Friday, February 27, 2009

Give to Caesar what is Caesar's, and to God what is God's..

I had, much before the 81st award ceremony by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), aired my views on "Slumdog Millionaire" - so this is not going to be a repeat of that. While I am quite happy to congratulate all the Oscar winners from the SDM team, I have to say that I despise certain public statements allegedly made by some of them, or those adduced on them - statements replete with insinuations that winning an Oscar amounts to gaining legitimacy, as if works of art that do not (or until they) receive such awards are illegitimate.

When such statements do come from the likes of A R Rahman, and if he meant to say so with seriousness, then I loathe such statements. Oscar awards are a recognition - no doubt. If one wishes to, it is also a means to go truly international, as one gets noticed by the whole world. The field of vision, within which one had hitherto been working, gets magnified and one's platform becomes bigger and wider. It will also raise one's price tag. But it is important that such recognitions or honours are not taken beyond those areas of reality, where they belong to, into realms of fantasy.

Wikipedia indicates that AMPAS
.... is composed of over 6,000 motion picture professionals. While the great majority of its members are based in the United States, membership is open to qualified filmmakers around the world. As of 2004, the Academy roster included theatrical filmmakers from 36 countries....
Be that as it may, but please bear in mind that
apart from those of a few whose names are announced in AMPAS web-site, we do not yet know the credentials of 98% of these 6,000 plus members (mostly American as AMPAS have admitted). Therefore, if one does a plain-speak, this should be seen as an award chosen by this 6,000 AMPAS members - supposedly by voting.

Interestingly, I was taken to the web-site (through a link provided by Shri B R P Bhaskar in his blog) of "New American Media" where they have publicised the interview which their editor Sandip Roy had with Danny Boyle. More than the interview itself, what struck me most was the Editor's note for this item. The note reads
Editor's Note: "Slumdog Millionaire" is the underdog that did make it to the top with eight Oscars. The film about a young slum kid rising to the top of the Indian version of "Who Wants to be a Millionaire?" is as much a rags-to-riches story as it is about an India that's changing before our eyes...
How come SDM is an underdog? Is it because it is supposedly depicting the story of underdogs? Does it mean that if the storyline is about kings, the story will be deemed royal status? Or is it that if the movie is about India, it needs necessarily to be deemed an underdog? Forget about all that, how has this poorly-crafted, mediocre, script come to represent India's changing face? Does it mean India's is a similar rags-to-riches story? Were we the equivalent to a slum until the turn of this century?


I don't intend to discredit the awards that SDM or its makers have received. However, shouldn't there be at least an attempt to look at things in perspective and to keep things tied to realistic moorings. Let Oscars remain where such awards rightfully belong. But for God's sake, let that not be seen as something that legitimises a work of art. Going Biblical, as Matthew (22:21) says “Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s", but let's not forget that God should also give us the wisdom to know the difference...

Tailpiece: If SDM could get 8 awards, can anyone give one cognisable, sensible reason why a movie like Lagaan, which had much superior story line, direction, and action, did not receive at least one award?

2 comments:

flaneur said...

I read that too. Does it mean that being heard by billions of Indians for the past decade or so doesn't legitimise your work until one white guy does? I didn't think that of all people he would be indulging in self colonial hangover.

Harikrishnan:ഹരികൃഷ്ണൻ said...

I agree. Such a feel by any artist is deplorable. However, coming, as it did, from a person like him was the biggest surprise!!!