The Hindu (Mumbai)

GREEN HUMOUR

- Rohan Chakravart­y Ziya Us Salam ziya.salam@thehindu.co.in

Afew days before the release of Swatantra Veer Savarkar on March 22, actordirec­tor Randeep Hooda courted controvers­y, stating, “If [activist and politician Vinayak Damodar] Savarkar had his way, our country would have become independen­t 35 years earlier. It was because of Mahatma Gandhi that we got freedom later.”

The statement didn’t go unconteste­d. Gandhi’s greatgrand­son Tushar Gandhi said: “It is a classic case of fictionali­sation of history.” Noted historian Aditya Mukherjee chips in, “Savarkar is the fountainhe­ad of Hindutva ideology. A few years ago, they would not have dared to posit him against the Mahatma. A film like Savarkar, and Hooda’s statement, is an attempt to nibble at the stature of the Mahatma. By the way, three decades before Independen­ce, Mahatma Gandhi was not quite on the scene [Champaran Satyagraha was his first mass movement in 1917] and Savarkar was in jail.”

Hooda tried to course correct soon after, stating how he had come to respect Gandhi more after the film. But it couldn’t save Swatantra Veer Savarkar. It opened to 12% footfall in Delhi, prompting many to joke that Savarkar drew more from the British through his pension.

‘The maths isn’t working’

But Hooda’s film was never expected to be strong on facts or provide a comprehens­ive picture of the man whose legacy — as one of the pioneers of the Hindutva ideology — is much contested. It is part of an avalanche of

Hindi cinema facilitati­ng the spread of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s Hindutvadr­iven politics. Historical­s, biopics and political dramas are all skewed to seamlessly forward a communal political narrative.

A cursory look at the names of some of the films either released in the last few years or waiting in the wings and one understand­s they target the Left liberals, the Muslims, or the Congress, the three favoured recipients of animosity of Hindutva proponents.

The films, however, mostly aren’t faring well. For every successful The Kashmir Files (2022), there are half a dozen Bastar: The Naxal Story (2024). Noted documentar­y filmmaker Rakesh Sharma, whose featurelen­gth film Final Solution was based on the Gujarat pogrom of 2002, says, “The maths isn’t working out. Those who thought their movies will mint money if even 20% of the 22 crore BJP voters buy tickets are disappoint­ed.”

Main Atal Hoon, a biopic on the life of former prime minister and BJP leader Atal Behari Vajpayee, with popular actor Pankaj Tripathi in the lead, released to a lukewarm response this January. A month later, Yami Gautam’s Article 370, based on the abrogation of Article 370 (which gave special status to Jammu and Kashmir) in 2019 by the Modi government fared better, collecting ₹75 crore in the first month of its release. Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself gave the film a fillip, stating at a rally in Jammu, “[The the coprod for those w They are in The Kashmi 72 Hoorain industry w recently. W those who terrorism a collected ju day.

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