a handful of grass into a cow’s mouth — he wants ‘Gau Mata’ to help him pass his exams. Another student halts in front of an idol and pledges Rs.100 per month. The narrator stifles a laugh and remarks, “Rs.100 won’t even bribe a traffic cop, let alone the Almighty.”


This is exactly the kind of “mocking of religion” that “PK” is being criticised for, but there’s more: the narrator in “3 Idiots,” the one whose mocking commentary underscored those visuals, is named Farhan Qureshi. And where is that film’s “hero” through all this? Blithely asleep. Even the sounds of the mantras muttered during that aarti, even that tinkling bell can’t wake him up — which is just another way of saying that he is beyond all this. So one has to wonder why no one made a noise, then, about a Muslim narrator’s amusement at what are legitimate Hindu rituals, practised in many parts of the country, and why no one brought up the fact that the Muslim actor at the film’s centre, the film’s messiah, was shown not needing the crutch of rituals. Not a word was heard, either, about the seeming lack of Christian, Sikh and Muslim students praying hard to their gods. Why, one might have asked, are only Hindus shown to be following practices that the rational/secular mind would find ridiculous?\

Reason for targeting


But no one brought it up — probably because “3 Idiots” was not overtly about religion. But “PK” is much more obvious about its intent. It is a brazen attack — though “attack” is too strong a word for such a sweet-natured film — on religion, and therefore, it announces itself as an instant target. In all likelihood, the film also became the focus of all this attention because it’s a big movie, with a big star, which means big attention when you speak up against it. It’s like what happened with Kamal Haasan’s “Vishwaroopam.” The Muslim outfits that protested against it seemed oblivious to the fact that the film’s hero was a namaaz-performing Muslim who saves the world by foiling a terrorist plan hatched by other Muslims. You’d think those Muslim outfits would have celebrated the film’s choice to make the hero a Muslim — most other films with a similar theme would have opted for a Hindu character to portray the same. But no. The radicals almost always miss the point.


The other charge against “PK” is that it promotes ‘love jihad,’ with a romantic track that revolves around a Pakistani man named Sarfaraz and a Hindu woman with the goddess-like name of Jagat Janani, the “creator of the world.” But the romance plays out neither in India nor Pakistan, but in the relatively neutral Belgium, just like “My Name is Khan” set the romance between a Muslim man and a Hindu woman in the U.S. The women in both these films are educated, liberal — there’s no evidence that they will convert to Islam after marriage, and neither did the strong-willed Hindu heroine of “Jodhaa Akbar” renounce her religion. Even in earlier decades, you can find films like “Muqaddar ka Sikandar,” where the hero is raised by a Muslim woman and is in love with a Hindu. And if you consider interreligious love stories with the gender polarities reversed, you have “Gadar” (Muslim woman-Sikh man), “Veer-Zaara” (Muslim woman-Hindu man), “Raanjhanaa” (Muslim woman-Hindu man), “Ek Tha Tiger” (Muslim woman-Hindu man). Did you hear many protests against these films?


All the movies mentioned above are hits — “3 Idiots,” in fact, was the first film to gross over Rs.200 crore at the box office. You don’t make that kind of money without love from all sections of the audience, especially from Hindus, who make up most of our nation. And if they don’t mind this lighthearted mocking, then who are these others, from opportunistic political parties, to take up cudgels on their behalf? Don’t they realise that movies are like elections? People wait patiently in line, go to the counter, and cast their vote by buying a ticket. So when a film like “PK” becomes this kind of a blockbuster — it’s practically guaranteed to cross the Rs.300 crore mark, the first Indian film to do so — then it means that it has been approved by an overwhelming majority. The people have spoken. On the one hand, you hear that the Maharashtra government has asked the police to “look into” the content of the film. On the other, the boxofficeindia site predicts that “PK” may be the first film to collect Rs.100 crore in the Mumbai circuit alone. You have to ask the question: Who’s really being offended here?


Once a film has come through the Censor Board, no one has the right to demand that it be pulled from theatres because it has offended them. Everyone is sensitive to something, and if you begin to factor it all in, you’ll never make a movie. You know this, I know this, and the outfits doing the protesting know this. Why, then, do they continue to get all hot and bothered? Is it because of the increasing “saffronisation” of India, as some claim? The cultural climate now is different, compared to the 1970s, when a film like “Hare Rama Hare Krishna” could get away with yoking the names of the gods in its title to scenes (and a smash-hit song, “Dum maaro dum”) that featured uninhibited pot smoking and premarital commingling. But a bigger reason is that our 24x7 TV channels and Internet portals need news, and when this news is related to a blockbuster film, it becomes bigger news. And sensational, viewership/readership-attracting news as well —when protesting organisations, in their quest for cheap and easy and guaranteed publicity, proffer up such incendiary images of rioting and poster-burning. The sad news is that you know this, I know this, and the outfits doing the protesting too know this.

baradwaj.r@thehindu.co.in

Other pieces:

My 2nd piece

http://theghousediary.blogspot.com/2014/12/pk-great-bollywood-film-panacea-to.html
PK controversy: 5 reasons why the film must be banned
Read more at: http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/5-reasons-why-aamir-khan-pk-must-be-banned/1/410550.html
'PK' Controversy: Salman Khan, Rani Mukherjee, Karan Johar, Others Condemn Attack on Theatres
http://www.ibtimes.co.in/pk-controversy-salman-khan-rani-mukherjee-karan-johar-others-condemn-attack-theatres-618831

PK controversy: 5 reasons why the film must be banned
Read more at: http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/5-reasons-why-aamir-khan-pk-must-be-banned/1/410550.html
'PK' Controversy: Salman Khan, Rani Mukherjee, Karan Johar, Others Condemn Attack on Theatres
http://www.ibtimes.co.in/pk-controversy-salman-khan-rani-mukherjee-karan-johar-others-condemn-attack-theatres-618831
Aamir's 'PK' Controversies: Subramanian Swamy Questions Film's Funding; Cites ISI link
http://www.ibtimes.co.in/aamirs-pk-controversies-subramanian-swamy-questions-films-funding-cites-isi-link-618660
Hindu Organizations attack
http://indianexpress.com/photos/entertainment-gallery/pk-controversy-hindu-organistation-attack-theatres-screening-the-aamir-khan-film/4/

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