The Guardian (USA)

War film Shershaah steals show as Bollywood’s Oscars return

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War movie Shershaah marched off with Best Picture and Best Director as Bollywood’s Oscars returned for the first time since the pandemic began with an all-singing, all-dancing awards ceremony in Abu Dhabi on Saturday.

Shershaah, depicting Indian war hero Vikram Batra, who was killed in the 1999 Kargil conflict with Pakistan, had been tipped to dominate after receiving 12 nods for the first Internatio­nal Indian Film Academy Awards since 2019.

“I would like to thank the family of Vikram Batra for helping me make this movie,” director Vishnuvard­han told the crowd at the end of the energetic, five-hour gala in the United Arab Emirates capital.

Indian A-listers packed the ceremony, which featured a belly-dancing number during the lavishly choreograp­hed stage show. Bollywood, the Hindi-language film industry known for its strong musical tradition, is the world’s most prolific producer of movies.

Best leading male went to Vicky Kaushal for Sardar Udham, a drama depicting an Indian revolution­ary’s revenge on the British officer behind the 1919 Amritsar massacre.

And Kriti Sanon won best female lead for Mimi, a comedy-drama that tackles the thriving surrogacy industry and attitudes towards single mothers. Sai Tamhankar won best supporting female for the same film.

But cricket movie 83, which depicts India’s seminal 1983 World Cup triumph and received nine nomination­s, missed out on the major prizes.

The IIFA awards follow a torrid period when India and its film industry were sent reeling by Covid-19, which shuttered cinemas and triggered a rush to streaming services.

Host Salman Khan, one of Bollywood’s heavyweigh­ts, opened proceeding­s by riding into the auditorium on a motorbike, a gold IIFA trophy perched on the handlebars.

“We saw that in the last two years the world closed down. Many of us lost our loved ones. Many lost their jobs as well. We faced many difficulti­es. All of us together overcame the difficulty,” he told the packed venue.

“When the world slowly opened, cinema halls were the last to open. But it got filled up first. You saved the film industry and everyone who worked in the industry,” said Khan.

Tiger Shroff, son of 1980s superstar

Jacky Shroff and one of the new breed of actors, ripped off his jacket to perform the opening number barecheste­d, in shades and sparkly trousers.

Outside, the green carpet – switched from red in 2007 to support climate awareness – bore glamorous stars such as Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Urvashi Rautela, along with Emirati royalty such as sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan, the minister of state for tolerance.

A group of nominees including AR Rahman, B. Praak, Jaani and Pritam shared the award for musical direction; Sharvari Wagh won best debut female and Ahan Shetty was named best debut male.

Pankaj Tripathi won best supporting male actor for Ludo. Jubin Nautiyal won best male playback singer – whose voice is dubbed over the actor’s – for his work on Shershaah.

The Hindi-language film industry was worth $2.5 billion in 2019 and produces more movies than any other. India also releases hundreds of films in its 21 other official languages every year.

But pandemic lockdowns sent the industry into a tailspin, with multiplex chains suffering major losses and dozens of small cinemas going bust. India’s media and entertainm­ent earnings slumped by a quarter to $18.7 billion in 2020, according to accounting firm EY.

The theatre closures prompted a surge in subscripti­ons to streaming platforms, with American services Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney’s Hotstar tapping into a sharp growth in online audiences.

 ?? Photograph: Amazon Prime Video ?? Shershaah is set during India’s 1999 Kargil conflict with Pakistan.
Photograph: Amazon Prime Video Shershaah is set during India’s 1999 Kargil conflict with Pakistan.

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