Archive for December, 2010

THE NOT-SO-GAY FACE OF BOLLYWOOD


2010
12.22

-Sukhdeep Singh

Since the inception of Dunno Y..Na Jaane Kyun, there has been too much hullabaloo surrounding the movie. From censor trouble to protests by Hindu activists, you find it in news every other day. But even before all this, the big question that remains to be answered is: ‘Is Bollywood ready for gay cinema?’ At the first instance, this question may sound stupid to you; after all, there have been gay characters in movies, and films like Fashion, Metro and Page 3 depicted the characters in a sensible way (and let’s just not discuss about all the gay parodies that come out of the industry). But just ponder a little; all these characters have been in supporting roles at best! The only sensible movies with gay central protagonists that come to mind are Fire and My Brother Nikhil. While Fire was released in 1996, My Brother Nikhil was released almost 5 years back! In nearly 15 years, the world’s biggest film industry produces only three films whose central protagonist is gay/lesbian. Something certainly must be amiss, given the fact that nearly three movies get released every week!

Is it a lack of audience support, or a lack of financers, or simply a lack of interest from the directors and their unwillingness to experiment with a “taboo topic”? After all, Bollywood is quick to copy its Western counterpart, and movies in the west made on such themes have often gone on to win Oscar awards in various categories.

Funds Crunch

Walking the untrodden path has always been a difficult task, and it’s been only recently that Bollywood has moved away from the usual boy-meets-girl  stories.  Most of these ‘unconventional’ movies have been small budget ones, but have gone on to become hits, thus instilling some confidence in the producers, who are now ready to finance such movies. However, there are still some topics that most choose to stay away from, even though a movie on a similar theme might have been a commercial success.

This is exactly what Onir, the director of My Brother Nikhil who is currently working on I AM, found out. “When I was doing My Brother Nikhil, because the central protagonist was gay, it was impossible to get any financers or producers. We had producers telling us ‘Why don’t you make Nikhil’s character as someone who is heterosexual?’, which was unacceptable to me,” says Onir. “Five years down the line when I am making I AM, where one of the stories has a gay protagonist, the industry is still not very accepting. As long as people are pretending to be gay, they are fine; but gay central protagonists are still not accepted in terms of getting the finances at all,” he adds. Kapil Sharma, the lead actor of Dunno Y.. Na Jaane Kyun echoes the view, “I didn’t have much problem finding the producers… We were lucky in our case, but generally producers aren’t forthcoming.” And in case you are a first time director, getting your film financed can be like searching for water in a desert, as Maanav Raj has discovered.  Maanav has directed many successful commercials previously and also worked as an Associate Director for the movie Pankh, and now wants to venture out into the film industry with a movie that deals with gay romance in the late 80s and early 90s. Ready with the script, he is yet to find any producers willing to take the plunge. “Had I made a guy – gal love story, I would have got funds by now, but I am struggling to find money for this kind of project,” he says.

But with Forbes India estimating the earned income of the LGBT community at 3% of Indian GDP, what exactly is holding back the producers? Is it pure homophobia, or is it the risks involved in investing in something new? “Because it is something that has just started opening up in the country, financers and producers are still not confident about putting their money in. A lot of them are of course homophobic, while others see that the business possibility is difficult, because what happens is that a lot of people, especially men, they, when a film gets labeled as a gay film, are afraid to go to the theatre to watch it because of how they would be perceived…So all those things are taken into account when it comes to financing a film,” explains Onir. Maanav narrates a similar story, “My film could be a good film outside India. Internationally it could get awards, but it is not going to generate money abroad, it’s just going to generate some applause. But at the end of the day, for a producer, he is investing some money; for him it is a business and he needs his money back.”

Unwilling Actors

The woes don’t end there for a director. Getting an actor to play a gay role on-screen is an uphill task that mostly leads to disappointment. Though finding producers wasn’t so difficult for Kapil Sharma of Dunno Y…Na Jaane Kyun,  casting was much of a problem for him. And both Onir and Maanav agree that even if you are able to generate funds for your movie, there aren’t enough takers for the role among our so called “established actors”. “Some of the senior actors like Zeenat Aman and Helen had no issues because of the gay content at all, the problem was for the newer stars, the youner generation ones,” says Kapil. Although Kapil ended up playing the lead role himself, he hadn’t planned to do so initially. “For my role, I had spoken to some actors who had done two – three films, they aren’t stars but are known. They had a lot of hang ups and even if they were playing the role, they wouldn’t do a lot of things. Eventually I decided to do the role that I am doing,” he reveals. For My Brother Nikhil, no actor even wanted to be cast in the movie, and little seems to have changed in these 5 years. “While working on I AM, for one of the segments I had approached a “star” star and for months the person did not even have the time to read the script, which is because of the sub-story and then I realized the insecurity of how a person would be perceived if he plays gay and at the same time not having the balls to do something because of perception,” says Onir. The fear of getting “typecast” is what seems to rule their mind. “They don’t want to play a gay role because it would damage their image of lover boy,” tells Maanav.

“Somewhere they have a lot of inhibitions,” sums up Kapil. Probably there’s a lot of internal homophobia too that these “stars” need to overcome. In a recent report in DNA newspaper, on a question of playing a gay role in a movie, actor Bobby Deol was quoted as saying, “I don’t see myself playing a gay role. My physique and demeanour is very masculine and I am sure audiences will faint at that very thought. Though I will love to experiment, this is something that I can’t carry off.” The statement in itself reveals how actors have stereotypical images in their mind that they still need to get past. What did he actually mean by “a very masculine physique” is something that only Mr. Deol could explain and justify.

If It’s mockery, it’s fine

Strangely though, from the producers to the actors, no one seems to mind it if the movie or the role is making a mockery of the community. So, in almost every third movie churning out from the film industry today, you would find a certain guy having a crush on a straight friend, or a certain Kantaben entering the room only to find the lead actors in a “compromising position”. These sub-plots have in fact become an essential part of the movie.

“As long as it is mockery, as long as people are laughing at it, it is OK; because at the end of the day no one cares. Then it is OK, then they (actors) would all accept,” points out Onir. That would explain the eagerness of actors Imran Khan and Ranbir Kapoor to be chosen for Dostana 2. In an episode of Koffee With Karan, the two actors in fact kissed each other in front of Karan Johar- the host and owner of Dharma Productions- to convince him that they are “comfortable” playing a gay couple. Dostana, it may be pointed out, was yet another movie where the lead actors have to “pretend” to be a gay couple to get a rented house in USA, leading to a series of bizarre situations.

Censorship and Distribution

After going through all the difficulties, there is another hurdle that a movie needs to cross- that of the censors. The Govt. appointed Censor Body in India often has the last word on what the countrymen can watch. Many films, especially if they are on some sensitive or offbeat topic, have faced the heat of censor scissors. Dunno Y… Na Jaane Kyun found itself in a similar situation, when the censors refused to pass the love making scenes in the movie. “They had issues with some intimate shots and it took us three months to convince them that if it is a love story, it has to have some intimate moments. If it would have been a guy and girl love story, than those scenes would have been easily passed. Finally we reached to a compromise. They passed the first intimate kiss, but we had to reduce the length,” says Kapil. However, he feels that they faced objections because it was the first time the censors encountered such a film and there was a certain shock value to it.

Onir on the other hand says that he never faced any trouble form the Censors for his movies. “There are a lot of people who are very sensible and they are not there to screw your script, they are not there to harm you. Of course they have certain guidelines to follow because they are working for an organization.”

After overcoming all the hurdles, it is not necessary that distributors will be ready to take up the movie, as the makers of Dunno Y… Na Jaane Kyun found out. Major multiplex chains like Fun Cinemas, INOX, Cinemax refused to screen the movie because of its gay content, citing that they are a “family theatre”, affecting the release of the movie countrywide. Eventually, the movie could only be released in three cities- Mumbai, Delhi and Ahmedabad. Negotiations are still going on with the distributors, but the movie is yet to release in any other city in India.

Audience Support

Despite all the apprehensions and inhibitions shown by the producers and actors, audiences have come out in full support, clearly giving thumbs up for more such movies in the future. My Brother Nikhil not only won many awards, but was a commercially successful movie too. “My Brother Nikhil had a very long run… If you make a film which has a good story to tell, which is tackled in an intelligent way, people are willing to see the film,” says Onir. Even Dunno Y… Na Jaane Kyun has had an above average collection in these cities. “In PVR Cinemas in Mumbai, the collections have now been fifty- sixty percent. There is mixed audience that is coming,” informs Kapil.

For that matter, even I AM would not had been possible on Onir’s side without public support. Unable to find producers who would be willing to put their money in a movie with 4 sub-stories about child sexual abuse, gender and sexuality, Onir decided to let people become co-owners of the movie. Anyone could become co-owner by contributing as little as Rs 1000. He was finally able to generate more than half of the movies budget and in the end, the movie had around 350 co-owners (those who gave anywhere between Rs 1000 – Rs 1 Lakh) and around 50 co-producers (those who contributed more than Rs 1 Lakh). “The way I AM is made, I have got an entire audience support who are ready to put in money. For me it is a big moral boost because it’s almost telling that yes we believe in your kind of film and subject; and we need to participate in the making of the film,” an ecstatic Onir said over the phone. “I think people in general are more supportive than the so called financers or producers,” he added.

A Beginning has been Made

To say that Bollywood would change overnight would be pure utopia; after all, perceptions take time to change. But the success of these movies would surely instill some confidence among the producers to come forward to fund such movies. Kapil feels that the movies that would be made in the future probably won’t have to experience the same hostilities as his movie did. “Somewhere it had to start. It has been started. We had to go through the consequences… In the future all these people will be more lenient… I think some film makers will have more guts to come out with different aspects of this issue.” And even if financers view it as a good investment, how long will the actors take to shed their inhibitions and phobia remains to be seen.

Queers in the Idiot Box


2010
12.22

-Avishek

The queer community has been getting a pie of its existence in the Indian cinema for over several years now, albeit on the lines of gay parody. But the depiction of the alternate sexuality in cinema’s smaller cousin, the idiot box, in India is no less than an evolving story in itself.

One of the earliest forms of appearance of the community happened way back in the early nineties or late eighties of last century when we saw the mythological character ‘Shikhandi’, played by Kanwarjit Paintal (better known as Paintal) in one of the most viewed TV series of the world-Mahabharat. The popular scene depicts Shikhandi, who in his earlier birth was a woman Amba, appearing before Bhisma-the supreme commander of the Kauravas. Amba was insulted by the eternal godfather in Mahabharata, Bhisma, and she vowed to take revenge. Bhisma recognizing Shikhandi, refused to fight against a woman and eventually laid down his arms. The character made reappearance in the mid-nineties when there were several reruns of the same TV series.

With the advent of a new century the Indian TV audience began to be bombarded by the saas-bahu (mother-in-law-daughter-in-law) saga from the production house managed by Ekta Kapoor. Amidst the plot of conspiracies and counter-conspiracies of these TV shows, one of the most known faces in the queer community, Bobbie Darling made a short but very effective appearance in Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi. The character she depicted was more on the hilarious side though.

As the decade progressed, the commercial aspect of TV viewing in the form of TRPs began to rule the roost. The reality shows became a part and parcel of TV channels to garner more TRPs. It is in one of these reality shows, the first season of Bigg Boss that was aired on Sony TV to be exact, Bobbie Darling made an appearance. Thanks to her appearance in both the TV shows mentioned above, she became a house-hold name in India.

One of the notable presences of the queer community has come not from north India but down south in Tamil Nadu. Rose, in her early thirties is India’s first transgender TV talk show host. She has hosted Ippadikku Rose on Vijay TV, owned by the media mogul, Rupert Murdoch. She is widely regarded as Oprah Winfrey of the south.

A few TV ads have appeared to highlight the progressive concept the queer community is so much struggling for. A Hindustan Times TV ad shows a curious but homophobic man being hit on the head by a newspaper after seeing two homosexual men exchanging a romantic moment at a restaurant. This abrupt beating on the head with the help of a newspaper is being done to shed one’s homophobic attitude.

In the last few years, the appearance of at least one person from the queer community in any reality show has almost become a regular feature. Last year we saw the renowned Hijra activist, Laxmi Narayan Tripathi, appearing in Sach Ka Saamna, which was aired on Star Plus, to face a volley of questions concerning her personal life from the host Rajeev Khandelwal. Her sheer grit and the revelation of her well guarded life created a huge interest across India. She reappeared earlier this year in another reality show, Raaz Pichhle Janam Ka. This show tries to portray one’s life before the present life. She revealed that in her earlier birth she was born as a man in the year 1879 in Egypt. She had rebelled against her society’s norms then and ventured into sea. Disowned by her parents then, she met with her death in a ship wreck. She conveyed to the presenter, Ravi Kishen, that before coming to her present life she had requested the Almighty to give her present form to her, to understand what it takes to be different from the rest. Although the veracity of this reality show is still unknown, the presence of a queer is really a point to reckon with.

Since last year, Bigg Boss, the Indian version of Big Brother, seems to have adopted a stand to keep a queer in the house for every season. It was the turn of the celebrity fashion designer, Rohit Verma previous year. The bithching and bickering he unleashed upon the celebrity couple of Tanaaz and Bhakhtyar made him one of the leading TRP pullers of the show, along with filmmaker Kamal Rashid Khan. The scene in which Rohit is punished to spend a considerable part of a day inside a huge cage hung from a crane as punishment for his misdeeds in the house attracted a considerable amount of viewers. The reality show in its present season, which started on 3rd October, made Ali Saleem, best known by his alter ego Begum Nawazish Ali, enter the house. Although Begum has now been evicted, his presence inside in the house was not dull, if not the most entertaining.

A few months ago another reality show, Emotional Athyachar, showed Bobby Darling breaking from her boy friend after getting to see his infidelity.  Recently, it also featured an episode where a young gay man, in his early twenties, broke-up from his boy-friend, who simply did not believe in a monogamous relationship. The episode almost ended in a violent fight between the two men.

The first season of Axe Ur Ex on Channel-V featured a gay-relationship in its season finale. The participant, gay by sexuality, made his ex-beau almost cry by enacting a couple of pranks with the help of the program’s producers.

Recently, the controversial reality show of Rakhi Ka Insaaf, aired on Imagine TV, gave a chance to Shri-a queer from UP who was beaten by his own family members, to speak about his sexuality. The episode ended with him being accepted by his parents, although his elder brother seemed to have boycotted him.

Unlike these reality shows, some popular TV shows continue to portray the queer community on the lines of the same old gay parody. Recently, an episode of Baat Hamaari Pakki Hai on Sony TV showed the hero getting attracted towards a man under the spell of a magic trick and almost ending up kissing the man in front of his in-laws and parents. The mother of the hero even insists on him being treated by a doctor to treat any level of homosexuality he has.

Whatever it is, a scripted or a gay parody storyline, Indian TV seems to have caught the section of queer community as its viewers. Hopefully, we would see the positive aspect of the community being shown in the Indian idiot box in the coming months.