Re: Krrish To Be Honored By Harvard University
• A Taste for Three-Hour Flicks: After five years in India, staff writer Scott Baldauf has developed a taste for Indian films. So he enjoyed covering “Krrish,” the new film about India’s own version of Superman ( see story). E-mail this story
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“Watching a three-hour-long Hindi language film, with no subtitles, might seem like torture, especially when that film is aimed at children,” he says. "But I’ve become quite a fan of Bollywood movies, from gritty gangster films like “Company” and “Maqbool,” to the soppy urban romantic comedies like “Dil Chahta Hai” (“What the Heart Wants”) and “Kal Ho Na Ho” (“Tomorrow may never come”).
Scott says that Indian cinemas are increasingly comfortable, with reclining seats, Dolby surround sound, and air conditioning that help the song-and-dance numbers go down. “In the hot Delhi summer, what’s not to like?” he says.
Yes, but three hours?
"I suspect the films are that long for the same reason that American restaurants serve dinners that no single human can finish: to give the customer a sense of value for money. (A Bollywood film in a Delhi theater costs about $2.75 per ticket.)
“In any case, I noticed that whenever the hero, Hrithik Roshan, broke into song, audience members would head to the washroom or the snack bar.”
David Clark Scott
World editor
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Some blogs argue that the very notion of a superhero is an Indian invention, and that Superman himself is a pale imitation of the Hindu monkey-god Hanuman. (In a nutshell, the argument goes like this. Like Superman, Hanuman can fly. Unlike Superman, Hanuman was written thousands of years ago. Plagiarism!)
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“Krrish is very much a part of India’s emerging self-perception as a growing economic power,” says Mr. Juluri. “Traditionally, Indian cinema reflects what it means to be Indian. Now we have a superhero, and that reflects our own image of our country as a growing superpower.”
“Krrish” also reminds its audience that any decent Indian hero will maintain his ties to Indian traditional values. At home, Krishna is the perfect son … or, rather, grandson, since his parents are both dead, and like a good Indian boy, Krishna devotes his life to his grandmother. (With the stunning 1980s actress Rekha playing his grandmother, this is hardly a sacrifice.)
“He’s the Indian superhero who saves the world, but he saves the world for mom,” says Juluri. “Superheroes are a product of modernism, and in the secular West, you looked to a character who righted wrongs in society. In India, Hindu mythology is so deeply rooted in our culture, with gods that we celebrate, that we didn’t really need superheroes.”
Bollywood has had its brushes with superhero characters before, and there have been three or four brazen rip-offs of America’s “Superman” in the past. One, in the Telegu language, featured a future Indian politician named MGR praying to the monkey god Hanuman for strength.
But “Krrish” is the first fully realized Indian superhero, and India’s most technically impressive science-fiction movie to date. Krrish fights like a character in “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” in part because of the skills of the movie’s action director, Tony Ching Siu-Tung, who is famous for the action sequences in “Kill Bill.”
Superhumans vs. supernations
As a “Krrish” movie trailer makes the rounds on TV, with the slogan in one TV ad proclaiming, “When you have power, it shows,” Professor Gupta notes with some chagrin that unless Indians develop a greater sense of responsibility as citizens, India’s aspirations to greatness may be just as much of a fantasy as “Krrish.”
“We are so easily satisfied, that we rarely complain. We don’t expect good-quality services from our government, and we let them off the hook,” says Gupta. As if to emphasize his point, the power in Gupta’s upscale neighborhood is cut and much of his interview with the Monitor is conducted in the fading light of dusk.
“Instead of relying on government, we dig our own tube wells, run our own generators, hire our own security guards, go to private hospitals, arrange our private garbage pickup, and we become our own sovereign nations,” says Gupta. “That is why we can never become a great nation.”