BOLLY WOOD BEFORE AND TODAY
(Programme of the 25th Festival of the 3 Continents,
November 2003)
Bollywood, Bollywood, Bollywood... Over the last ten
years, the term has been widely and excessively used. What is it all
about? Is this a publicity stunt aimed at selling a film genre or a
quality label or anything else?
People who have been closely interested in Indian cinema
for a long time knew straightaway that Bollywood was nothing more than
a new brand for big studio-made popular Indian films relying on the
star system.
This year's Bollywood section in our festival essentially
aims at reasserting that the greatest popular Indian films were mostly
made before the appearance of the Bollywood "label" and that the golden
age of these great entertaining films was the Fifties.
The directors-authors in their own right-of these films
were Raj Kapoor, Guru Dutt, Mehboob Khan, Kamal Amrohi, Karimuddin Asif.
Their films remain milestones in the history of cinema and will not
be overshadowed by the poorer production from today's film-makers.
Watching four versions of Devdas (two from 1935 and
two remakes made in 1955 and 2002) will help check (and perhaps decide)
whether Bollywood is nothing else than contemporary wrapping for a content
which cannot compete with films such as Mehboob Khan's Mother India
(1957) or Karimuddin Asif's Mughal-e-Azam (1960) which are matchless,
and will remain so for many years.
Our Nantes audience will have the opportunity to see
such films very rarely seen in France and to appreciate their high artistic
quality. Alain Jalladeau
Alain Jalladeau
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