This is my first
entry for a project in which I watch 52
movies from 52 countries in one year.
When I got the idea to watch fifty-two movies from fifty-two countries throughout 2018, I knew I'd have to start with India.
Indian cinema is the world’s largest film industry. According to multiple
sources, the country produces over a thousand movies a year (some sites put
that average closer to two thousand).
So choosing which movie I'd watch was a challenge in upon itself. My choice wasn’t necessarily meant to “represent” the country or sum up its history (try finding a movie that “sums up” America). I simply wanted a fantastic, memorable film.
In the end I chose...
BÃHUBALI: THE BEGINNING (2015)
DIRECTOR: S.S. Rajamouli
WRITTEN BY: Vijayendra Prasad (Story)
S.S. Rajomouli (Screenplay)
C.H. Vijay Kumar (Telugu dialogue)
Ajay Kumar (Telugu dialogue)
Madhan Karky (Tamil dialogue - the version I watched)
Manoj Muntashir (Hindi dialogue)
STARING: Prabhas
WHERE YOU CAN FIND IT: Netflix Instant, Amazon Instant.
PLOT: An infant found drowning in a river grows up to be Shivudu, a free-spirited boy who spends his days exploring the surrounding mountains. When Shivudu becomes a man, he leaves his home and discovers he is connected to a vast kingdom ruled by a psychotic warlord.
MEMORABLE MOMENT: An insane musical number in which our hero (Prabhas) climbs an impossibly tall waterfall in pursuit of a woman covered in blue butterflies.
PLOT: An infant found drowning in a river grows up to be Shivudu, a free-spirited boy who spends his days exploring the surrounding mountains. When Shivudu becomes a man, he leaves his home and discovers he is connected to a vast kingdom ruled by a psychotic warlord.
MEMORABLE MOMENT: An insane musical number in which our hero (Prabhas) climbs an impossibly tall waterfall in pursuit of a woman covered in blue butterflies.
ABOUT THE MOVIE:
- The most expensive film ever made in India.
- The first of two movies filmed simultaneously. The sequel Bãhubali: The Conclusion was released in 2017.
- Has an animated television series which is a part of the franchise.
Bãhubali (also spelled Baahubali) shares many similarities to blockbusters from around the world. There are familiar mythic archetypes (the baby found in the river, the beautiful female warrior who refuses love until she meets our hero, the protagonist with a violent/mysterious past).
However it would be impossible to mistake this movie for a Hollywood blockbuster. As one might expect from Indian cinema, Bãhubali has considerably more song and dance numbers than The Lord of the Rings or 300.
(Although LOTR does have the one)
Also, despite the epic battle sequence at the film’s climax, Bãhubali’s tone (especially in the first half) feels lighter than many American blockbusters. Granted the most recent Star Wars and Avengers movies are filled with a self-aware tongue-in-cheek humor, but the gaudy musical numbers and the gorgeous settings bring an ethereal tone to much of (although not all of) the film. Overall, the special effects and sets are used to make this movie as beautiful as it is epic.
Then there is the treatment of animals. Not
only does the movie open with a statement that no animals were harmed during
the making of the film, but whenever an animal appears to be in danger, the
letters “CGI” flash in the lower left-hand corner, assuring viewers that the
water buffalo or the horses being killed are just pixels on the screen. Most
Hollywood movies are so desperate to look real (even when the computer effects
are cruddy) they would never consider such a disclaimer.
I chose Bãhubali for
its overwhelmingly grand scale both in terms of plot as well as production. Not only was it the most expensive Indian film ever made, it shattered box office records and was met with almost universal critical
acclaim.
Part of me wanted to go for an older, “classic Bollywood”
movie. Bãhubali is a beautiful film but it definitely has that recognizable international
blockbuster feel to it (just watch the trailer above). Despite the song and dance numbers, there are sections that could almost be mistaken
for scenes from Hollywood fantasy films. One could argue that maybe I should have gone for a film unlike anything I’d find in an American
Cineplex. (Bãhubali was literally playing in a movie theater ten minutes
from my house.) With this in mind, I might write a couple “bonus posts” throughout the
year, touching on other Indian films (I'll probably do the same for
countries like France, Japan and Korea).
Feel free to leave suggestions.
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