The DEVDAS Phenomenon
by Corey K. Creekmur
(Notes
on 3 DEVDAS films and the novel that inspired them.)
DEVDAS (1935),
Hindi version, 140 minutes.Produced by New Theatres. Screenplay and Direction by P. C. Barua
Cinematography: Bimal Roy Music: Rai Chand Boral and Pankaj Mullick Dialog and lyrics: Kidar Sharma
Starring: K.L. Saigal, Jamuna, Rajkumari, and K. C. Dey
DEVDAS (1955), Hindi, 161 minutes.
Produced and Directed by Bimal Roy. Music: S. D. Burman Lyrics: Sahir Ludhianvi
Starring: Dilip Kumar, Vyjayantimala, Suchitra Sen, and Motilal
DEVDAS (2002),The True Love Never Die
Hindi, 184 minutes.
Directed by Sanjay Leela Bhansali Music: Ismail Darbar Lyrics: Nusrat Badr
Starring: Shahrukh Khan, Madhuri Dixit, Aishwarya Rai, and Jackie Shroff
Dilip Kumar as Devdas (1955)
The
tragic triangle linking the self-destructive Devdas, his forbidden
childhood love Paro
[Parvati] and the reformed prostitute Chandramukhi was first told in
the popular and influential 1917 Bengali novella by Saratchandra Chattopadhyay
(1876-1938)
[sometimes rendered as Sarat Chandra Chatterjee or Chatterji, among
other variants]. The story has since become one of the touchstones of popular
Indian cinema.
An adaptation starring Phani Burma (later a notable Bengali director)
was
filmed in 1928 by Naresh Chandra Mitra, but the first widely influential
version was
directed simultaneously in Hindi and Bengali in 1935 for New Theatres
by P.C. (Pramathesh Chandra) Barua, son of the Raja of Gauripur. Barua
cast
himself
as
Devdas in the (recently rediscovered) Bengali version, and the legendary
pre-playback singing star K. L. (Kundun Lal) Saigal (who has a cameo
role
singing two songs
in the Bengali film) starred in the extremely popular Hindi version;
because both Barua and Saigal suffered from their character’s alcoholism,
the suggestion of a pathological identification with the role of Devdas
has haunted later figures
attracted to the story as well. Devdas also exists in at least one
Tamil (P. V. Rao, 1936), Malayalam (Ownbelt Mani, 1989), and two Telegu
verions (Vedantam
Raghavaiah, 1953 and Vijayanirmala, 1974), as well as a Bengali remake
(Dilip Roy, 1979), though its most prominent versions following Barua’s
film featuring Saigal are undoubtedly the remakes in Hindi by Bimal
Roy starring
Dilip Kumar
in 1955, and by Sanjay Leela Bhansali starring Shah Rukh Khan in 2002.In addition to these many “official” versions of Devdas, the story and its tragic characters have also served as crucial referents for such major Hindi films as Guru Dutt’s PYAASA (1957) and especially his KAAGAZ KE PHOOL (1959), which involves a dissolute director remaking Devdas as a film within the film. (Guru Dutt is yet another key figure in Indian cinema whose biography unfortunately resonates with the tormented and self-destructive Devdas.) Indeed, as Gayatri Chatterjee suggests, Devdas is the archetype of what she tentatively calls “the genre of the self-destructive urban hero” in Indian cinema. A loose adaptation of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, PHIR SUBAH HOGI (Ramesh Saigal, 1958) features Raj Kapoor in a rare Devdas-like role, whereas MUQADDAR KA SIKANDER (Prakash Mehra, 1978), a more or less unofficial remake, forges the unexpected link between the early 20th-century upper-class Bengali aesthete and Amitabh Bachchan’s Emergency-era, working-class, angry young North Indian man (as Ashis Nandy has insightfully noted). Finally, the masochistic romantic relationships of Devdas are echoed in films such as PREM ROG (Raj Kapoor, 1982) and many others that depict lifelong, but socially thwarted, passions. Although he has become the very model of the ardent lover whose passion is never consummated, Devdas has nevertheless spawned a school full of sad children throughout the history of Indian cinema.
Suchitra Sen and Dilip Kumar (1955)
The basic plot
of Devdas has remained fairly consistent throughout its various incarnations,
and in bare outline it hardly explains
the story’s ongoing
fascination. The rich brahmin zamindar’s devilish son Devdas
and the middle-class Parvati (affectionately called Paro) are
childhood playmates who declare their
love just before Devdas is sent away to Calcutta (or, in the
most recent version, England) for his education. After the young
couple are reunited (Paro’s
brother-like playmate “Dev-da,” the novel notes,
becomes “Devdas-babu”),
Parvati’s family attempts to arrange her marriage to Devdas,
but the latter’s
father rejects the union. Paro’s family are lower status,
a trading family, and unfortunately, neighbors, and the girl’s
insulted family responds by quickly arranging her marriage to
a wealthy widower with grown children. Though
promised to another, Parvati, in one of the story’s now-famous
set-pieces, risks her reputation by coming to Devdas in the night
and asking him to save
her from a loveless marriage; the weak-willed Devdas hesitates,
and decides that he cannot challenge his family and tradition.
He is, however, distraught in his
decision and, back in Calcutta, seeks to lose himself in drink
and the seductive urban demi-monde when his worldly college chum
Chunnilal takes him to a brothel. There he meets the dancing
prostitute Chandramukhi, who will fall in love with the glum
young man who
pays yet seeks nothing
from her. Three key events carry
the story to its hopeless conclusion: Devdas writes Paro an insincere
letter denying his love for her, which he attempts but fails
to prevent from being delivered;
prior to her wedding, Devdas, breaking a childhood promise never
to hit Paro again, scars Paro’s beautiful face (originally
with a fishing rod), marking her with a symbol of his enduring
love (and a punishment for her vanity); finally,
as he sinks into greater oblivion despite Chandramukhi’s
attempts to care for him after she abandons her profession, Devdas
takes a last, aimless train
ride across India. Finally, as he had promised (“If it’s
the last thing I do, I’ll come to you”), Devdas drags
himself to the entrance of Parvati’s home – to which
she has been restricted — where he dies just before she
is alerted to the presence of a stranger’s body just
beyond the massive gates that shut her inside as she runs to
him. (While these details may spoil the story for a first-time
viewer, it’s
clear that most Indian viewers come to any telling of the tale
with the plot
well-known
and its
now-familiar highlights eagerly anticipated with each retelling.)
Shah Rukh Khan as a London-returned Devdas (2002)
As
a narrative centered around love in separation (viraha), Devdas
evokes the story of Krishna and Radha, an echo made explicit
in Bimal Roy’s film when,
replicating a scene from the novella, Paro pays a Vaishnava
couple (replacing three women in the text) with three rupees
she is holding for Devdas; whereas
in the novel “The songs, their meaning, all passed
Parvati by” (though
they have an emotional impact), the film trusts that the
song – recounting
Radha’s longing for the absent Krishna – grounds
this story in Hindu tradition and myth. Yet at the same time,
the character of Devdas is explicitly “modern” in
terms of his education and dress when he first returns from
college; the novel outfits him in “foreign shoes, bright
clothes, a walking stick, gold buttons, [and] a watch – without
these accessories he felt bereft.” More significantly,
Devdas is a modern thinker, especially in his challenge to
(at least the idea of) arranged marriage, in his cigarette
smoking (which in the film versions replaces
the novel’s hookah), in his addiction to the “Western” vice
of alcohol, and in his bohemian attraction to the nether-world
of brothels (aided by the cosmopolitan but irresponsible
Chunnilal). As critics have noted, the
movement between the village and the city, the story’s
cycle of departure and return that abets the young man’s
descent, is also fundamental to the experience of Indian
modernity, and the consequent alienation from tradition.
As such, the hero’s perhaps attractive rebellion is
offset by his continually emphasized weaknesses: he is spineless,
cruel, narcissistic, and a virtual Hindu
Hamlet in his frustrating inability to act, especially when
action seems most necessary. The role is then a complex one
for a film “hero,” at least
in the decades before the “anti-hero” redefined
the qualities of the protagonist in the 1970s. While many “feel-good” Hindi
films celebrate the careful balance of tradition and modernity – for
instance in recent films where arranged marriages and love
matches happily cohabitate – Devdas
dramatizes the tragic inability of tradition and modernity
to achieve balance: the home and the world (to evoke the
paradigmatic title of Tagore’s famous
novel) are the story’s ultimate tragic couple.
The
now-iconic figure of Devdas also might be read as the
ritual sacrifice of the young Bengali brahmin
to European romantic aestheticism, transporting the sorrows
of young Werther-ji into the subcontinent. As noted above,
the appeal of that doomed figure, whose
self-loathing might express a young audience’s
milder frustrations and inability to reconcile cultural
demands
and individual desires, continued at
least into some of the manifestations of Amitabh Bachchan’s
angry young man, who nevertheless was more often motivated
to fight back, even in vain, than
to wallow in passive self-pity. For many viewers Devdas,
no matter which charismatic star embodies him, will remain
a difficult character to like or admire, but the
character demands emotional identification rather than
moral emulation; this ambivalent attraction may be exactly
what
was radical about the original character
for at least a generation of Bengali artists and readers.
As a self-absorbed, selfish character who is by no means
too good for this world, Devdas cannot adjust
his damaged ego to what Freud would call the reality
principle; indeed, part of the figure’s modernity
is in his being defined by an individual ego rather than
a class
or caste-based
morality,
a
difference that
makes traditional
heroes appear as unrealistic ideals rather than the type
of young man one could actually imagine encountering
on the streets of
Calcutta
in the early
decades
of the 20th century. Whether the modernist figure of
Devdas continues to retain its appeal and relevance for
contemporary
Indian audiences
and postmodern,
globetrotting NRIs may be central to evaluating the most
recent version of the story.
Production still from Barua's DEVDAS (1935)
P.
C. Barua’s Hindi version of Devdas, with cinematography by the young
Bimal Roy, is one of the most important films in
Indian cinema history, though modern audiences will probably find Barua’s
film “primitive” and
Saigal’s performance stilted (with carefully
enunciated Hindi that always sounds quoted rather
than spoken),
but for its time the film is quite remarkable
and formally inventive, using songs and voiceover
dialog, for instance, in ways that were innovative
for early
sound cinema. And many enduring fans will attest
that Saigal’s “evergreen” songs
have not lost their power and appeal. Unlike the
novella,
or Bimal Roy’s own remake of the film he first
photographed, Barua’s Devdas does not introduce
his main characters as children, but as naïve
young adults; Barua, however, does suggest that,
the title
aside, this is largely Paro’s story, as she
introduces the narrative. Despite the title of most “official” versions,
the story of Devdas is always the story of the doomed
relationship between three pivotal characters,
and most of its filmed versions take advantage of
film techniques to emphasize the deep, almost supernatural
ties between them. Critics often cite the film’s
use of parallel editing, most notable when, late
in the story, Devdas cries out and the film cuts
to Paro stumbling,
then back to Devdas falling in his train
car. Whether this device was Barua’s innovation
is hard to determine, but its use of a distinctly
cinematic technique to suggest a “telepathic” connection
between the separated lovers remains powerful. [Note:
Barua's film is not presently, to my knowledge, available
on DVD.]
Fom Bimal Roy's DEVDAS (1955)
Perhaps
the best-known version of Devdas was produced in 1955, and directed, again,
by the cinematographer
of Barua’s 1935 films, Bimal Roy, who had
recently established himself as a notable Bombay-based
director and producer working in a realist style
with DO BIGHA ZAMEEN (1953). Most memorably, his
version
provides indelible performances by Dilip Kumar, Vyjayantimala
(originally from South India) as Chandramukhi, and
Suchitra Sen (from Bengal) as Parvati. At first
glance, Roy’s version of the story seems subtle
and naturalistic, with affinities to the emerging
Bengali art cinema of Satyajit Ray: the actors are
restrained and convincing, and often placed in realistic
locations rather than the studio sets which provide
the stylized background for other versions. But
closer examination reveals that Roy’s film
is formally intricate without calling attention to
its
techniques.
Following
the novella, but also picking up on what had by then become something of
a tradition
in Hindi films (such as
ANMOL GHADI or AWARA, among many others), Roy
introduces his protagonists as children and will carry them
to young adulthood through a transitional dissolve,
in this case by focusing upon the richly condensed
image of a closed and then open lotus in the
river where Paro gathers water, an image that suggests
the
girl’s “blossoming” as well
as the cyclical revolutions of nature, and with
an object
that moreover connotes the nation. Roy also makes
careful, meaningful use of his restlessly moving
camera
throughout the film. When the boy Devdas calls
Paro from her room by tossing stones at her window,
a graceful crane shot travels with her from an
upper
floor to the gate where she meets Devdas below.
Years later, when Devdas has returned from Calcutta,
the shot replicates itself exactly without much
fuss,
so that the film itself suggests a basic, enduring
relationship despite the passing of years, and
the embodiment of the characters by a different
set of
adult actors.
A
moving camera also underlines a key scene, when Paro and Chandramuki – ostensible
rivals but sisters in their doomed passion – view
one another on the road. In the original novel,
the two central female characters never meet,
but filmmakers
have been unable to reconcile themselves to their
complete isolation from one
another. While the most recent version of the
story allows its superstar heroines to indulge
in considerable
female bonding, Roy’s
film merely suggests this possibility through
a quiet but formally
powerful
moment.
Most
recently, Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s extravagant 2002 release starring
Shah Rukh Khan as Devdas, Ashiwariya
Rai as Paro, Madhuri Dixit as Chandramukhi, and Jackie Shroff as Chunilal
is said to be the most expensive production in
Indian film history. Although the original
context for Devdas is specifically early 20th-century Bengal, the persistent
return to the character and story throughout
Indian popular culture suggest that they
have become archetypes with broad application and appeal. But Bhansali’s
film, presented as an explicit tribute to Chattopadhyay,
Barua, and Bimal Roy,
also suggests
that the relevance
and
appeal of Devdas may
be fading into the historical past; his
elaborate
sets and costumes render the historical
past as spectacle rather than
as artifact,
and so his early
20th-century
Calcutta resembles an elaborate fantasy
rather than a
lost, recreated time and place. On its
surface a rather simple
story, in this
recent incarnation
Devdas
has become operatic, or, less generously,
overblown.
Bhansali’s
film is an opulent, extravagant spectacle, filled to the brim with elaborate
sets and stunning costumes, and it is often shot with breathless,
rushing steadicam shots of swirling
action and color. The soundtrack pounds away with thunderous beats at every
emotional high or low point. As Anup Singh suggests,
the director’s aim seems to
be to render the story’s strong
emotions through the film’s
hyperventilating style as well as
the situations of the characters.
But this abundance – if this
is indeed India’s most
expensive film to date, the money,
as they say, is on the screen – constantly
threatens to overwhelm what remains
at heart a simple, if psychologically
complex, story.
Vyjayantimala as Chandramukhi, Motilal as Chunnilal
(1955)
It
is not mere nostalgia that makes Roy’s version seem
preferable, and near definitive,
but its realistic grounding despite
adherence to Bombay
conventions: Devdas is, again,
less a classical tragic hero than a modernist
anti-hero, whose downward spiral
does not occur in a mythic space,
but in the historically specific
modern world which, lowering
the standards of genuine tragedy,
can no longer support the grand
gesture or heroic sacrifice of mythic heroes.
The persistent echo of the divine
(yet lustful) love of Krishna
and Radha in the Devdas story is thus
as mocking as it is sustaining:
while the devotion of
Devdas and Paro may be unbreakable,
they are after all not immortal
gods, and so the world breaks them despite
their passion, reducing them
to the human status
of the doomed Romeo and Juliet
rather than elevating them to the realm
of the eternal lovers of Hindu
myth.
Bhansali’s film places its
characters within a modernity
that is now so far past that it must be
artificially overstated,
as Devdas’s arrival in
now-comic early 20th-century
Western fashion
(including a monocle and cigarette
holder) emphasizes for a short
while. Thereafter, the
film’s setting is taken
over by the elaborate sets which
compete
with the story and characters
for the audience’s attention.
The film is thus neither updated
(by,
for instance, making Devdas a
drug addict rather than an alcoholic)
nor genuinely historical, techniques
which might have forced the audience
to compare its present situation
to the represented past. By creating
a fantasy
space with only slight reference
to the real world or historical
context – the
film generally avoids specifying
its time or place directly – the
film constructs a fantastic vision
of a romantic “Bengal” that
may be as exotic for the film’s
(North) Indian audience as for
its diasporic (and non-Indian)
viewers.
(If, for instance, the film is
obviously favoring the “modern” love
match over the traditional arranged
marriage, then the return of
the arranged marriage in so many
of the
mega-hit family films of recent
years suggests that
the “modern” position
can hardly be assumed for
contemporary viewers.)
Moreover,
this version’s decision not to first depict Devdas and Paro as
children, except later,
in brief flashbacks (with Devdas hardly depicted at all), tends to take the
story out of a tradition – developed in part by earlier
versions of this story
and associated works – of presenting true lovers
as recognizing one another
even as children, whose passion never “grows
up” or adjusts
to the pressures of class,
caste, or economic realities.
While the childhood infatuation
of Devdas and Paro is
frequently described
in dialog, the avoidance
of the characters as
children – in part,
I think, an effect
of Shah Rukh Khan’s
prominent boyishness
in his screen persona
– makes their lifelong
love and Devdas’s
Krishna-like mischief
something we must trust
upon hearing from others
rather than something
we are given to witness.
The lifelong attachment
of Devdas and Paro is
richly grounded by the
first sections
of Bimal Roy’s
film, whereas Bhansali
trusts that
mere reference
to their childhood
devotion
will suffice.
Although
it might be argued that none
of the stars
of the latest
version of Devdas
were
capable of
carrying the weight
of these
now-legendary roles,
the film has
the odd effect of
its actors improving as
the film proceeds.
Shah Rukh
Khan achieves some
of the gravity of
his character once
the boyish qualities
that
have defined
him as a star are
no longer appropriate,
and Aishwarya
Rai – for the
first half perhaps
the dimmest Paro
in the story’s
tradition – seems
to perceptibly gain
increased knowledge
of, if no control
over, the social
forces defining her.
(As depicted in earlier
versions, Paro is
a simple but by no
means stupid girl,
and so Aishwarya
Rai’s emphatic
naivete seems a disservice
to the character:
the fact that she
actually keeps a
candle burning for
Devdas implies a
too-literal mind
as well as devotion.)
Madhuri
Dixit, here playing
a “mature” character
now that she
is an “older
woman” by
Hindi heroine
standards,
provides the
film’s
standout performance,
and constructs
perhaps the single
character
whose feelings
seem genuine
throughout;
an elaborate
song-sequence
in which she
and Paro interact
(to
an extent unprecedented
in earlier versions)
is unexpectedly
effective in
demonstrating
Chandramuki’s
basic goodness,
undeserved abjection,
and passionate
drive, all registered
through Madhuri
Dixit’s
expressions and
postures. As
the unwitting
aide to Devdas’s
self-destruction,
Jackie Shroff,
in a cameo as
the unintentionally
destructive Chunnilal,
is also memorable.
Yet even these
worthy performances
must
continually compete
with the film’s
dazzling – but
ultimately distracting – costumes
and scenery,
all again presented
through
a hyperactive
camera and unrelenting
soundtrack.
As with
each previous
version of the
story, this
film’s
strongest moments
are in small
details and gestures,
but the film
itself seems
to have been
made with
the mantra that “size
matters” as
it persistently
boosts and trumpets
many
of its otherwise
most delicate
moments.
Although
Bhansali’s film was a commercial hit that played in major
cinemas worldwide (I
saw it in a massive cinema in London’s theatre district, where
it was
widely advertised alongside mainstream British and American films), its
long-range
impact seems less certain than that of previous versions of the story.
(The apparent
attempt to make this the film to finally bring “Bollywood” to
Western
audiences also seems a failure: the smaller non-Bollywood films MONSOON
WEDDING and BEND
IT LIKE BECKHAM have reached far more Western viewers, who often mistake
such “international” films
for the
real thing.) Whether
the myth
of Devdas maintains its
power into
the 21st century
remains
to be seen,
but one
suspects that yet another
version – probably
in the
now-established
tradition
of unofficial
remakes – will
be necessary
to revitalize
the tale
for contemporary
audiences,
in
the way
that Bachchan’s
unexpected
channeling
of Devdas
in some
of his
1970s
roles clearly
shook up
the norms
of Indian
popular
cinema.
In any
case,
the story
of a young
man who
dies too
young
has seemed
immortal
for most
of the
20th century;
ironically,
his
latest
incarnation
seems to
hasten
his legend’s
demise
rather
than sustain
it.
[The
films on DVD: As
noted above, the 1935 Hindi version of Devdas is only currently available
on unsubtitled, mediocre-quality videotape. The Yash Raj Films
DVD of the
1955 DEVDAS in their Bimal Roy Collection is of good but not superior quality;
it features
complete subtitles and also includes an illuminating interview with Dilip
Kumar by Nasreen Munni Kabir and “Images of Kumbh Mela,” unedited
footage shot by Bimal Roy before his death. The Roy film is also available
in a Baba Traders edition with image quality roughly comparable to that of
the Yashraj version, but with no subtitles for songs. A slightly superior
print of the film, and with subtitles for both dialog and songs, is available
from Shemaroo Ltd., which owns the Indian distribution rights for the DVD;
though technically illegal in the West, Shemaroo copies occasionally turn
up in Indian shops and on DVD websites. The Eros DVD of Bhansali’s
2002 DEVDAS is available in an excellent version with complete subtitles
as part of an – unsurprisingly – lavish two-disc box set which includes
souvenir postcards and an extra disc of “special features” including
entertaining but insubstantial documentaries and interviews with the film’s
stars
and director.]
Printed sources:
The
first complete English translation
of Saratchandra
Chattopadhyay’s
Devdas by
Srejara Guha
with Guha’s
helpful introduction,
was published
by Penguin
Books India
in 2002.
It
should supersede
the abridged
version
translated
by V. S.
Naravane
included
in Sarat
Chandra Chatterji,
Devdas
and Other
Stories,
New Delhi:
Roli
Books, 1996.
Both the 1935 and 1955 film versions of DEVDAS have received considerable critical attention: see, for instance, Ziauddin Sardar’s wonderful essay “Dilip Kumar Made Me Do It,” in The Secret Politics of Our Desires: Innocence, Culpability and Indian Popular Cinema, ed. Ashis Nandy (London: Zed Books, 1998): 19-91. Other discussions of DEVDAS appear in Kishore Valicha, The Moving Image: A Story of Indian Cinema (Hyderabad: Orient Longman, 1988): 43-60; and in Ashis Nandy's essay, “Invitation to an Antique Death: The Journey of Pramathesh Barua as the Origin of the Terribly Effeminate, Maudlin, Self-Destructive Heroes of Indian Cinema,” in Pleasure and the Nation: The History, Politics, and Consumption of Public Culture in India, ed. Rachel Dwyer and Christopher Pinney (New Delhi: Oxford UP, 2001): 139-160. Asjad Nazir’s essay “The Changing Faces of Devdas,” in Eastern Eye (London) 5 July 2002: Emag 8-9 is a brief overview of almost a century of the story’s retelling; a more detailed overview can be found in P. K. Nair, “The Devdas Syndrome in Indian Cinema,” Cinemaya 56/57 (Autumn-Winter 2002): 82-87. The same issue also includes Anup Singh’s “Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Devdas and the Intensity of the Self,” and Faria Etem’s “Seen from Bangladesh: No Borders for Devdas.” A recent volume, largely in celebration of the 2002 film but containing useful informaton, is Devdas: The Eternal Saga of Love, edited and compiled by Rahul Singhal (Delhi: Pentagon Paperbacks, 2002). Gayatri Chatterjee relies on the 1935 Devdas in order to illuminate Raj Kapoor’s classic film in her close analysis Awaara (New Delhi: Wiley Eastern Ltd., 1992; rpt. New Delhi: Penguin Books India, 2003), and Ravi Vasudevan uses a key scene from the 1955 Devdas to illustrate the Hindu practice of darsana (or darshan ) in “The Politics of Cultural Address in a `Transitional’ Cinema: A Case Study of Indian Popular Cinema,” in Reinventing Film Studies, ed. Christine Gledhill and Linda Williams (London: Arnold, 2000): 130-164.]
Both the 1935 and 1955 film versions of DEVDAS have received considerable critical attention: see, for instance, Ziauddin Sardar’s wonderful essay “Dilip Kumar Made Me Do It,” in The Secret Politics of Our Desires: Innocence, Culpability and Indian Popular Cinema, ed. Ashis Nandy (London: Zed Books, 1998): 19-91. Other discussions of DEVDAS appear in Kishore Valicha, The Moving Image: A Story of Indian Cinema (Hyderabad: Orient Longman, 1988): 43-60; and in Ashis Nandy's essay, “Invitation to an Antique Death: The Journey of Pramathesh Barua as the Origin of the Terribly Effeminate, Maudlin, Self-Destructive Heroes of Indian Cinema,” in Pleasure and the Nation: The History, Politics, and Consumption of Public Culture in India, ed. Rachel Dwyer and Christopher Pinney (New Delhi: Oxford UP, 2001): 139-160. Asjad Nazir’s essay “The Changing Faces of Devdas,” in Eastern Eye (London) 5 July 2002: Emag 8-9 is a brief overview of almost a century of the story’s retelling; a more detailed overview can be found in P. K. Nair, “The Devdas Syndrome in Indian Cinema,” Cinemaya 56/57 (Autumn-Winter 2002): 82-87. The same issue also includes Anup Singh’s “Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Devdas and the Intensity of the Self,” and Faria Etem’s “Seen from Bangladesh: No Borders for Devdas.” A recent volume, largely in celebration of the 2002 film but containing useful informaton, is Devdas: The Eternal Saga of Love, edited and compiled by Rahul Singhal (Delhi: Pentagon Paperbacks, 2002). Gayatri Chatterjee relies on the 1935 Devdas in order to illuminate Raj Kapoor’s classic film in her close analysis Awaara (New Delhi: Wiley Eastern Ltd., 1992; rpt. New Delhi: Penguin Books India, 2003), and Ravi Vasudevan uses a key scene from the 1955 Devdas to illustrate the Hindu practice of darsana (or darshan ) in “The Politics of Cultural Address in a `Transitional’ Cinema: A Case Study of Indian Popular Cinema,” in Reinventing Film Studies, ed. Christine Gledhill and Linda Williams (London: Arnold, 2000): 130-164.]
nicee http://free-download-video99.blogspot.com
ReplyDelete