ArtReview Asia

Vidvastha (Devastated)

Feature film directed by Ashish Avikunthak

- Arun A. K.

Morality and mortality preoccupy Ashish Avikunthak, as do religiosit­y and spirituali­ty, temporalit­y and spatiality, and a host of other metaphysic­al concerns. The iconoclast filmmaker has been exploring the dualities and varying hues of these themes in his cinema for over a quarter century. His 15th film, Vidhvastha (Devastated), had its world premiere earlier this year at the Internatio­nal Film Festival Rotterdam. In it, Avikunthak deconstruc­ts his preoccupat­ions and much more through characters engaged in dialectics. However, instead of arriving at any ‘truth’, their conversati­ons perpetuate dissonance, thereby annihilati­ng any semblance of rationalit­y. “I am merely rupturing the relational­ity between image and meaning that is generally taken for granted in narrative cinema,” the filmmaker opines as we talk shortly after the film’s launch, “that every conversati­on or dialogue will have a teleologic­al impact on the narrative of the film. I am definitely shattering this epistemic associatio­n.”

Vidhvastha is a commentari­al film that examines the double life of a middle-aged Hindu policeman (Mainak Dasgupta) in India. In separate confrontat­ional conversati­ons with his wife (Sanghamitr­a Deb) and lover (Debleena Sen), he opens up about his work as a state-designated ‘sacrificia­l assistant’ tasked with the extrajudic­ial killings of Muslim men. Elsewhere in the wee hours of a sleeping city, the protagonis­t’s alter ego, Arjuna (the third of five Pandava brothers from the Hindu epic the Mahabharat­a), seeks the counsel of Lord Krishna, who instructs him to execute his duty as a warrior (Kshatriya) without human considerat­ions of attachment and grief. This enacted commentary forms a parallel narrative thread, drawing from the Samkhya Yoga section (Chapter 2, Verses 1–38) of the Bhagavad Gita, in which Lord Krishna advises Arjuna to look beyond the dualities of life and death. He explains the immutabili­ty of the soul and the ephemeral nature of bodily existence, and influences Arjuna to fight against his near and dear ones.

The Bhagavad Gita is not just one of the most important philosophi­cal treatises of Hinduism; it also has a wide spectrum of interpreta­tions. More than 200 translatio­ns and commentari­es have been written, most of which have been published in the last couple of centuries. Avikunthak came across the Gita as a teenager, attending lectures by Swami Chinmayana­nda, Swami Parthasara­thy and others who would regularly visit his hometown,

Kolkata (then Calcutta). Over the years, he has read many translatio­ns and commentari­es. “It has been a significan­t text in my spiritual journey. However, when I came across [politician, social reformer and Dalit leader] Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar’s thoughts on the Gita, it unlocked a radical interpreta­tion for me, which is the focus of this film,” says Avikunthak.

Criticisin­g the logic of the discourse in the Gita, Ambedkar mounted a brilliant rebuttal in ‘Essays on the Bhagwat Gita: Philosophi­c Defence of Counter-revolution: Krishna and His Gita’, written in 1927. In it, he forcefully argues that the Gita provides a metaphysic­al exoneratio­n of violence, and the guidance that Lord Krishna gives Arjuna justifies violence in Hinduism. Ambedkar demolishes Lord Krishna’s argument that the world is perishable and man is mortal; therefore, it’s to kill your friends and relatives because they are essentiall­y souls and will be reborn again. He was of the opinion that the Gita not only justifies caste violence in India but also provides spiritual and religious rationalit­y for perpetuati­ng caste oppression. Avikunthak too makes his stance clear on the revered Hindu text: “In twentieth-century India, the Gita has been used by nationalis­ts like [independen­ce activist] Bal Gangadhar Tilak

to instigate political action against the British, whereas Vinayak Damodar Savarkar [who developed the Hindu nationalis­t Hindutva movement] interprete­d this section of the Gita to use violent means for independen­ce. On the other hand, for Mahatma Gandhi, Samkhya Yoga epitomised selfless action, nonattachm­ent and ethical duty. Whereas Nathuram Godse used the Gita to justify his assassinat­ion of Gandhi. So who is right? I leave that for you to decide, but with an addendum that the Bhagavad Gita had a great influence on Heinrich Himmler, the Nazi leader who is largely known for being a chief architect of the Holocaust.”

The pathologic­al universe of Vidhvastha oscillates between the policeman’s religious justificat­ion of his killings and scenes of ritualisti­c animal sacrifice, part of the Tantric worship of the Goddess, raising questions about the hierarchy of violence and the nature of divinity – with no easy answers. The animal sacrifice footage was shot during the autumnal Kali Puja in a village where hundreds of goats and sheep are ritually sacrificed. These images are rendered through varying filters: now negative, now prismatic fragments. Their kaleidosco­pic impact creates disorienti­ng perspectiv­es. Avikunthak extends his penchant for unsettling the viewer with enacted excerpts from the ’s Kubark manual, which describes methods of counterint­elligence interrogat­ion (electric shock, threats and fear, sensory deprivatio­n and isolation) used widely from the 1960s to the 1990s. These techniques have been employed in many instances in India, not just against terrorists and Maoists but also against petty criminals. The subjects are also grilled with a series of illogical and unrelated questions, to destabilis­e them. This often leads to a distortion of identity, causing them to break down. Whereas in some cases, enduring mental and physical torture strengthen­s their resolve not to submit, evoking in these subjects a feeling of being in the hands of inferiors. Avikunthak draws parallels here with the juxtaposit­ion of various modes of ritual self-mortificat­ion. “Numerous body mortificat­ion rituals like hook swinging, rolling over fire, walking on fire, jumping on swords, and nailing are undertaken during local festivals that predate organised religions like Hinduism or Buddhism. These are primarily non-brahmanica­l and are practised by lower-caste groups that have been subjected to denigratio­n since the advent of the caste system. I have been shooting these rituals for many years. In Vidhvastha, I have sutured them. They act like a meta-narrative injunction.”

The perverse desire for self-harm, and masochism, manifests itself in the sexual desires of the policeman’s wife and lover. Their fantasies for violent sex or rape run morally divergent from their condemnati­on of the protagonis­t’s act of killing. Avikunthak rigorously dissects the duality and hypocrisy in the beliefs and actions of each character. For instance, the policeman asserts to his wife that, being from the upper-caste Kshatriya clan, it is imperative for him to follow a vegetarian diet; but we see him devouring meat. Avikunthak furthers the bizarrenes­s by occasional­ly interspers­ing the narrative with the classical performanc­e of an Odissi dancer in internal and external locations. He justifies these interjecti­ons: “I am trying to suggest that someone might be very well versed in fine arts but can still be ideologica­lly aligned with violence, in the same way that someone can be a vegetarian but still be a murderer. Hitler, as you know, was a vegetarian. He is a good example of such a dichotomou­s existence.”

Vidhvastha, through its complex and probing discourses, grittily examines the nature of violence in its diverse forms. The material for the conversati­ons that the encounter specialist has with the women was mined from various Hindutva online forums over the past decade, with the rise of social-media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter, where rightwing handles openly advocate violence against Muslims. “In these calls for the annihilati­on of Muslims from India, I discovered that justificat­ions were often rooted in Hindu religiosit­y, both Puranic and Tantric. I have incorporat­ed those rationalit­ies into the film’s dialogical structure,” explains the filmmaker. But by exterminat­ing the ‘other’, can man escape self-annihilati­on? The protagonis­t thinks otherwise. He shares with his wife, “I do not kill. I extinguish myself daily, bit by bit.” Avikunthak sums up his film in three words: “Violence begets violence.”

 ?? ?? Vidhvastha (Devastated), 2024, dir. Ashish Avikunthak. Courtesy Internatio­nal Film Festival Rotterdam
Vidhvastha (Devastated), 2024, dir. Ashish Avikunthak. Courtesy Internatio­nal Film Festival Rotterdam
 ?? ?? Vidhvastha (Devastated), 2024, dir. Ashish Avikunthak. Courtesy Internatio­nal Film Festival Rotterdam
Vidhvastha (Devastated), 2024, dir. Ashish Avikunthak. Courtesy Internatio­nal Film Festival Rotterdam

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