By Saswat Pattanayak
Well, some news is actually good!
Like the news that Munna Bhai is back with his friend
Circuit to the silver screen! In an unflinching
tribute to his beloved late father Sunil Dutt, who is
much missed in this brilliant sequel, Sanjay Dutt has
made more than acting come alive. Writer-Director
Raju Hirani has once again excelled in popularizing
the conventionally absurd, eulogizing the most
susceptible, and sketching raw feelings with innate
deftness of a master filmmaker.
None of the Mumbai films released this year made much
sense this year, with the sole exception of Madhur
Bhandarkar’s Corporate, which dealt with feminism’s
oppositional intersection with capitalism in a
profoundly relevant manner. And in fact, all the rest
of the flicks this year, were disastrous experience
for someone who has grown up admiring Raj Kapoor and
Guru Dutt when it comes to Hindi film industry. In
fact, the much touted movies like Kunaal Kohli’s
Fanaa, and Karan Johar’s Kabhi Alvida Na Kehna were
so pathetic that they deserve entry into the
Bollywood Hall of Shame.
Before rushing to
ImaginAsian
theater, I had a sneak review of Lage Raho Munna
Bhai, which did not say much (actually
Jason Buchanan got the film’s plot wrong).
Moreover, the film really caught me off guard with
introduction of Mahatma Gandhi, considering that with
the exception of Kamal Hassan’s
Hey Ram
(2000), none of the recent movies have treated the
Mahatma in a worthy light. In fact, the current crops
of Hindi film industry directors have developed some
sort of an obsession with making
films ridiculing Gandhi and his ideals. So when
Munna Bhai got Gandhi as his conscience keeper, it
was alarming in the beginning. Indeed, in a scene,
Munna came to practice “Gandhi-giri”, and rather
displayed some of his own brand of “Dadagiri” to get
things done. But as the movie proceeded, there were
more complex crossroads between theory and practice
that easily left anyone with a deep impression for
appreciation.
Just like its predecessor,
Munna Bhai MBBS,
which radically destroyed the halo around the unholy
medicos, this film while actually glorifying the
academia, also does its bit to sensitize the fact
that no knowledge is good, if it’s not shared. In a
bitter way, it denounces the academic elitism of the
ivory towers, and the gross arrogance characteristics
of the ‘educated’ class, which apathetically
witnesses powerful Godmen get away with superstitious
spells, and takes active part in promoting such
belief structures. It goes even to an extent of
patronizing the Marxist analysis of history which is
based on mass, not iconic struggles. When an elite
history professor flaunts his knowledge on Gandhi,
Circuit offers him a slice of his knowledge: history
of the misguided youths.
Skillfully done, even the most ardent Gandhian would
derive immense pleasure from the absolutely riveting
portrayal of the Mahatma. On the flip, devoid of the
Kamal Hassan sophistication in filming the Gandhian
methods,
Lage Raho Munna Bhai may have ended
up simplifying Gandhi albeit a bit too much. But
looking from the perspective of someone who equates
October 2 with a ‘dry day’, the lessons from history
is very well learnt with the vulnerabilities and
humility intact.
Sunil Dutt legacy:
Lage Raho Munna Bhai has unforgettable moments of
Sanjay becoming a radio personality first, to woo his
love, then to spread Gandhian messages, and finally
to win back his love. One can only recall that Sunil
Dutt indeed began his career as a famous radio
personality on Radio Ceylon hosting an extremely
popular “Lipton Ki Mehfil” in early 1950’s.
Beyond the obvious, Sunil Dutt would have continued
to be proud of his son Sanjay, who has been in the
past variously accused in aiding of terrorism cases.
Like a statesman of high caliber and integrity that
his father was while contesting polls from Mumbai,
Sanjay Dutt has always silenced his apprehensive
critics through his commitment to social justice
instead. Sanjay’s unwavering allegiance to his
father’s legacy can be traced in movies of his later
career. A little known film “Tathastu” made this year
starring Sanjay Dutt also reflects the father-son
relationship at most beautiful junctions.
Sunil Dutt and his wife Nargis (Fatima Rashid) were
widely known as brilliant leading stars for some of
the finest Hindi cinemas of yesteryears. But the part
that they have most inspired Sanjay with were their
commitment to peoples’ causes. Nargis whose
progressive works were well known was nominated to
Rajya Sabha by Indira Gandhi herself. And Sunil Dutt,
through his commitment to carry on the tasks that
Nargis had left behind, joined politics in later part
of his career. Contesting from Congress ticket would
not have come easy for someone in Mumbai, the
stronghold of right-wing Hindu fanatic bosses who
continue to have a hold over film industry
operatives. And yet, Dutt through sheer dedication in
his various involvements at grassroots levels, won
from his constituency for five terms and passed away
while being at office. Not as a successful
politician, rather as a conscientious objector and a
secular progressive activist, Sunil Dutt liked to
live his life.
Whereas right-wing hawkish Indian political
leadership celebrated India’s nuclear state status,
it should be remembered that Sunil Dutt went from
Nagasaki to Hiroshima in order to condemn nuclear
weapons. During Punjab crisis, despite anti-Congress
wave, he walked 2000 km with his daughter and others
from Mumbai to Amritsar in order to plead for peace.
At a time when the country was enamored with being
declared a superpower (a kind of ‘dadagiri’ if you
may) in the making, Dutt traveled through the entire
South Asian region in a peace expedition called
“Hands Across the Borders”. More importantly, when
Babri Masjid was demolished by the Hindu brigade in
1993, Sunil Dutt resigned from his seat as a Member
of Parliament, in an exemplary gesture against the
communal politicians. Such was the legacy of Sunil
Dutt who led his entire political life fighting the
communal elements spreading hate and religious
intolerance. A peacenik, secularist, progressive
politician, and a relentless campaigner in care for
cancer and HIV/AIDS affected.
A lesson worth reliving:
Amidst the much mushroomed Bollywood
movie scene that proclaims individualistic love,
worse, individualistic infidelities, (of the Karan
Johar and Mahesh Bhatt variety),
misplaced history lessons of free market youths (like
Rang De Basanti, hastily made films about Bhagat
Singh), of inundated Diasporic cinema of regressive
value (Deepa Mehta range of
Fire and
Water), of sheer reactionary brand of
patriotism (
Fanaa,
Sarfarosh,
Border etc), one has to pause awhile and
watch
Lage Raho Munna Bhai for whatever it
has to offer. Its not just principles of
Ahimsa and
Satyagraha that
rejuvenates the undoubtedly best film of this year,
but also the fact that anyone in the world can be a
Mahatma, and indeed many already are Mahatmas through
their committed lives for the sake of others. These
Mahatmas are ordinary people like Munna and Circuit
who even reform themselves to incorporate Gandhi’s
talisman which behooves on us to take steps for the
poorest of the poor and to behave appropriately to
bring happiness in lives of people we otherwise
consider ‘lower’ than us.
For a generation of Indians who take fancy in
opposing reservation policies for the oppressed class
of people, for those youths who take great pride in
their ‘superior’ religions and ‘higher’ castes; for
those youths who take pride in their ‘high culture’
sophistication in pursuing ‘cleaner’ high society
life, those who gloat in their higher ‘merit’
academic lifestyles, and for those arrogant and
innocent and cool and the chic,
Lage Raho Munna
Bhai will probably provide the greatest lesson
of life. This film is the quintessence of the Marx
and the Mahatma.
A must-see. A must-felt movie.
Tags: Saswat, Film, Bollywood, India, History, Colonialism