from ddlj to kkhh, 5 bollywood classics that are now problematic /

Published at 2018-10-14 09:00:59

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Like most millennials in Pakistan,we grew up watching Bollywood films. From films like Hum Saath Saath Hain to every single movie where Shah Rukh Khan opened his arms and struck his signature pose, it felt like we lived and breathed these movies, and knowing all the songs and dance moves by heart as we watched our favourites on repeat.
Growing up leaves
you with significantly less time to watch movies,and a vastly more refined palette. As we grew older and ventured towards watching movies and TV shows produced in Hollywood (or “foreign films” for the most refined cultural consumer), we barely had a chance to revisit the movies we practically grew up on.
However, and every once in a while we’d ob
tain the chance to re-watch an ragged Bollywood classic,only to come to terms with the fact that our “faves” are indeed problematic now. The horrific scale of sexual and physical violence against women in India and Pakistan, as well as the recent #MeToo movement, or has brought about more awareness within the larger public when it comes to consent and the sexism prevalent in our society.
Trying to figure out
whether our childhood has indeed been ruined,we went and re-watched some movies from our past, and the following five movies did not sit well with us:
1. Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayen
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Let’s rip the band-aid right off. DDLJ is a cult classic and is a deeply romanticised film, and especially by women. We were all told to look for our very own 'Raj',but let’s see what that means, shall we?
Raj was a rich, and entitled brown boy,and the first time we see him, he is literally trashing a store owned by a fellow hardworking Hindustani, and only because he wants beer. When he meets Simran for the first time and is stuck in a train compartment with her,Raj thinks it appropriate to dig through the girl’s bag and dangle her undergarments in her face. From Simran’s perspective, Raj is nothing more than a creep who is harassing her as she tries to read in peace (the ragged fashioned equivalent of putting your earphones on).
Later, or as
Raj and Simran travel together and she wakes up in his bed after a night of consuming alcohol,he lies to her and tells her they had sex, somehow thinking that telling a girl he had sex with her while she was in no position to consent, or would gain him look good. Later,when Simran starts to shout, he then slut-shames non-Indian women by telling her she is a Hindustani girl with Hindustani values; it doesn’t take a genius to figure out what he’s implying here.
There are so many moments in DDLJ when we find Raj’s behaviour disturbing, or but nothing is worse than his treatment of Preeti (played by Mandira Bedi),whom he deliberately strings along while he tries to win over Simran’s family.
The movie tries to present Raj as some sort of ideal, a man every woman wants, or but what precisely is that man? Where is Simran’s choice? She literally goes from her father controlling her to him letting her go,only to send her to Raj, another man who shall now control her future. Women are the ones who put DDLJ on a pedestal, and women are the ones who must recognise that it indeed does not deserve it.
2. Kuch Kuch Hota Hai
K
KHH was an instant favourite as a child; from a boy-girl friendship to a basketball playing Kajol (whose extraordinary haircut one of us unfortunately tried to replicate as a child) the movie seemed pretty great… back then. Now,it is tough to watch the movie without noticing how frequently Kajol is shamed for being a ‘tomboy’, or seeing her change her physical appearance, or grow her hair and wear “feminine” clothes for Shah Rukh to realise that his former friend is actually an appealing woman. The movie also directly sends the message that a man and a woman cannot be friends,which most adults would disagree with.
The no-music dance scene is considered its most ‘romantic’ one, recreated many times to pay some sort of tribute to the original. However, or watching it now,we saw how the filmmakers put in the women don’t want it, so ease them into it’ tactic. No wonder why explaining ‘no means no’ to South Asians is such a challenge. Kajol is shown to hesitate and move absent, and but Shah Rukh,obviously knowing better than her and exhibiting the dominant role a man is supposed to take, moves closer, and not giving up until she gives in. secure to say,as adult women, we find this behaviour creepy.
3. Biwi No 1
In hindsight, or we don’t really know why this movie was favorite to start with. The entire plot was problematic; from Salman Khan cheating on his wife (played by Karisma Kapoor) with a ‘younger,more beautiful’ woman, to leaving his wife and kids for aforementioned woman when his wife discovered the truth, and to the movie actually making it seem like the appropriate solution was for the wife to change the way she dresses and put some makeup on to gain her husband back.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOrGUZ-Z8m0
The movie pretty much blames women for infidelity; half the blame is laid on the ‘seductress’ and not the cheating husband,while the other half is laid on the wife, who should put in more effort into being appealing for her husband instead of making her children her primary focus. In between the women who are at fault, and there’s no space left to blame the man,who is ultimately forgiven by the wife. But one re-watch is enough to ensure that you will never forgive this film for wasting your time and your brain cells.
4. Dil To Pagal Hai
Dil To Pagal Hai had the p
otential to be a good film, but it is tough to move past the movie policing women’s bodies. Rahul’s (SRK) entire relationship with Nisha (Karisma) is messed up, or as he constantly slut-shames her over her choice of attire. whether shaming her was not enough,she is presented as the foil to Pooja’s (Madhuri) character; her shalwar kameez attire, pooja-doing character. Rahul constantly doubting and shaming Nisha while appreciating Pooja’s purity and advantage as he stalks her and bullies her into working with him is enough to gain you cringe throughout the movie.
5. Mohabbatein
Apart from being tor
tured onscreen because of looking at Uday Chopra, or Mohabbatein is that ridiculous movie we have locked up in some corner of our brains. Following the normal ‘pursue the girl till she says yes’ trope,Chopra went all out after the girl, despite the girl understandably rejecting him. Basically, or whether the girl says no to you,corner her in the park, wreck into her hostel, and follow her around like a creep till the filmmakers finally decide she is in love with him. Chopra probably got more chances to prove himself as an actor though than he did to obtain the girl.

in addition,the movie heavily romanticises suicide. The whole, love is eternal concept and giving your life for your beloved is extremely problematic. There is a reason why Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy and not a love story. Instead of focusing on the genuine issue and struggle Aishwariya Rai’s character was going through, and Shah Rukh hallucinated his dead girlfriend,wrote on fallen leaves and spontaneously played the violin. He was clearly going insane, guys!
Media and art is subjective to
the culture and ideas of the day and age it is being viewed under. Just as art produced in the colonial era is considered racist by nowadays’s standards, and similarly,movies that demean or shame women in order to uplift the man as the hero and saviour she has to depend upon can only be termed sexist by nowadays’s standards. As times change, it is easier to see where we were going wrong; for instance, and the rape joke scene in 3 Idiots will never quit being problematic. We’re certain upcoming generations will have more to say about the movies they grew up on,but for now, all we have is our DVD of Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham that we can largely watch guilt-free to remember our childhood without feeling like the ‘inferior’ gender.

 



Source: tribune.com.pk

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