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It’s time India recasts its Oscar game plan

Despite its prolific output and creative talent, Indian cinema hasn’t been a hit at the most prestigiou­s annual film award ceremony

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s film submission­s get underway for Oscars 2018, India is caught in a customary hand-wringing on why its movies are never a hit at the Big Daddy of all movie awards. Despite an abundance of cinematic talent, and a prolific output of more than 1,000 films per year by Bollywood alone (almost double the number of its American counterpar­t, Hollywood) and not counting regional fare, an Indian film has never bagged an Oscar.

This collective simmering discontent usually bubbles to the surface around this time of the year when directors/ filmmakers/actors pontificat­e on what can be done to improve India’s chances on the big stage. In a recent article, veteran actor/director Amol Palekar, whose film Paheli was the official Indian entry to the Oscars in 2006, rued the country’s flawed selection process that kept him completely out of the process of how his film was selected. Palekar urged that if India wants to be in the reckoning for Oscars, it should start playing the game profession­ally.

Underwhelm­ing as it is, out of a nation of 1.3 billion, no film — and only five Indians, Satyajit Ray, Bhanu Athaiya, Russell Pookutty, A.R. Rahman and Gulzar — have won the Oscar so far. Ray received an honorary award in 1992, while the others were part of movies made by foreign production houses.

Despite sceptics who deny the Oscars’ relevance, accusing its selectors of bias towards ‘white’ cinema and western actors over black or Asian ones, there’s no denying the awards’ enormous symbolic and pragmatic significan­ce. With more than 30 million viewers, a redoubtabl­e jury, and a putative historic legacy, the Oscars are indeed the greatest movie show on Earth. The coveted prize is now universall­y acknowledg­ed as a symbol of achievemen­t in global entertainm­ent. Conferred for the first time in 1929, it is also the oldest film prize in history.

Yet, Indian filmmakers remain impervious to what works at the Oscars. Worse is the controvers­ial choice of selectors each year and the politics and infighting among them. As some critics have pointed out, the Indian selection committee — comprising around a dozen eminent members from the film world — depends overwhelmi­ngly on the commercial success of a movie, while ignoring other critical benchmarks. Vested interests further undermine the chances of good films while the below-par ones get a ticket to ride at the taxpayers’ expense.

One of the most respected voices in global cinema, Derek Malcolm, had once declared that “Indians choose the most terrible scripts”. Indeed, the biggest problem confrontin­g Indian cinema today (especially Bollywood) is the lack of originalit­y and a weak storyline. What passes muster instead is peddling of stereotype­s, formulaic dialogues and utter disregard for western tastes.

It’s not that India doesn’t make good movies. It does. But for every one luminous Dangal, there are 10 puerile Dabanggs. Masaan, The Lunchbox, Gangs of Wasseypur, Aadukalam (Tamil) and Drishyam (Malayalam) are all good films. But what do we do instead? We ignore these and pack off mediocrity — such as Eklavya — The Royal Guard, which even the Indian audience had rejected — to the Oscars!

Compelling storytelli­ng

In the year 2012, India sent Barfi! as its official submission. Never mind if its numerous scenes were allegedly plagiarise­d by its maker Anurag Basu from several internatio­nal classics! Ironically, Barfi! was chosen over other better (and original) films like Kahaani, Paan Singh Tomar and Dirty Picture.

Most illustrati­ve is the example of Danny Boyle, director of the Oscar-anointed Slumdog Millionair­e, who swept the coveted academy awards despite being a foreigner, and working on a shoestring budget with fresh faces sheared of ‘star power’. How did he pull this off? Simply by offering an immersive experience of India with his flesh-and-blood characters and compelling storytelli­ng that transporte­d viewers (and the jury of course) to Indian slums. Similarly, Life of Pi and Gandhi — both Indian in their theme and made by non-Indians — struck it rich at the Oscars for their powerful content.

With globalisat­ion, Indian filmmakers and selectors need to be in tune with western tastes. Even smaller nations like Taiwan or Japan and Iran are making their mark simply by embracing a more global filmmaking approach. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon not only bagged an Oscar, but it was liked by millions worldwide, propelling its Taiwanese director Ang Lee’s career into the stratosphe­re in Hollywood.

Given India’s enormous creative talent and prolific cinematic output, its time filmmakers and selectors offered well-crafted films, with inclusive representa­tion from regional cinema as well, to the Oscar jury. And then, who knows, maybe even a Salman Khan starrer may bag a glitzy golden lady or two?

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