Visualizzazione post con etichetta R YASH CHOPRA. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta R YASH CHOPRA. Mostra tutti i post

4 maggio 2014

Bollywood vs. Jihad

Katrina Kaif in Tees Maar Khan
[Archivio

Vi segnalo il curioso articolo Bollywood vs. Jihad, firmato da Shikha Dalmia e pubblicato da Reason nel numero di agosto-settembre 2011. Può il soft power di Bollywood contrastare l'avanzata del fondamentalismo islamico? L'8 settembre 2011 Il Foglio aveva pubblicato la traduzione in italiano del pezzo. Di seguito un estratto dal testo originale:

'Islamic fundamentalists have long worried about the threat that Bollywood poses to their puritanical demands. Of late, they have even taken to making videos - rap videos, no less - condemning Bollywood movies as being the product of an infidel culture trying to brainwash Muslims against their own religious values and duties. They have ample reason to be worried. About 3 billion people, or half the planet, watches Bollywood, and many of them live in the Islamic world. By depicting assimilated, modernized Muslims, Bollywood - without even trying - deromanticizes and thereby disarms fanatical Islam. (...)
The kind of Western soft power that proved so crucial in bringing down the Soviet empire - jazz, Hollywood, the Beatles - is arguably less relevant in the struggle against fundamentalist Islam. American culture, despite its alleged ubiquity, doesn't have the same resonance in Eastern countries that don't share the West's ethnic, religious, and cultural background. While hip hop and heavy metal have helped inspire some of the street protesters demanding more freedoms across the Middle East and northern Africa, outside of the hardcore early adopters these cultural subgenres remain more voyeuristic than aspirational. Their popularity arguably stems more from a curiosity about how exotic people in alien countries live than from an inclination to emulate them.

That isn't true of Bollywood. India's flamboyant, campy, kitschy film industry is rooted in heritages, values, aesthetics, and geographies shared with much of the Muslim world. The Middle East is Bollywood's third largest overseas market. Many Bollywood movies now hold their premiers in Dubai. (...)
Disaffected youth throughout the unfree Muslim world see in Bollywood a glimpse of the pleasures, colors, and riches available in a world with more liberty. Among the first businesses to open after the Taliban fell in Afghanistan were movie theaters showing Bollywood films. Even at the height of the Taliban's repression, shopkeepers kept a secret stash of undestroyed film star posters that they would barter for food and goods. (...)
The Muslim country most in the grip of Bollywood mania is Pakistan, India's cultural twin in every respect but religion. The more aggressively that Pakistani authorities have tried to purge it from their soil, the more Bollywood's popularity has grown. During the country's four-decade-long ban on Indian movies, Pakistanis watched them via satellite dishes and smuggled VHS tapes. When the ban was finally lifted in 2008, the Bollywood scene in Pakistan exploded. Not only have Bollywood movies been playing to packed houses, but Indian movie stars are treated like demigods, despite Islam's taboo against idol worship. The latest fad among Pakistan's urban nouveau riche is Bollywood theme weddings in which the bride and groom dress in outfits worn by a particular movie's stars and hold their wedding reception in elaborate tents constructed to resemble movie sets.

It's hard to emulate - and adulate - a cultural form while simultaneously rejecting its message. And Bollywood's message is profoundly at odds with the strictures of Islamic extremism. At the simplest level, women who don Bollywood outfits, even when adapted for more modest sensibilities, are resisting the Islamic strictures that would shroud them in a burqa. At a deeper level, Bollywood movies offer a compromise between tradition and modernity that resonates with ordinary Muslims while subverting Islamist designs.
Take romantic movies. You might have expected Hollywood's more sexually explicit romances to pose a bigger threat to puritanical Shariah law than Bollywood's tamer approach. You'd be wrong. Both Hollywood and Bollywood idealize true love that conquers all. But the obstacles that Hollywood couples face - previous lovers, infidelity, commitment phobia, baggage from broken marriages - have little to do with the concerns of people in traditional Muslim countries. They can relate far more with Bollywood's paramours, whose chief impediment is familial objections, given that arranged marriage is still a revered institution in that part of the world. (...)

Veer-Zaara portrays the tension between the possibilities of modernity and the demands of tradition, offering a resolution that accommodates both. It affirms the right of young men and women - not their parents or families - to decide their own romantic fate. But it does so without demanding the wholesale jettisoning of religion, tradition, or family. Zaara's original journey to India to dispose of her caregiver's ashes conveys her piety, love, and deep respect for her elders, all prized virtues in traditional, religious cultures, Islamic or Hindu. What's more, Veer and Zaara don't simply thumb their noses at Zaara's family and run off to Las Vegas. That would have delegitimized their cause. They pursue a much harder balancing act. Zaara does not dishonor her family or reject its claims on her. But she breaks away from her husband, choosing instead to be single.
Bollywood, then, encourages young lovers to follow their heart by persuading their families of the rightness of their cause, not by turning their backs on them. It seeks to realize romantic love not outside the broader structure of faith and family but within it, at once reforming and affirming key social institutions - a resolution that legitimizes Muslim reformers against Islamist reactionaries. Bollywood is at once both progressive and conservative, a combination that appeals to Muslim youth.
Veer-Zaara was released when Pakistan had not yet lifted its ban on Bollywood. But it became an underground cult hit there anyway. By depicting ordinary Pakistanis, if not their government, as decent, honorable, family-oriented people, the movie flattered one of its key audiences. Pakistani athletes who happened to be in India when the movie was released reportedly watched the film at a special screening and spilled into the theater aisles to dance and clap along when Veer performs an obligatory fantasy dance sequence on a bus rooftop.

There is another key reason for Bollywood's appeal to the Islamic world. Since its inception, some of the Indian film industry's biggest stars, both male and female, have been Muslims. Currently, the three highest grossing male leads are Muslims, all with the recognizably Muslim surname Khan. Bollywood's most respected music composer - A.R. Rahman - (...) is also a Muslim, as are many of Bollywood's best lyricists and screenwriters.
The success of these Bollywood Muslims has profound implications for the emergence of a moderate Islam. They have a very different attitude toward their faith than the one prescribed by radical Islamists. Some industry professionals are more religiously observant than others, and movie gossip circles are always abuzz over which member of the Khan troika is more serious about the faith. It's widely reported that Salman Khan (...) eschews alcohol and that Shah Rukh Khan (...) fasts to observe Ramadan. But ultimately the faith of Bollywood's Muslims is about personal spiritual elevation, not subordination to Taliban-style medievalism. Rahman, the composer, is a devout Sufi who prays five times a day - not because he is trying to popularize Islam's rigid strictures but because, as The Times of India puts it, it helps him "release his tension and gives him a sense of containment."
The best Sufi music these days is arguably coming not from the Mideast but from the Indian subcontinent, thanks in no small part to Bollywood Muslims. By showcasing these artists and their work, the Indian film industry demonstrates to Muslims everywhere that adapting to modernity does not require them to abandon their faith and traditions. In fact, it can be a vehicle for preserving and promoting them.

None of this satisfies hardcore Islamists, of course. But their vitriol at (...) Bollywood's many (...) transgressions has little resonance with the industry's Muslims. Shah Rukh, who has one billion fans across the world, in fact has made it something of a personal crusade to take on clerics who question his faith or try to impose on him their rigid version of Islam. "Jihad [meaning 'inner struggle'] was supposed to be propagated by the Prophet himself," the actor told CNN-India. "Now two versions of Islam exist. There is an Islam from Allah, and very unfortunately, there is an Islam from the Mullahs." 
But at the same time Shah Rukh criticizes extremists, he uses his stardom and artistic platform to convey the legitimate concerns of ordinary Muslims to the rest of the world. For example, his 2010 film My Name Is Khan depicts the indignities to which American Muslims have been subjected post-9/11, especially through racial profiling. As if to prove his point, immigration officials at Newark Liberty International Airport detained and questioned Shah Rukh for several hours when he came to America to promote the movie.

America's reliance on hard power stems from a subconscious fear that, without it, there will be nothing left to counter the spread of Islamic extremism. But hard power's inevitably blunt application makes distinguishing between extremists and nonextremists nearly impossible, thus alienating the very people America needs to enlist on its side. Pakistan has borne the brunt of Washington's hard power, from the constant drone attacks to the infringements on its sovereignty during Osama bin Laden's killing. And the more America has deployed its hard power, the more that anti-American sentiment has grown among ordinary Pakistanis. (...)
But even as Pakistan's resistance to America's drones and raids has grown, its resistance to Bollywood's soft power has crumbled. The extremists who find sympathetic audiences when directing fire and brimstone toward the Great Satan are powerless to prevent Pakistanis from consuming Bollywood blasphemies'. 

6 settembre 2013

Jab tak hai jaan: Recensione

[Blog] Recensione di Jab tak hai jaan, ultima opera di Yash Chopra e unico film del 2012 il cui protagonista è Shah Rukh Khan. Lo affiancano Katrina Kaif e Anushka Sharma.

14 novembre 2012

Jab Tak Hai Jaan: prima mondiale

Il 12 novembre 2012 a Mumbai ha avuto luogo una prima mondiale davvero indimenticabile. In occasione della proiezione speciale di Jab Tak Hai Jaan, gli studi di Yash Raj Films si sono trasformati in una gigantesca sala cinematografica, decorata con le locandine di tutti i titoli diretti dal compianto Yash Chopra. È stato organizzato un red carpet calcato dalle celebrità più note di Bollywood. Ha fatto scalpore la partecipazione delle superstar Salman Khan e Aamir Khan (con Kiran Rao) ad una prima di una pellicola interpretata da Shah Rukh Khan. Amitabh Bachchan era accompagnato dalla moglie Jaya Bhaduri, dal figlio Abhishek e dalla nuora Aishwarya Rai. C'erano anche Akshay Kumar (con Twinkle Khanna) e Hrithik Roshan. E poi Shahid Kapoor, Anil Kapoor, Sonam Kapoor, Ranveer Singh e altri ancora. Molti registi, fra cui Karan Johar, Ashutosh Gowariker, Rajkumar Hirani, Imtiaz Ali, Zoya Akhtar, Dibakar Banerjee, Kabir Khan e Shekhar Kapur. Numerose le eroine dei film di Chopra, fra cui Madhuri Dixit, Sridevi (con Boney Kapoor), Rani Mukherjee, Rekha e Preity Zinta. Quanto a Kajol, l'eroina numero uno, protagonista di Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, il più grosso successo prodotto da Yash Raj Films (diretto da Aditya Chopra, figlio di Yash e ora nuovo boss), la diva ha snobbato il red carpet e, secondo quanto rivelato da Hindustan Times, accompagnata dallo schivo Aditya avrebbe raggiunto gli studi da una porta secondaria. Tutti i riflettori erano comunque puntati sul trio di attori di Jab Tak Hai Jaan: Shah Rukh Khan, Katrina Kaif e Anushka Sharma (che ha sfoggiato una magnifica nuova acconciatura e un abito Cavalli). Video ufficiali: prima, seconda, terza e quarta parte. Ammetto che al caldo abbraccio scambiato da Aishwarya e Hrithik mi sono un po' emozionata...













7 novembre 2012

Le prime del 13 novembre 2012: Jab Tak Hai Jaan

Il Diwali 2012 dovrebbe incoronare Yash Chopra re del botteghino. Jab Tak Hai Jaan possiede infatti tutte le carte in regola per conquistare folle oceaniche di spettatori. Chopra è tornato alla regia, dopo otto anni dal deludente (spero nessuno mi spari) ma amatissimo Veer-Zaara, con una nuova storia d'amore creata per esaltare la figura dell'eroe romantico per eccellenza del cinema indiano: Shah Rukh Khan. Ad affiancarlo Katrina Kaif, l'attrice attualmente più quotata al botteghino, e la spumeggiante Anushka Sharma. Location incantevoli, eccellente fotografia, sguardi, sorrisi, drammi e batticuore, coreografie e abiti da sogno. La colonna sonora, piuttosto classica, è composta dal premio Oscar A.R. Rahman. JTHJ offre uno Shah Rukh anche in versione ruvida, con barba incolta da uomo che non deve chiedere (chissenefrega dell'eroe romantico: *Lui* rende molto meglio nei panni dello sciupafemmine, e spero che Yash non abbia esagerato con lo zucchero). Da non sottovalutare l'ondata di commozione suscitata dal decesso improvviso di Yash Chopra,  avvenuto il 21 ottobre 2012, e che ha etichettato JTHJ come l'ultimo lavoro dell'uomo più potente di Bollywood. Le aspettative sono dunque altissime, e, a meno che il film non si riveli orribile, il concorrente Son of Sardaar dovrà faticare parecchio per farsi notare. Vi propongo, oltre al trailer, i video dei brani Jiya Re, Saans, Challa, Ishq Shava e Heer.
Vedi anche Jab tak Hai Jaan: prima mondiale, 14 novembre 2012

Aggiornamento del 15 novembre 2012: come sta procedendo la sfida del Diwali? È ancora presto per decretare il vincitore, ma in rete è già stato diffuso qualche dato certo. La contesa relativa al numero delle sale si è conclusa con 2.500 sale per JTHJ e 2.000 per SOS. Entrambi i titoli stanno incendiando il botteghino, e l'industria cinematografica di Mumbai ha un motivo in più per celebrare. È un testa a testa che vede primeggiare alternativamente JTHJ e SOS. Nei circuiti multisala sembra avvantaggiarsi JTHJ, nei cinema monosala è invece SOS ad avere la meglio. All'estero JTHJ ha strozzato il rivale (pare che in Nuova Zelanda sia entrato direttamente al numero uno nella classifica dei titoli più visti, battendo le pellicole locali e quelle hollywoodiane), ed anche negli USA i numeri generano entusiasmo. Ma SOS ha bruciato sul tempo JTHJ in Pakistan, ridisegnando la storia di Bollywood nel Paese confinante. Sembra inoltre che entrambi i titoli abbiano segnato il record di incassi nel primo giorno di distribuzione per entrambi gli attori protagonisti. Le recensioni, però, non sono proprio entusiastiche. Per JTHJ, il decesso improvviso di Yash Chopra ha indotto i critici a limitare il sarcasmo e ad addolcire il giudizio finale. Il risultato? Pezzi monotoni e tediosi. Traspare che JTHJ non sia piaciuto poi molto, ma, agganciato al filone del classico film romantico d'altri tempi, gli vengono perdonati diversi passi falsi.
Recensione di Raja Sen, Rediff, 13 novembre 2012, ***: 'A Yash Chopra drama that treads very familiar territory slickly - and a fair bit too slowly - but does so with an old-world sincerity that somehow makes most of it bearable. Rather like its leading man, who is often made to balance entire scenes on his dimples, grinning so wide his eyes appear closed. There are times in JTHJ when it's hard not to feel embarrassed for Shah Rukh Khan having to work with material this tedious - and yet he, despite the exaggerated show of youngness, manages inexplicably to charm. This is his film, and, against all odds, he works it well. (...) Katrina is the film's big surprise, providing a solidly competent performance in a role that could well have been reduced to farce. The lazy screenplay makes sure she kisses more than she gets to speak, which isn't a bad thing because she turns out pretty good with the silent moments. The actress brings a tenderness to the proceedings and emotes strongly, making sure her character - while unlikely, untimely and irrational - ends up real enough to root for. And yet it's not her film. Or even Yash Chopra's, really. JTHJ is all Shah Rukh, all the time. His character seems larger than the film, and Khan himself is in fine form even when the script deserves far less. There are times he seems out of place, certainly, but these are made up for by times where he grounds the narrative with one glare, with one scowl, with one kiss. The dude abides. As a swan-song for the master director, JTHJ might only be a middling effort. But then, sometimes, all we need is a Khan-song'.
Recensione di Mayank Shekhar, 13 novembre 2012: 'This is a romantic weepy. They are expressly made for women audiences the world over. Be warned. But you knew that all along. These barriers are mostly blurred. There’s an emotional woman inside every hardened man. No one should feel shy about letting it all out. Except that by the end of the saga, you worry less about the hero’s love and his wellbeing, and far more for the movie’s length. (...) After about three and half hours in the theatre, when you step out of JTHJ, you realise his last movie, at 80, clearly wasn’t quite his best, or even close to it. It would have been unfair to even expect that. But it did have shades of what we loved him for. You can instantly tell why he was still the youngest filmmaker around. This film may not survive him. There’s a huge legacy that will, and I know we will forever thank him for being'.

21 ottobre 2012

È morto Yash Chopra

Qualche ora fa Yash Chopra si è spento in un ospedale di Mumbai. Lo scorso 27 settembre aveva compiuto 80 anni.

20 settembre 2012

Jab Tak Hai Jaan : trailer

Gustatevi in religioso silenzio il trailer del nuovo film dell'affascinante, bellissimo, oltraggiosamente sexy  King of Bollywood: Shahrukh Khan.
A giudicare dal montaggio delle prime immagini la pellicola, diretta da Yash Chopra, riserva delle autentiche chicche per gli infervorati fan di Srk. Devo ancora riprendermi perciò rimando i commenti ad una data da destinare, sempre che sopravviva. 

9 marzo 2012

Srk, Anushka & Katrina: a London based "Yash Raj" Love Story

Yash Chopra torna alla regia dopo una lunga pausa durata otto anni: il suo ultimo film è stato Veer Zaara distribuito nel 2004.  Il capostipite di casa Chopra, nonchè fondatore della Yash Raj, sta attualmente girando una nuova love story che vede impegnato Shahrukh Khan per la prima volta al fianco di Katrina Kaif. Le riprese sono iniziate lo scorso 22 febbraio a Londra, e, dalle prime immagini che circolano in rete, la coppia di attori appare in semplici e moderni abiti invernali. Non mancano minigonne per Katrina e nemmeno stivali rockkettari e chitarra per il King. Anuskha Sharma raggiungerà il resto del cast nei prossimi giorni. Ricordo che la colonna sonora del film è composta da A.R. Rahman, mentre i testi sono di Gulzar. L'appuntamento al cinema è fissato per il Diwali 2012.