Modern Indian cinema
Some filmmakers such
as Shyam
Benegal continued to produce realistic Parallel
Cinema throughout the 1970s, alongside Satyajit
Ray, Ritwik
Ghatak, Mrinal
Sen, Buddhadeb
Dasgupta and Gautam
Ghose in Bengali
cinema; Adoor
Gopalakrishnan, John
Abraham and G.
Aravindan in Malayalam
cinema; and Mani
Kaul, Kumar
Shahani, Ketan
Mehta, Govind
Nihalani and Vijaya
Mehta in Hindi
cinema. However, the 'art film' bent of the
Film Finance Corporation came under criticism during a Committee on
Public Undertakings investigation in 1976, which accused the body of
not doing enough to encourage commercial cinema. The 1970s did,
nevertheless, see the rise of commercial cinema in form of enduring
films such as Sholay
(1975), which solidified Amitabh
Bachchan's position as a lead actor. The
devotional classic Jai
Santoshi Ma was also released in 1975.
Another important film from 1975 was Deewar,
directed by Yash
Chopra and written by Salim-Javed.
A crime
film pitting "a policeman against his
brother, a gang leader based on real-life smuggler Haji
Mastan", portrayed by Amitabh Bachchan, it
was described as being “absolutely key to Indian cinema” by Danny
Boyle.
Commercial cinema
further grew throughout the 1980s and the 1990s with the release of
films such as Mr
India (1987), Qayamat
Se Qayamat Tak (1988), Tezaab
(1988), Chandni
(1989), Maine
Pyar Kiya (1989), Baazigar
(1993), Darr
(1993), Dilwale
Dulhaniya Le Jayenge (1995) and Kuch
Kuch Hota Hai (1998), many of which starred
Aamir
Khan, Salman
Khan and Shahrukh
Khan.
The 1990s also saw a
surge in the national popularity of Tamil
cinema as films directed by Mani
Ratnam captured India's imagination. Such films
included Roja
(1992) and Bombay
(1995). Ratnam's earlier film Nayagan
(1987), starring Kamal
Haasan, was included in Time
magazine's "All-TIME" 100 best movies,
alongside four earlier Indian films: Satyajit Ray's The
Apu Trilogy (1955–1959) and Guru
Dutt's Pyaasa
(1957). Another Tamil director S.
Shankar also made waves through his film
Kadhalan,
famous for its music and actor Prabhu
Deva's dancing. The South
Indian film industry not only released cinema
with national appeal but also featured multicultural music which
found appreciation among the national Indian audience. Some Tamil
filmi
composers such as A.
R. Rahman and Ilaiyaraaja
have since acquired a large national, and later international,
following. Rahman's debut soundtrack
for Roja
was included in Time Magazine's "10
Best Soundtracks" of all time, and he
would later go on to win two Academy
Awards for his international Slumdog
Millionaire
(2008) soundtrack. Tabarana
Kathe, a Kannada
film, was screened at various film festivals
including Tashkent, Nantes, Tokyo, and the Film Festival of Russia.
Long after the
Golden Age of Indian cinema, South India's Malayalam
cinema of Kerala experienced its own 'Golden
Age' in the 1980s and early 1990s. Some of the most acclaimed Indian
filmmakers at the time were from the Malayalam industry, including
Adoor
Gopalakrishnan, G.
Aravindan, T.
V. Chandran and Shaji
N. Karun. Adoor Gopalakrishnan, who is often
considered to be Satyajit Ray's spiritual heir, directed some of his
most acclaimed films during this period, including Elippathayam
(1981) which won the Sutherland
Trophy at the London
Film Festival, as well as Mathilukal
(1989) which won major prizes at the Venice
Film Festival. Shaji N. Karun's debut film
Piravi
(1989) won the Camera
d'Or at the 1989
Cannes Film Festival, while his second film
Swaham
(1994) was in competition for the Palme
d'Or at the 1994
Cannes Film Festival.
Bhuvan
(Aamir
Khan)
with his cricket team consisting of village-folk, in Ashutosh
Gowarikar's
Lagaan
(2001).
In the late 1990s,
'Parallel Cinema' began experiencing a resurgence in Hindi cinema,
largely due to the critical and commercial success of Satya
(1998), a low-budget
film based on the Mumbai
underworld, directed by Ram
Gopal Varma and written by Anurag
Kashyap. The film's success led to the
emergence of a distinct genre known as Mumbai
noir, urban films reflecting social
problems in the city of Mumbai.
Later films belonging to the Mumbai noir genre include Madhur
Bhandarkar's Chandni
Bar (2001) and Traffic
Signal (2007), Ram Gopal Varma's Company
(2002) and its prequel D
(2005), Anurag Kashyap's Black
Friday (2004), and Irfan Kamal's Thanks
Maa (2009). Other art film directors active today include Mrinal
Sen, Buddhadeb Dasgupta, Gautam Ghose, Sandip
Ray, Aparna
Sen and Rituparno
Ghosh in Bengali cinema; Adoor Gopalakrishnan,
Shaji N. Karun and T. V. Chandran in Malayalam cinema; Mani Kaul,
Kumar Shahani, Ketan Mehta, Govind
Nihalani, Shyam Benegal, Mira
Nair, Nagesh
Kukunoor, Sudhir
Mishra and Nandita
Das in Hindi cinema; Mani Ratnam and Santosh
Sivan in Tamil cinema; and Deepa
Mehta, Anant
Balani, Homi
Adajania, Vijay Singh and Sooni
Taraporevala in Indian
English cinema.
Influences
Prasads
IMAX Theatre houses at Hyderabad,
the 2nd largest IMAX-3D in the world (2nd to the world's largest in
Sydney, Australia).
MG
Road Gurgaon, one of the longest commercial streets in Asia
There have generally
been six major influences that have shaped the conventions of Indian
popular cinema. The first was the ancient Indian
epics of Mahabharata
and Ramayana
which have exerted a profound influence on the thought and
imagination of Indian popular cinema, particularly in its narratives.
Examples of this influence include the techniques of a side
story, back-story
and story
within a story. Indian popular films often have
plots which branch off into sub-plots; such narrative dispersals can
clearly be seen in the 1993 films Khalnayak
and Gardish.
The second influence was the impact of ancient Sanskrit
drama, with its highly stylized nature and
emphasis on spectacle, where music,
dance
and gesture combined "to create a vibrant artistic unit with
dance and mime being central to the dramatic experience."
Sanskrit dramas were known as natya,
derived from the root word nrit (dance), characterizing them
as spectacular dance-dramas which has continued in Indian cinema. The
Rasa
method of performance, dating back to ancient Sanskrit drama, is one
of the fundamental features that differentiate Indian cinema from
that of the Western world. In the Rasa method, empathetic
"emotions are conveyed by the performer and thus felt by the
audience," in contrast to the Western Stanislavski
method where the actor must become "a
living, breathing embodiment of a character" rather than "simply
conveying emotion." The rasa method of performance is
clearly apparent in the performances of popular Hindi film actors
like Amitabh
Bachchan and Shahrukh
Khan, nationally-acclaimed Hindi films like
Rang
De Basanti (2006), and
internationally-acclaimed Bengali films directed by Satyajit
Ray.
The third influence
was the traditional folk theatre
of India, which became popular from around the
10th century with the decline of Sanskrit theatre. These regional
traditions include the Yatra
of Bengal,
the Ramlila
of Uttar
Pradesh, and the Terukkuttu
of Tamil
Nadu. The fourth influence was Parsi
theatre, which "blended realism
and fantasy,
music and dance, narrative and spectacle, earthy dialogue and
ingenuity of stage presentation, integrating them into a dramatic
discourse of melodrama.
The Parsi plays contained crude humour, melodious songs and music,
sensationalism and dazzling stagecraft." All of these influences
are clearly evident in the masala
film genre that was popularized by Manmohan
Desai's films in the 1970s and early 1980s,
particularly in Coolie
(1983), and to an extent in more recent critically-acclaimed films
such as Rang De Basanti.
The fifth influence
was Hollywood,
where musicals
were popular from the 1920s to the 1950s, though Indian filmmakers
departed from their Hollywood counterparts in several ways. "For
example, the Hollywood musicals had as their plot the world of
entertainment itself. Indian filmmakers, while enhancing the elements
of fantasy so pervasive in Indian popular films, used song and music
as a natural mode of articulation in a given situation in their
films. There is a strong Indian tradition of narrating mythology,
history, fairy stories and so on through song and dance." In
addition, "whereas Hollywood filmmakers strove to conceal the
constructed nature of their work so that the realistic narrative was
wholly dominant, Indian filmmakers made no attempt to conceal the
fact that what was shown on the screen was a creation, an illusion, a
fiction. However, they demonstrated how this creation intersected
with people's day to day lives in complex and interesting ways."
The final influence was Western musical television, particularly MTV,
which has had an increasing influence since the 1990s, as can be seen
in the pace, camera angles, dance sequences and music of recent
Indian films. An early example of this approach was in Mani
Ratnam's Bombay
(1995).
Like mainstream
Indian popular cinema, Indian Parallel
Cinema was also influenced also by a
combination of Indian theatre (particularly Sanskrit drama) and
Indian
literature (particularly Bengali
literature), but differs when it comes to
foreign influences, where it is more influenced by European
cinema (particularly Italian
neorealism and French poetic
realism) rather than Hollywood. Satyajit Ray
cited Italian filmmaker Vittorio
De Sica's Bicycle
Thieves (1948) and French filmmaker Jean
Renoir's The
River (1951), which he assisted, as
influences on his debut film Pather
Panchali (1955). Besides the influence of
European cinema and Bengali literature, Ray is also indebted to the
Indian theatrical tradition, particularly the Rasa method of
classical Sanskrit drama. The complicated doctrine of Rasa
"centers predominantly on feeling experienced not only by the
characters but also conveyed in a certain artistic way to the
spectator. The duality of this kind of a rasa imbrication"
shows in The
Apu Trilogy. Bimal
Roy's Two
Acres of Land (1953) was also influenced by
De Sica's Bicycle Thieves and in turn paved the way for the
Indian New Wave, which began around the same time as the French
New Wave and the Japanese
New Wave.
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