The Asian Age

Kaala and Rajini’s future

-

Rajinikant­h’s Kaala had a pan- India release, including in a few Bengaluru multiplexe­s despite the protests by some fringe proKannada groups against the filmstar’s stand on Cauvery. The sense of anticipati­on was more as it’s his first movie after he declared his interest in joining politics. At first glance, it may appear Kaala will do more to give an impetus to Rajini’s 43- year- old movie career than his fledgling links with politics. But there’s a deeper meaning to be seen in his fight for the underprivi­leged of Dharavi. The battle of the downtrodde­n is neverendin­g as the film’s unusual climax may show, and Rajini’s part in it may even help him make up for the controvers­ial comment he made on the Sterlite stir in Tamil Nadu. He had lumped committed protesters with certain anti- social elements who may have hijacked the protest while lacing it with violence, leading to police firing that killed 13 people.

Rajini’s Kaala supports the people’s right to protest, even violently, in the eternal fight for the right to land. This could be extended to mean the environmen­t too, which is the crux of many of Tamil Nadu’s protests against seemingly progressiv­e projects. Rajini may have expressed the fear that the state could turn a graveyard if protests against anything and everything industrial continued. In the film, he’s the hero of the slum championin­g people’s causes. In Tamil Nadu, a state famous for politics led by movie stars and personalit­ies, it’s always been hard to separate the real from the reel. Kaala can thus effectivel­y resurrect Rajini from small blots in his early political record.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India