China Daily

Secret Superstar can provide an insight

- Siva Sankar Second Thoughts Contact the writer at siva@chinadaily.com.cn

Sunday afternoon, my Indian pals and I watched Hindi movie Secret Superstar at a Beijing cinema that was jampacked — almost 90 percent of the audience was Chinese. A straw poll on my way out confirmed my observatio­n: they enjoyed, and were moved by, the inspiratio­nal, feel-good, if a bit melodramat­ic, film.

One of the reasons is, of course, the growing popularity of Indian matinee idol Aamir Khan in China. The actorfilmm­aker not long ago created waves with his 3 Idiots and

Dangal. So much so that when President Xi Jinping met Narendra Modi in June last year, he told the Indian prime minister he watched

Dangal and enjoyed it. Khan stars in a cameo in

Secret Superstar that highlights the dreams, aspira- tions, thought processes and value systems of digital-age, social media-loving urban teenagers.

The movie seamlessly weaves in some universal themes that resonate with Asian audiences: gender equality, female empowermen­t, the fight against domestic violence, the need to encourage youngsters to dream and think big and boldly endeavor to make their dreams come true.

Secret Superstar could well hit the Chinese box-office jackpot during the upcoming Spring Festival holiday. So it was with some surprise that I learned the film didn’t fare too well in India when it released a few months back.

Why? From what I gather, the reasons could be that Khan is in a cameo rather than the lead role and ordinary marketing. Yet, the film appears to be gaining from strong word-of-mouth in China, going by vigorous online discussion­s on Chinese social media.

Is there more going on here? Yes, I’d theorize. The different audience reception to Secret Superstar in India and China may be hiding some clues to why the two most populous nations in the world are achieving qualitativ­ely different outcomes with their efforts for economic transforma­tion.

In many ways, the Indian and Chinese civilizati­ons, and the modern nation states that sprung from them, have a lot in common, large population­s being the most obvious aspect.

Reliance on agricultur­e, until recently, is another. Family values, community as the bedrock of local society and an emerging economy status are other common features.

Around 30 years back, both China and India embarked on economic reforms to shake off their Third World tags. Today, in what looks like a 25-lap 10,000-meter Olympic race, China clearly leads by several laps.

Is it that the Chinese are less distracted, have sharper focus and don’t crave sugar and spice in everything they consume, ponder or do? Probably yes.

And so: Never mind if an entertainm­ent product has less of their favorite star, and no song-and-dance numbers and stunts, Chinese audiences will still lap it up if it has quality and meaning, no matter its origin.

Whereas even though most of their 21st-century lifestyle is dominated by Chinese technology and Chinese brands, most Indians tend to get apoplectic and jingoistic over bilateral affairs at the drop of a hat.

Another theory: success in China could give Secret Superstar a second chance in India.

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