LIGHTS, CAMERA AND PROPAGANDA: BOLLYWOOD MOVIES UNDER THE PRESSURE TO MEET POLITICAL AGENDA; WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CHANGING DIMENSIONS OF SATYAJIT RAY’S MOVIES

Authors

  • Shubhajit Chowdhury PhD Scholar, Department of English, Biranghana Sati Sadhani Rajyik Vishwavidlaya, Golaghat, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v5.i1.2024.1057

Keywords:

Bollywood, Movies, Satyajit Ray, Politics, Propaganda, Politicization, Nehruvian Ideology

Abstract [English]

Movies are the mirror of the society, and based on the movies people can get into the reality of the society. The motif of this paper is to question the relevance of this statement, based on several instances taken from Satyajit Ray’s movies to our contemporary movies. The reality is that after the media, movies have also become politicized, politicians use movies to promote their political propaganda and stimulate the mind of the audience. Starting from Satyajit Ray, along with the masterpieces, how his movies were politicized to promote the Nehruvian ideologies to the global audience. How Ray’s characters were prototypes of the Nehruvian ideologies. How Ray presents both poverty and ambition in movies but focuses more on his character’s ambitions rendering that with Nehruvian ambition for modern India. This hereditary politicization of movies has continued till the present, and in the present scenario, the movies are fabricating the reality at such a level that, they appear more real than the reality to their audience. All because it stimulates the perspectives of the audience towards political propaganda. This paper will focus more on decoding the politicization of Satyajit Ray’s earlier movies. While doing that this paper will decode one movie from the contemporary era, to prove that politicization in Bollywood is a traditional practice.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Bhuj movie review: Ajay Devgn in slow motion does little for what is anyway a godawfully dull war saga. (2021, August 14). Firstpost.

Bollywood and Politics: The BJP’s Increasing Influence on Movies - INKspire. (2020, December 14).

Bollywood becomes political battleground as India’s election looms—Nikkei Asia. (n.d.). Retrieved From 2024, March 23.

Cardullo, & Bert. (2007). Satyajit Ray: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi.

Dhar, A. (Director). (2019). URI: The Surgical Strike [Military Action].

First the Media, and Now Bollywood Too Is Trying to Brainwash Us! (n.d.). Retrieved From 2024, March 23.

Ghosh, S. (2016). In Defiance of the State: The Nehru Era and Satyajit Ray’s films. Taylor and Francis. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/02666030.2016.1191806

Jawaharlal Nehru: A Guiding Force in Our Past, Present, and Future. (n.d.). The Wire. Retrieved From 2024, March 23.

Lesser Known Facts About the Uri Surgical Strike. (n.d.). Retrieved From 2024, March 23.

Neyazi, T. A. (2019). Digital Propaganda, Political Bots and Polarized Politics in India. Routhledge, Taylor and Francis Group. https://doi.org/10.1080/01292986.2019.1699938 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/01292986.2019.1699938

Ray, S. (Director). (1955). Pather Panchali [Drama].

Ray, S. (Director). (1956). Aparajito (The Unvanquished) [Drama].

Ray, S. (Director). (1959). Apur Sansar (The World of Apu) [Drama].

Ray, S. (Director). (1963). Mahanagar (The Big City) [Drama].

Robinson, A. (2022). Satyajit Ray:The Inner Eye (3rd Ed.). Bloomsbury Publishing. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350258532

Roll, camera, support: How BJP has backed ‘The Kashmir Files’, other movies | Political Pulse News—The Indian Express. (n.d.). Retrieved From 2024, March 23.

Sinha, S. (2011). Alternative Be/longing: Modernity and Material Culture in Bengali Alternative Be/longing: Modernity and Material Culture in Bengali Cinema, 1947-1975. University of Western Ontario.

“Bhuj” Is Less a Film and More a Pamphlet With a Long, Tedious Rant Against Pakistan. (n.d.). The Wire. Retrieved From 2024, May 23.

“Surgical Strikes Day” Is Just a Pre-Election Dose of Patriotic Political Fodder. (n.d.). Retrieved From 2024, March 23.

Downloads

Published

2024-06-21

How to Cite

Chowdhury, S. (2024). LIGHTS, CAMERA AND PROPAGANDA: BOLLYWOOD MOVIES UNDER THE PRESSURE TO MEET POLITICAL AGENDA; WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CHANGING DIMENSIONS OF SATYAJIT RAY’S MOVIES. ShodhKosh: Journal of Visual and Performing Arts, 5(1), 1115–1124. https://doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v5.i1.2024.1057