Business Standard

Acting head

- ADITI PHADNIS

If you don’t watch movies in Punjabi, you can be forgiven for not knowing who Deep Sidhu is. Actually, you might not have heard of him even if you do watch Punjabi movies. As a film actor, Sidhu is not yet a household name, though he is working hard to get there. He is the individual who planted the “Nishan Sahib” or the Sikh religious flag atop the Red Fort on January 26. In his Facebook post, Sidhu claimed credit for climbing on top of the 350-year old monument to fly the flag, clarifying that the national flag was neither insulted nor taken down. "To symbolical­ly register our protest against the new farm legislatio­n, we put up Nishan Sahib and a farmer flag and also raised the slogan of Kisan Mazdoor Ekta,” he said.

With this one act, Sidhu may have become the face of the Punjab farmer-protestors as the movement descended into chaos with attempts to take out a parallel tractor parade on Republic Day. The move might do Sidhu’s wobbly career trajectory as an actor some good, though most participat­ing farmers are not quite sure exactly who he is.

If you’re from Punjab — whether you’re a bureaucrat, politician, soldier, entreprene­ur or actor — you need to have a view on the farmers’ protest against the three central laws. It is hard to sit on the fence — as actor and former BJP Lok Sabha MP from Bikaner, Dharmendra, discovered after posting tweets beseeching the central government to review the laws — which he deleted in double-quick time.

His son Sunny, who represents the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha seat on behalf of the BJP, is yet to indicate his views on the protest movement. Sidhu may have developed political ambitions after Sunny Deol’s victory in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections: he was part of the group that worked for Deol. Deol has since dissociate­d himself from Sidhu.

Sidhu was the winner of the Kingfisher Model Hunt that began his career in glamour. He walked the ramp for designers such as Hemant Trivedi and Rohit Gandhi. After this, he studied law and worked with several firms such as Sahara India Pariwar and Balaji Telefilms. He also opened his own law firm, Lex Legal, which handled clients such as Vijayta Films, Red Chillies, PVR Pictures, Colours and Sony Pictures.

But his real passion was acting and his debut film was Ramta Jogi (2015), produced by Dharmendra. A moderate- ly successful Punjabi movie, Jora 10 Numbaria, followed.

This chronicles the journey of a boy who grows up to become the dreaded gangster, Jora (Sidhu).

Dharmendra also starred in the movie, which was released in 2017 and is an adaptation of Gangs of Wasseypur. The villains in the movie are both politician­s and corrupt police officers. The highlight dialogue is Dharmendra (Jagga), telling Jora, “Gunde te guerelle wich bada fark honda hai” (there a big difference between a gangster and a guerilla).

That movie was successful enough to merit some discussion about a sequel, which is reportedly in the works. But not much has been heard of Sidhu after that in the Punjabi movie world. Or in the universe of politics.

Till January 26.

The Punjab film industry is not like the Tamil or Telugu film industry where actors are politician­s and politician­s are actors. Shailesh Kapoor, media analyst and CEO and founder of Ormax Media, a production house, says the national studios, Indian and foreign, like Disney, Fox or even Yash Raj films have so far not invested in Punjabi movies that have developed through home-grown labels, financed and produced sometimes by actors themselves or by small local financiers. Punjabi films reported a box office collection of around ~250 crore in 2019, about 2 per cent of the overall India box office collection­s. That said, he says, the Punjabi film industry is growing at a steady 10 to 15 per cent annually. Kapoor says what works for Punjabi movies is music: music stars are usually film stars as well.

But that is not to say films with politics as the theme have not been a success. In 2014, Punjab:1984, the tale of a mother’s search for her son during the insurgency, did phenomenal­ly well. A box office hit was the 2014 release Chaar Sahebzaade, produced by Eros Internatio­nal and Baweja Films, which is thought to have grossed ~70 crore. A Deloitte report from 2017 says the growth in Punjabi films is not only because of Over The Top and digital delivery. Punjab is one of the states where multiplexe­s are increasing: the number of multiplexe­s in Punjab has grown from four in 2007 to 36 in 2016 with 99 multiplexe­s under constructi­on.

With all this, clearly, Sidhu sees a future for himself in politics as well as cinema. While farmers and politician­s might be wagging their finger at him now, his face is the one recognisab­le image from the farmer protest. Whoever said publicity doesn’t do you any good?

Sidhu was the winner of the Kingfisher Model Hunt that began his career in glamour. Later, he studied law and opened his own law firm

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