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Although initially I had planned to write a movie review of Holiday (2014), I came to a realization that the film industry is now exploring and creating characteristics of heroines that are unconventional. Each time the recent films have pushed the boundaries and has arguably represented characteristics in women that were earlier either unaccepted or viewed as immoral or perhaps even unfeminine. I will elaborate these examples through the examples of three films I recently watched this year: Holiday (2014), Hassee to Phassee (2014), and Shuddh Desi Romance (2013). In the string of films that have been challenging the stereotypical representations of Indian women, earlier films include Dev D (2009) and Luv Ka The End (2011).
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While for a lot of audiences this moment goes unrecognized, I found this representation in particular to be a step forward in India's fight for violence against women. However, Holiday is not the only film that I would say that has pushed the boundaries of unconventional characterizations for the heroine of the film industry. Earlier this year, I had watched Hasee to Phasee (2014) and Shuddh Desi Romance (2013).
Both starred the international star, Priyanka Chopra's cousin sister, Parineeti Chopra in two completely different roles that argued that girls did not have to shape themselves into the classic Miss India like characters who are traditional, delicate, and are represented as women who inhabited the domestic space, which is where their role is as nurturers and providers for their family and husbands. However, both these films challenged these notions and showed that the heroines in both these films wanted much more than just domestic bliss. Meeta (Parineeti Chopra) is intelligent, quirky, bold, and dares to risk her family and reputation to pursue the career of her dreams. Unlike her sister in the film, she is simple and tomboy-ish.
Throughout the film, her sister's boyfriend, Nikhil (Siddharth Malhotra) tries to get know her and eventually ends up falling for her. While it may seem initially quite surprising, the fact that the filmmaker, not surprisingly, Karan Johar presented us with unconventional heroines, she is accepted into the family and for once, she is shown as empowered. The earlier notions that a woman has to leave her career and aspirations when she gets married is left behind, instead, we see that the couple support each other in their careers, which enables for perhaps an even more successful marriage. Earlier, if I remember correctly, parallel cinema films represented women who were intelligent as ugly and nerdy who did not know how to have fun and enjoy life. This misconstrued notion also further suppresses a girl's desire to pursue education and become successful in her own way. This was perhaps one of my most favorite films after Highway (2014) this year.
This was not the first time, though, that Parineeti broke the conventions as a heroine. Shuddh Desi Romance (Pure Indian Romance, 2013). The film's particular focus was on commitment, marriage, live-in relationships, as well as, arranged marriages. Raghu Ram (Sushant Singh Rajput) and Gayatri (Parineeti Chopra) both are involved in a relationship and eventually move in and start living together. Unlike many films, this particular film explored the idea that sometimes it is okay to be with someone without signing the dotted line. While personally, there are some traditional expectations such as marriage that I continue to agree with. I found this to be a film that spoke volumes about the cultural changes that are taking place in India and to be sure, not just in cosmopolitan Indian cities but indeed even in small towns and cities that exist in most of India. The film also shows Gayatri smoking, engaging in pre-marital sex, and being bold and independent. At the end of the film, both Raghu and Gayatri still end up living together but not signing the dotted line. Even though many may not necessarily agree with the conventions or their decision on many levels (morally, socially, and so on), I think again this is a step forward (albeit an uneasy one).
To sum it up, this is the time when the Indian film industry, in particular, Bollywood is making strides in producing unconventional heroines in mainstream cinema. As the time continues, it will be interesting to see how these trends start reflecting within the Indian culture. Secondly, these type of representations also show that even though there is an overarching problem in India if a woman or girl child's life is valued, these type of representations do emphasize what Nisha Pahuja has stated that there are multiple Indias and indeed these representations become a lens through which we see a multi-layered and multidimensional India!
Image Sources: pinkvilla.com, apne.tv, ecx.amazon.com, 1.bp.blogspot.com, intody.in
© Nidhi Shrivastava 2014 This content is subject to copyrights. Please ask for my permission before using this content for any purpose.
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