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September 22, 1997 |
Farzana Versey
There cannot be 'stock' reality
When we seek to answer these questions, we make the mistake of classifying it as a debate: art versus commercial cinema, good versus bad. When the fact is that realism cannot be categorised and, for it to succeed in films, it can only be in its capacity as a prop or an unobtrusive backdrop. A facsimile of authenticity is not possible, for all cinema verité comes to us through the camera's eye, which acts as its own filter. As for the much-touted objectivity of parallel cinema, it is a myth or an objective, nothing else. No cinema is more subjective than this one. It is here that the filmmaker tries to express his political and ideological stand.
Has the other cinema been able to shake off its own obsession with star billing? It would be foolish to presume that a Shabana Azmi or an Om Puri or a Robert de Niro or Al Pacino draw crowds because they depict the common man in their films. They do so because they have acquired some glamour, having reached the audience, ironically, through the much-maligned commercial cinema. And offbeat cinema is not willing to let go of this star pull.
If the purpose of serious cinema is to raise the standards of the masses to make them see things in a larger perspective, then it has not succeeded. Simply because it has not tried. There has been an exceedingly superior attitude towards the very masses who have given it grist for its mill. People about whom the film is rarely get to see it. If the argument is that the idea is not to change the sufferers, then no adequate attempt is made to reach the victimisers either.
No one goes out of his way to be anti-realist. Even a run-if-the-mill film deals with an intelligible reality, though it may not be intelligent. There cannot be a stock reality. |
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