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Action Genres in Contemporary Indian Cinema by Lalitha Gopalan (London: British Film Institute, 2002)
by Megan Carrigy
Lalitha Gopalan's introduction begins with a fine proposal: that the cinema proposes to us. This opening proposition to Gopalan's lucid work on the cinema throws us head first into the heart of her elaborate argument. It was, for me, a very delightful proposition; one that made me instantly receptive to Gopalan's emerging thesis. Gopalan argues that it is not just any cinema that proposes to us but most explicitly Indian popular cinema. Thus we begin immediately in Cinema of Interruptions to consider what this cinema specifically has to offer us. More accurately, Gopalan begins with a love affair. The proposal that Indian popular cinema makes to us is positively a romantic one. More often than not, it seems, this romantic proposition becomes triangulated. Take the conclusions Gopalan draws from the love triangle of Rangeela/Colourful (1995) with which Cinema of Interruptions initiates its proposition: The endurance of this triangle, identified by Gopalan and endorsed at Rangeela's resolution, has significant implications. Gopalan brings us swiftly to a song and dance sequence in yet another love story, Hum Aapke Hain Koun..! (1994), where the lover of the cinema is the spectator:
Specifically referring to action genres in contemporary Indian cinema, by interruptions Gopalan principally means the intermission that occurs 80 minutes into a film, the song and dance sequences and censorship regulations. While these are the three primary manifestations of interruption in Indian popular cinema, they are also simply the most immediately apparent, explicit manifestations we encounter. Gopalan articulates a much more diverse range of subtle possibilities, hinting at some, coming to rest at others, while allowing a number to brush up against one another. This approach leads her to formulate the term constellation of interruptions to account for an articulate and nuanced range of disruptions that texture the transference between spectator, screen and cinematic duration. Such a term aptly encompasses interruptive forces including irony, flashbacks and auteur signatures (p. 19). This constellation of interruptions textures the book itself so that its chapters are divided not according to the various manifestations of this constellation but in accordance with Gopalan's choice of films, directors and genres. As Gopalan tells us, cinephilia colours the selection of genre films in this book (p. 3). The second chapter deals with the Avenging Women genre and its relationship to censorship regulations. This is followed in the third with a focus on J.P. Dutta's films and their restructuring of narrative and anticipation in gangster films. The forth chapter on Mani Ratnam's Nayakan accounts for auteur signatures that operate interruptive reconfigurations of genre. The final chapter discusses Vidhu Vinod Chopra's Parinda and its use of flashbacks. I found that censorship was fascinatingly dealt with in Cinema of Interruptions, since by censorship, Gopalan does not only mean that a film carries with it traces of censored cuts. The book acknowledges a spectrum of negotiations around censorship regulations, manifesting most blatantly on the female body. This is specifically dealt with in the second chapter, Avenging Women in Indian Cinema (2). Gopalan's negotiation of censorship culminates in the technique she whimsically labels coitus interruptus the camera withdraws just before a steamy love scene ensues, and the film replaces it with extra-diegetic shots of waterfalls, flowers, thunder, lightning, and tropical storms (p. 21). Otherwise identified, with equal humour, as the withdrawal-of-the-camera method, Gopalan signals it as producing, ironically, a crucial source of surplus pleasure unintended by the censor, affirming one of Gopalan's central premises that in Indian cinema we find pleasure in these interruptions and not despite them. Gopalan proposes that paying attention to pleasure in film theory indeed acknowledging it as a primary condition of engagement is a highly neglected, undernourished area of Indian cinema studies. Gopalan formulates pleasure and interruption in a close alliance, stressing that interruptions are intrinsic to the enjoyment of this cinema. This emphasis is not an opportunity for the author to conjure nostalgic recollections. Rather, she argues for a close scrutiny of interruptions as a way to reconsider theoretical approaches to the cinema, opening up a kind of film theory that operates with the cinema experience at the fore of discussion, maintaining a very personal yet rigorous engagement. The most significant of interruptions a consequence of all the others identified in Cinema of Interruptions comes in the assertion that action genres of contemporary Indian cinema interrupt a particular kind of film theory. Gopalan refers to Paul Willemen's Through the Glass Darkly: Cinephilia Reconsidered (3) to explain the necessity of this kind of theory: Gopalan believes that the spectators of action in Indian popular cinema find themselves at the crossroads of several intersecting cinematic styles (p. 24), requiring several theoretical positions in order to read one film. This is an exciting proposition. However, disappointingly, Gopalan has found little acknowledgement of this fascinating situation and minimal attempts to account for it among her American colleagues. In contrast to Gopalan's self proclaimed love affair with Indian popular cinema and its interruptions, she notes a conspicuous lack of understanding (or suitable theoretical approaches) to Indian popular cinema among the American film community and her conference going peers: As I understand it, Cinema of Interruptions has a problem with the attitude of a particular kind of film theory, a film theory that, although generated from engagements exclusively with Euro-American cinemas, assumes a trans-regional durability (p. 9). Gopalan attempts to develop her own strategies of engagement, not by carving out a separate theoretical paradigm for contemporary Indian commercial cinema but by rupturing the provincialism surrounding film theory and in the process rejuvenating it (p. 24). She cites the work of Mani Ratnam, Vidhu Vinod Chopra and Ramesh Sippy as having helped us to see how certain assumptions of the ideal spectator in perfect viewing conditions are specific to Hollywood (p. 69). Additionally, Gopalan very astutely points out that American-centric theory has missed, not only the differences, but the connections to be made between other national cinemas and so-called New Hollywood:
The focus upon rhythmic re-inflection of particular action genres in Cinema of Interruptions regularly prompted me to ask what kind of duration does the book itself have? This question arose not only because of the concepts with which Gopalan operates but the way in which they were manipulated. Gopalan keeps her complex agenda steadfastly afloat and under impressive intellectual control, allowing a generous seepage between her primary concerns. One can sense undercurrents within her argument, reflecting Indian cinema's indirectness, in-between-ness, its propensity for digression and interruption (p. 28). Concepts graze past one another, at times bumping into one another with exciting results. Something about this approach and Gopalan's writing style make me want to describe Cinema of Interruptions as oceanic. Reading this book, I felt at times as if I was falling into her narration, letting its currents wash over me. I never felt drowned or disorientated by this experience but as if I knew all the while that stable ground was always within reach. At other times I felt as if I was bobbing up and down on a floatation device, on the ebb and flow of her emerging argument, happy to be carried away by rips or ride a wave into shore. It seems appropriate given this oceanic experience, for me to draw some parallels between myself as a spectator of this book and the spectators of this cinema it describes. Gopalan's writing strategies seem to emulate her subject to the degree that her own term constellation of interruptions seems an apt description for the intricate pattern of her own rich argument. For me this fact is pertinent in assessing why Gopalan succeeds so well in Cinema of Interruptions as a critic and theorist. Certainly, this is not a book that enthusiastically smothers its object not a book of the all-knowing critic but one whose cues come from the rhythms of the films themselves, following the impulses of the author (5). This kind of approach to writing about the cinema activates, for its reader, the films about which it is concerned. Gopalan has succeeded in engaging her senses and therefore her pleasures before recruiting the conceptual tools necessary to account what she has experienced. This method of coming to terms with the cinema has a very different duration to the more pre-programmed, automated critical response of which Gopalan is critical. By a different duration I mean that Gopalan's writing is digressive, sinuous and responsive to what she has apprehended rather than following the linear trajectory of a preconceived argument. Her writing interrupts itself. And in this, I took great pleasure.
© Megan Carrigy, September 2003
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