A song from a
recent movie goes like this ‘Mere photo
ko seene se yaar chipkale saiyan fevicol se.’ It further adds lines like ‘pata le saiyan miss call se’. The song
has become a rage from nightclubs to marriages. The lyrics are creative you
have to agree but it has portrayed women as objects. The item numbers still cater
to the liking of males with a song-dance sequence showing a woman being stalked
and wooed by a bunch of men in a playful manner. For long, women have been
described as objects or equivalent to it in various films particularly those falling
in the category of popular entertainment. It implies a very orthodox, rigid and
traditional understanding of women as wild, devious as needing to be
controlled. Men make voices for uplift of women but once in a movie theatre
they start whistling at Kareena Kapoor dressed in skimpy clothes singing ‘Main to tanduri murgi hoon yaar gatkale saiyan alcohol se.’
There is very little doubt that Bollywood has shown women in
poor light. Be it with raunchy item numbers or double meaning dialogues or semi
nude posters outside theatres. There have been some women centric movies
displaying the atrocities faced by women but that sort of movies have made rare
appearances. Even during 70’s and 80’s bollywood was deeply infected with
cultural stereotypes with men being prime producers and consumers, the
objectification of women predominated the cinema. But the situation today is a
labyrinth to me with the two recent popular item numbers, Munni Badnam Hui and Sheila
Ki Jawani were both choreographed by a woman. Honey Singh has left no stone
unturned to display women as objects of sexual desire. His songs are utterly
noxious.
The films and media are a mirror of the society and if
children grow up dancing to the songs like fevicol
se then society is to be blamed for allowing such vulgarity to creep in. Films
are a commercial activity and in a bid to generate more revenues the movies
tend to be low on moral grounds. Young
parents are taking their little girls to coach and learn item numbers from
Bollywood films. They are then made to perform at family wedding ‘sangeet’ functions. Another
reason for such commoditization of women is the deeply ingrained theory of a
submissive female to a dominating male borrowed from ‘Ramayana’. Voyeuristic
camera angles and extreme show of sensuality have not helped the matters
either. Also, society as a whole has failed to distinguish between what is
acceptable and what is not.
If the cinema portrays women as strong natured and fearless
then this would gradually kick start the process of changing the image of the
fairer sex in the society. The actresses, producers, choreographers, directors
and everyone has a role to play.
But it can also be argued that whatever is displayed on
screen present only a partial picture and many times the movies have also been
talking about peace and communal harmony but still the problem remains.
Filmmaker, Sudhir Mishra is of the view that the nation does not follow
whatever is preached by Bollywood. Some of the actions which are acceptable in
movies are considered as obscene in real life so it could be like cinema is not
taken that seriously. And for the people who are campaigning for a Bollywood
without any misogyny then what about the violence and regressive remarks which
make their way through newspapers and websites?
In the end, it’s the mindset and the intent that matters in a country where truth is stranger than fiction.
In the end, it’s the mindset and the intent that matters in a country where truth is stranger than fiction.
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