Tuesday, February 26, 2013

NAMASTE Oscars!!!

“Namaste” as Ang Lee signed off his valedictorian speech littered with too many pause moments, after winning the 2012 Oscar for Best Director for Life of Pi, which reportedly pandered to the Indian diaspora across the world. But what appears to have missed by many from his speech is another ear-catcher – “Cant waste time talking of the cast”. While he did single out the young protagonist – Pi (Suraj Sharma); adult Pi (Irrfan Khan of The Amazing Spiderman fame) and Gita (Tabu of The Namesake Fame) – two prominent Indian actors from Bollywood were given a miss in his speech.

While some may chide me for making a big deal out of this, this to me is a wider endemic ingrained in the “I am superior” western psyche that appears to relish their half-baked conceptualized notions of India as a third world country, a 0.66 India who thrives below a $1 a day poverty line. While there may be some truth to that, these directors are really obsessed with the “impoverished” India, its daily struggles that assumes an even more ostentatious portrayal in their direction. The dynamic Uber India and its strong urban middle class that has catapulted the Indian stature both in economic growth and emerged as a Technology hub for world to take note of, is often left out for a very simple reason – it does not catch the figment of their imagination. What really excites the western audience in general is “India in the trenches”; a proven stereotypical Oscar winning recipe smartly mastered by the movie-chefs of recent times – Ang Lee, Danny Boyle to name a few. So the fact that Ang Lee ignored such Bollywood stalwarts in Tabu and Irrfan comes with that territorial mindset towards India in general. It appears Indian legend Anupam Kher (Silver Linings Playbook as Cliff Patel) had to fly solo at the Oscars as both Tabu and Irrfan were perhaps given an unceremonious snub.

Interestingly India’s biggest superstar of past 40 years Amitabh Bacchhan makes his Hollywood debut in the upcoming flick The Great Gatsby featuring Leonardo Dicaprio. Knowing Amitabh, it will be very difficult to imagine that he would settle for a junk role that likes of Anil Kapoor seem to grab with drooling tongues and popping eyes – remember Mission Impossible – The Ghost Protocol where Anil Kapoor played an embarrassing cameo as a business tycoon who gets beaten up by a lady. Still remember that night when I was watching that movie in the theater and folks around were going in splits watching his comical jabs that landed nowhere. Yes the same Anil Kapoor who hit a jackpot with Slumgdog Millionaire. Grapple this – In MI-V, the fancy Indian hotel with women attired in traditional lehngas dancing to some classical score in the background and high-tech car parking facility had nothing Indian about it, infact the entire sequence was shot at 5 star hotel Jumeirah Zabeel Saray in Dubai while the car silo itself was a Special Effect rendition of a parking facility in the Autostadt plant in Germany engineered by a team out of Vancouver. So the question is why would not they indulge qualified V/X teams in India to engineer the same special effect marvel, yet quickly pounce at the slightest opportunity to shoot car chase sequences through filthy ghettos of Mumbai.

Another clichéd notion of Indians is the Patel-ization of their characters in movies. Not all Indians are Patels while most Patels are of Indian origin. Hollywood somehow has this bizarre fixation for tagging them as Patels in their movies – Pi Patel, Cliff Patel. Nothing against Patels, some of my closest friends have been Shahs and Patels but it restricts India’s diversity to spread on the world’s biggest stages.

While directors like Lee and Boyle bask in their creative geniuses to portray India on global celluloid, it remains to be seen if this obsession of painting India in poor light will one day be passé.

This write up is only a microcosmic superficial insight into the western perception towards India but would like to share a brilliant analysis by Srividya Subramanium's that provides an in-depth study of India's portrayal in western movies A Content Analysis of the Portrayal of India in Films Produced in the West.

6 comments:

  1. Wikipedia doesn't even mention Amitabh Bacchan's name in the production of The Great Gatsby...other than having his name in casting. I won't be amazed, if he goes out from the movie like as you said Anil Kapoor in ghost protocol. Certainly none of them is close to Naseer (League of Extraordinary gentleman).

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  2. When you say...India's sophisticated graphics team...I would like to know...you are mentioning whom to create special effect??

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  3. o we all agree in principle that most of the VX outsourcing to India revolves around cheap labor while rest of d sophisticated stuff is created here. Question is why - its a case of western perception that indians cant architect brilliant special effects.....Classic case in point is Skyfall that had really WOW special effects..guess who made most of it - it was an Indian company...which leads me to believe that if given an opportunity these VX teams in India can be at par with their Hollywood peers..but so far the stereotyped perception was not letting them send those advanced VX effects projects until now but looks like that has now starting to change..

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  4. Though it's certainly true that outsourcing to India is due to cheap labor but I don't see anyone denying or saying that Indian's cannot create brilliant special effect. The fact is no one has ever created some outstanding visual effects at par with Hollywood movie effects. For me the eye candy of visual graphics was Avatar and Life of Pi and I cannot recall any Bollywood movie creating same sort of magic and I am not here supporting any Hollywood biggie just trying to reel out the fact. Moving Picture Company who did the special effect along with other companies is originally a London based company and started operations in Bangalore and the special effect biggie Steve Begg actually ran the show for all the effects, so we just cannot take credit away from the company as a whole and give it to one of it's branch. They definitely have started in India considering the talent that can produce Skyfall like effects but fact is a fact, we have not produced any remarkable special effects likes of Avatar, Life of Pi and Skyfall.

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  5. Interestingly all three movies you mentioned above in the end had Indian V/X teams playing a major role...so the reason why we dont see Bollywood movies of that stature is because Indian directors lack the creative genius to come up with a spectacle like an Avatar or life of pi , and when u spend 10-15% of your budget in movies for V/X effects I am pretty sure you are not going to get a Bollywood version of Avatar...that is why the Indian V/X teams in India here are solely reliant on what Hollywood throws at them, so if a James Cameroon threw an Avatar for them to work on that is what they will work on...but the grand V/X spectacle will always be his brainchild which the Bollywood directors lack in a big way...we certainly cannot blame the talented guys out in India for not producing a Bollywood version of an Avatar - right?

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  6. I agree to both the points that lacking creativity and Money is the biggest enemy. For example: Cost to create tiger in Life of Pi digitally was about 40 million dollars and in 40 million dollars you can atleast make 4 or 5 Dabbangg or Singham type movies and atleast two Ra.Ones..lol. We can think, unthinkable and no one can deny it, we have our own superheroes like Nagraj, Super commando Dhruv, Parmanu, Doga but no one and I mean not a single director, producer and actor/director/producer could think of a way to bring this character alive on silver screen and make them larger than life characters like we have here: Spiderman, Superman, Batman. CREATIVITY is big issues.

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