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SOUTH INDIAN FILMS UNSPOOL THEIR SUCCESS STORY

Can ‘Pushpa’, ‘RRR’, ‘KGF 2’ obliterate the South-Bollywood divide for good?

- By Sanjib Kumar Das Assistant Editor

“Pushpa, I hate tears …” Bollywood matinee idol of yesteryear­s late Rajesh Khanna’s famous words for his on-screen lady love, played by Sharmila Tagore, in the 1972 classic Amar Prem is as much a part of the Hindi film industry’s folklore as it is emblematic of an era when romance was king on either side of the Vindhyas — though, unfortunat­ely, the South-Bollywood divide in Indian filmdom was all too pronounced.

Romance, action, comedy, period flicks … they all were in vogue in both, the Hindi film industry, as typified by the term ‘Bollywood’, and the so-called ‘South Indian films’, as type-cast through nomenclatu­res such as ‘Kollywood’, ‘Tollywood’, ‘Mollywood’ etc. And it took 49 summers since Khanna’s ‘Pushpa’ for yet another Pushpa — from a whole new genre — to highlight a yearning for an unpreceden­ted obliterati­on of the North-South divide on India’s entertainm­ent topography.

Kannada ‘Rocking Star’ Yash (Naveen Kumar Gowda), the lead actor in the runaway pan-India hit KGF: Chapter 2 (2022), summed it up quite succinctly, saying: “If I make a film in Mumbai today, it’s no longer a Hindi film, it’s an Indian film.”

Bollywood, watch out — competitio­n is closer than you think!

Director Sukumar’s Telugu offering Pushpa: The Rise (2021), featuring superstar Allu Arjun in the lead, was released to a pan-India audience in December 2021. Till date, the film has grossed a whopping Rs3.65 billion (Dh17.46 million).

This was followed by another Telugu offering, RRR (2022), by legendary director S.S. Rajamouli and featuring an ensemble cast that included South heavyweigh­ts Ram Charan Teja and NTR Junior brushing shoulders with Bollywood stars Ajay Devgn and Alia Bhatt. The film went on to gross a mind-boggling Rs10 billion. Then came director Prashanth Neel’s Kannada film KGF: Chapter 2, starring yet another ensemble cast comprising Yash, Srinidhi Shetty and Prakash Raj from down South and biggies Raveena Tandon and Sanjay Dutt from Bollywood. The film is still in the theatres, having already earned Rs8 billion. In the coming days, it is expected to cross the box office collection­s of Aamir Khan-starrer Dangal, the second-highest Bollywood grosser ever. And as Tamil superstar Rajinikant­h would say, “Mind It!” – none of these recent blockbuste­rs were Hindi ‘remakes’ of South Indian super hits. They were all dubbed in multiple languages, includ

ing Hindi, and released and distribute­d simultaneo­usly all over India.

WHY #DEATHOFREM­AKES WAS TRENDING

It is not for nothing that #DeathOfRem­akes was recently trending on Twitter. There was a point of time, not too long ago, when commercial­ly successful films from the South of the Vindhyas were ‘remade’ in Hindi, with a re-packaging of the cast with popular Bollywood names.

The Hindi film industry is replete with such examples of rehashing of a hit ‘formula’. And then there was this tendency to rope in a very popular name from down South and project him in a supporting role in a Bollywood ‘remake’. In the process, quite ironically, the character who was supposed to play second-fiddle to the Bollywood lead ended up as the more endearing character, a more long-lasting imprint on the viewer’s consciousn­ess, than their Bollywood counterpar­ts.

Two examples that come straight to the mind are T. Rama Rao’s Andhaa Kaanoon (1983), where the inimitable Rajinikant­h matches vibes, frame for frame, with the towering on-screen persona of Amitabh Bachhan, and Saagar (1985), where Kamal Haasan steals many a march over Rishi Kapoor, the male lead.

In that sense, what we are seeing right now is something truly unpreceden­ted because all these films that have struck a gold mine in theatres pan-India, are dubbed Hindi versions of the original Telugu or Kannada offerings and not ‘remakes’.

YEARNING FOR DUBBED, BIGSCREEN ENTERTAINE­RS

The question that obviously arises here is, why now?

To understand this, let’s go back by about five years. The trend really started with the release of Rajamouli’s magnum opus Baahubali: The Beginning (2015) and Baahubali: The Conclusion (2017), that gave big-screen entertainm­ent a whole new dimension. These were films that presented a story from a never-never land that let one’s imaginatio­n run wild and see and savour life on every square inch of the 70mm silverscre­en perhaps like never before.

The ground for what we are seeing right now was prepared by Rajamouli’s Baahubali duology that really whet our appetite for more of the same brand of larger-than-life entertaine­rs that demanded to be presented and savoured on the big screen.

BREAKING THE SHACKLES OF THE PANDEMIC

Then came the pandemic and we all were forced to live our lives within the four walls of our homes. The home soon became an extension of our work space and the living room sofa and the television were soon transforme­d into ‘a window on the world’. Our ‘worlds’ became more and more constricte­d and tunnel-vision was more the norm than the exception. With that, there was this pent-up hunger to break free, to once again be back in the dark-room comforts and mysticism of the big-screen world. The hunger grew. The desire to return to normality grew.

THE STREAMING FACTOR

Streaming platforms played their role, too, in this quagmire of desolation and despondenc­e — holding out a ray of hope in the form of choice and alternativ­es at a time when ‘going out’ for a movie was a sure-fire invitation to mortal damage. Streaming allowed filmmakers to experiment with castingcou­p of sorts and with myriads of rather revolution­ary content.

One series that stands out in this regard is Family Man Season 2 (2021) in particular, where both the female leads, Samantha Ruth Prabhu and Priyamani, are establishe­d names from the South, who brush shoulders with the male lead, played by Manoj Bajpayee, a Bollywood star in his own right.

AMBUSHING THE HINDI FILM MARKET

In this scenario, easing of lockdowns and restrictio­ns saw a much-awaited opening of the floodgates. And in came a barrage of some extremely well-crafted, well-scripted, well-enacted big-screen offerings from down South that showed oodles of confidence, common sense and business acumen not to go the ‘remake’ way, but ambush the Hindi film market by straight away unleashing mega entertaine­rs on screens across India in their dubbed Hindi avatars. The pandemic and the proliferat­ion of streaming platforms had already sown the seeds for a craving for big-budget movies.

That is why the release of these bigscreen potboilers immediatel­y struck a chord with audiences across India, who were just looking for one good-enough excuse to step out of their homes and get hold of the new-found normality — any which way.

For these audiences, it didn’t really matter whether the film they paid for was hatched in Tollywood or Kollywood or Mollywood or Bollywood. All that mattered was some wholesome entertainm­ent presented in an easy-to-grasp format. In that sense, all these recent hits, whether it was Pushpa, RRR or KGF 2, had one thing in common: They all told a story that found a ready resonance with the man on the street and they were all honest attempts at presenting entertaine­rs with the soul of a rustic saga — shorn of predisposi­tions, shorn of any needless obsession with ‘form’ and ‘substance’.

The fact that there were no bigbudget Bollywood releases to match these southern offerings around the same time, further helped Pushpa, RRR and KGF 2 to prosper.

And yes, there seems to be just no room for tearjerker­s for the moment. Pushpa, we indeed hate tears!

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? A still from ‘Andhaa Kaanoon’.
A still from ‘Andhaa Kaanoon’.
 ?? ?? A still from ‘Saagar’.
A still from ‘Saagar’.
 ?? ?? A still from ‘KGF: Chapter 2’.
A still from ‘KGF: Chapter 2’.
 ?? ?? A still from ‘Baahubali’.
A still from ‘Baahubali’.
 ?? ?? A still from ‘Pushpa’.
A still from ‘Pushpa’.
 ?? ?? A still from ‘RRR’.
A still from ‘RRR’.

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