Disclaimer – This is not meant to be a comprehensive thesis. I just wanted to record a few thoughts on this
topic. Your inputs and
reactions are most welcome.
The characterization of Shalini (played by Amala Paul) in
the recently released Velaiyilla
Pattadhari-2 has drawn much flak. This is in part due to its director (Soundarya Rajinikanth) being a woman. But in all fairness, I think people,
especially women, may not have been enamored with the role even otherwise. Shalini, the adorable girlfriend from part-1,
is now a nagging homemaker. The dulcet
voice from the earlier movie has been replaced with a shrill. Dhanush, playing the husband, even breaks
into a mock sobbing bout when Kajol asks an innocuous question, “Are you
married?” We are supposed to understand
that he is henpecked! Dhanush’s writing,
which was quite a revelation in the Revathy-Raj Kiran portions of Power Paandi, exhibits nary a bit of
that delicacy here. The track is just
played for easy laughs. But probably
owing to Dhanush’s genial screen persona these days and its stark contrast to
the crudeness of some of his early day characters (like Thiruda Thirudi) I did not find the husband-wife interactions
particularly offensive.
Despite being the butt of her husband’s jokes, Shalini is
very much her own individual, who decides when to work and when not to. Living in the same house with her
father-in-law, husband and brother-in-law, she might be the one preparing food
(even in a makeshift kitchen on the terrace amidst floods) but she tells them
what to wear, what groceries to buy, etc.
I do not mean to make all of this sound like the signs of deep women
empowerment. But in the male dominated
world of Tamil cinema, I suppose that I feel the need to pick my battles. And VIP-2
didn’t feel like one worth losing sleep over.
Even in the climactic portion, Dhanush’s words to Kajol about the equality
of men and women did not sound condescending to me.
Rather, it felt quite genuine. One
could argue that in this day and age, even such a line is redundant. But show me one modern day Tamil hero worth
his salt that gives you the vibe that the heroine is on equal footing with them. After watching the concluding portions of VIP-2, I was actually left with quite a
pleasant feeling that even the seemingly villainous Kajol character was not
shown as being ‘tamed.’ Instead, there
was a bonding that happened in the most unexpected fashion. Whether the writing of this segment was solid
is a moot point but it felt like the writer’s heart was in the right place.
As I reflected on the portrayals of women that have
impressed me over the years, it was hard to shake off a rather strong feeling. And that was that anything that I deemed better
than the status quo of the day had impressed me sufficiently that I did tend to give the
filmmakers brownie points for at least striving to make something different,
something more mature. My oft-repeated
example is Rhythm and movies of that
ilk like Keladi Kanmani, Sigaram,
etc. I have been enormously impressed by
the decency that is exhibited towards the women in these movies. The women are portrayed as strong-willed
individuals, with myriad shades, warts and all.
The characters are treated with immense dignity by the hero (by
extension, the filmmaker, I feel). But
the one fault that is laid at the feet of directors like Vasanth is that the remarrying
heroine is a virgin. While I am not
going to debate that, my own reaction to these movies has been largely positive
just because I don’t get to see such cultured interactions in the average Tamil
movie where the hero is deified and the heroine is objectified. Of course, Tamil cinema has moved to an era
where filmmakers like Gautham Menon have pushed boundaries, in the right direction I might add. To me, the Ajith-Trisha interactions were
easily the highlight of Yennai Arindhal. The fact that Trisha had a child was exquisitely
handled. (“Isha unakulla irundhu vandhava” was a particularly poignant line.) In essence, respect shown to women in the
movies should not come as a surprise to us.
It should be a given. But until
that happens in a movie industry that is, with reason, accused of glorifying
stalking and reducing women to objects of male fantasies, let me savor the rare maturely handled movie, with all its virtues
and flaws.
Having grown up on a staple diet of Mani Ratnam movies, I
thought of how the typical Ratnam heroine has rarely, if ever, been a
pushover. Even a Meera Jasmine who is
treated like dirt at several places by the Madhavan character in Aaytha Ezhuthu, has nerves of
steel. She is the most fascinating
character in that movie. She continually
forgives Madhavan for his impulsiveness and his explosive temper. But when, in her estimation, he crosses the
line of conscientiousness, she gets an abortion done without telling him. Whatever one’s opinion of that decision may
be, it is hard to refute the fact that she is not a one-note character. Where Madhavan explodes, she implodes. While he might have a short fuse, her anger may
be more measured but is every bit as intense as his. All this is to say that when I sense that
effort has been put into writing a well-rounded character for an actress, I walk
away not only impressed but also a tad relieved. That relief comes from the fact that human
dramas will rarely seem balanced and realistic if only the male character comes
across as well-written.
Whenever films like Magalir
Mattum and Valla Desam (both
unseen by me) with a female lead get released, there is always cause for cheer
just by virtue of their difference from the norm. As part of the promotions for these
movies, we invariably also hear mentions of the rarity of women
filmmakers. (For the record, both these films were directed by men.) It is a perfectly valid
lament. For commercial considerations, an
aversion to risk, the fear of being crushed by the male star juggernaut, an
inherent male chauvinism or just plain ignorance, the majority of movies made by male
directors do leave little for women to do.
Filmmakers like Karthik Subburaj (Iraivi),
Seenu Ramasamy (Dharmadurai) and Ram
(Taramani) have all attempted to
showcase their heroines in varied shades.
Opinions have been polarized.
While a group of people (that I belong to) admire their guts to try
something different and even admire the outputs for the most part, there have
also been clarion calls for more sensitivity and depth (especially in the case
of Taramani). All these discussions remind me of how even a filmmaker of repute like Ratnam once
admitted to having certain blind spots as a guy. He cited the example of the second half of
Roja, which had a scene where Madhubala (whose husband has been kidnapped by
terrorists) is shown wearing bangles. Ratnam recounted a conversation with a female friend of his who told him that a
suffering woman would never have the motivation to wear bangles!
While it is a small screen teleseries, Suhasini’s Penn is one of the rare works of a female
filmmaker that shows us the kind of outputs that we will get with women at the
helm. Each of her characters, be it the
mother and daughter (so marvelously acted by Srividya and Revathy), the
recalcitrant daughter (played by Bhanupriya), the cheated woman (Geetha) and the most
memorable, the Radhika character (who loses her husband in an accident) are all
splendidly written, three-dimensional characters. While the influence of Mani Ratnam in her
direction is quite obvious, the writing by Suhasini is of high order. Especially given that she had a little less
than 25 minutes for each episode, her portrayals of these women are a joy to
behold. In my tribute to the late
actress Srividya, I wrote that it is portrayals such as these that make me
respect the women in my own life, to value their sacrifices, to treasure the
lessons that they have taught me and to never hesitate to put them on their
deserving pedestals. I do think that it
takes either a female filmmaker or a male with amazing depth of perception of
women to evoke such a strong reaction.
No write-up on women in Tamil movies will be complete
without a mention of K Balachander. Throughout
the 1970s and 80s, he made several films with women as the protagonist, the
fulcrum around which the plot levers turned. Especially the second half of the 70s was a
period when he had strong talents like Kamal Hassan play second fiddle to the
women in his movies, a case in point being the memorable AvargaL. To me, KB’s works
were qualified successes. I admired the different
path that he took. I even admired the
guts and gumption displayed by some of his female characters. But save Nizhal
Nijamagiradhu, I found the latter portions of several of his movies to bend
under the weight of the heavy themes and the portrayal of women as mouthpieces for empowerment. A strong exception to this is Agni Saatchi, which I regard as the
finest work of his long, illustrious career.
The female character in that movie undergoes unspeakable hardships. But KB does something quite wonderful with
the Sivakumar character. He has the
actor drop anchor while Saritha walks away with the movie. But in having Sivakumar shower immense love
on the Saritha character and support her through her psychological trauma, KB ‘says’
a lot of what there is to be said about the responsibility of men towards women. A classic case of 'show, don’t tell,' Agni Saatchi is a must-see (even if a
difficult watch) for lovers of meaningful cinema. In Agni Saatchi, one scene that bothered me
was how Sivakumar resists from divorcing Saritha only after he gets to know of
her pregnancy. His character toes his
parents’ line a little too blindly in the sequence leading to this. But I then tell myself that KB portrayed the
Sivakumar character too as a human with his flaws, not as a cardboard cut-out
for supportive men. As Baradwaj Rangan pointed
out recently in a discussion on KB, “Let’s not throw the baby out with the
bathwater." Very true, for KB charted his own path that even modern day filmmakers rarely have the ability or willingness to take.
It is impossible to deny the responsibility that filmmakers have. While it is unfair to target them and attribute all societal evils to what is put out on the silver screen, it is true that cinema
is a pervasive, influential medium that has been used in Tamil Nadu for
everything from a political platform to a mindless entertainment medium. As critics like Rangan point out, the primary
duty of a filmmaker is to tell a story powerfully, utilizing all the tools and
techniques that this audio visual medium affords them. But the ‘audio’ portions are things people
hear, the visual parts are things that people see and retain. A display of a basic level of respect doesn’t
translate into portraying anyone as an angel.
As author Adam Grant once said, acknowledgement is the truest form of
empathy. To have filmmakers acknowledge
the depth and complexity of women would be a meaningful augury for the future of this medium. Even more so than the average book, images
and sounds from a film do make an impact on the human psyche. To the extent to which directors can tell
stories without taking either gender for granted, not just cinema but also our
society at large, will be richer for that.
***
I didn't get to mention this in my write-up but this is one of my favorite scenes from Aasai. The Suvalakshmi character sparkles here.
18 comments:
I still do not agree with your explanation of the Shalini character in VIP-2. Sure, she dictates what groceries to buy and what they will eat, but there is no mistaking that this is her place now that she is married. There is no dignity in her portrayal. Shalini here is just a stereotype pretending to be an individual. Her suggestion to work is met with dismissal. I really don't take the hero's foray into feminism seriously. It only makes me cringe. It is in the same vein that celebrates women for being homemakers, while simultaneously insinuating that it is their duty and responsibility to be homemakers, somehow passing judgment on those women who are not homemakers. Also, it is terribly easy to make a wife a nagging one. It is a common sentiment anyway.
As for Vasundhara, the hero talks down to her. She is shown to be arrogant and inconsiderate, which the hero is not (of course). She talks rudely to a prospective client, and she couldn't have become so successful if she had conducted business this way.
We must expect more from these movies. They are watched by everyone, they are held up as examples, the dialogues are repeated in casual conversations among friends, the men find endorsement of their viewpoints in them. This movie is so broadly staged and so gratuitous, both to unemployed engineers and women.
Had more to say but submitted my comment.
I'm actually getting a bit tired of the standard Mani Ratnam Heroine. This whole 'thuru-thuru' behaviour has been done to death! Playing pranks, making jokes, prancing about (sometimes in the rain).
Regarding your point about Vasanth, I always feel puzzled about why a decent portrayal is only awarded to those characters Tamil culture considers 'modest'. Are other types of characters not deserving of such decency on film?
I am not keen on watching Magalir Mattum to be honest. I fear it may just be like attending an early morning lecture. While I'm loving Jothika's clothes and accessories in her recent public appearances, something about her 'women empowerment' spiel doesn't ring true. She thanks her feminist husband and his family for letting her act, she has to constantly play the part of 'wife' in public, and she has chosen only what we again 'modest' characters in her comeback. There probably aren't enough roles for her to pick from, sure, but her husband meanwhile plays the most regressive characters on screen.
I agreed with Jothika's points about immature heroines who are used as props though (in one of her recent speeches).
Curious about Valla Desam. I've always liked Anu Hasan.
Thank you Ram for your thoughts on how women are portrayed in our movies. I strongly believe that Directors portray how they see women in our society. Directors like Balachander, Balu mahendra and Bharathi Raja gave women strong characters to play. These directors probably saw such strong women and wanted the society to know or may be they wanted women to be strong. As far as Vasanth is concerned, I really think he played it safe- didn't really want to take chances with the women in his films although they were very dignified. Some of the recent directors may have portrayed women better than our previous gen directors as times are changing. The women in our society are no longer the ones who lived 50 yrs ago. Directors and film makers will have to change the way the portray women when the society changes. Movies are a reflection of our society. Doesn't mean they can make any kind of movies. Just saying that we as people need to change for us to see the change in movies. These directors will be forced to change or they become outdated. A movie like VIP doesn' t offend me- it is a harmless entertainer. I am a woman, mother and a daughter and none of what has been told in the movie bother me. Just because we are women, we must not take exception to anything and everything said in movies. Shalini is a harmless character- and remember there are several Shalinis out there in our society who lead the exact same lives as her. Why so much hue and cry about this movie? This debate can go on and on but my point is that we need to raise the red flag for real issues and not make an issue out of everything related to women.
Ram Murali :
You've given us a lot to chew on with another of your thematic articles on Tamil cinema.
Very well written! My favourite segment of the article was the Meera Jasmine character - when he explodes she implodes . Vow ! Reminds me of Bruce Lee's philosophy (when the opponent expands I contract)
Having said that I enjoyed reading Anusha's reactions - especially the "thuru thuru" part :)
Now, you've taken a position - quite a reasonable and safe position - I'm tending to agree with you broadly in that the benchmark for portrayal of women in tamil cinema is so low that any good morsel becomes a meal.
I do have issues with KB's portrayal of women(havent seen vasanth's movies and since I'll hit the half century mark in less than 2 years I probably never will since I dont get around to seeing movies anyway).
I dont think KB really understands women. IMHO its objectification of a different kind. For instance, his portrayal of "Woman is a bundle of contradictions" was pretty shallow and dull to say the least.
If its any help even as recent as 1982 Male chauvinism in Hollywood was alive and kicking to an obnoxious degree. So we have a looooong way to go I guess.....
Don't have much to say about the portrayal of women characters in Tamil films, given that I don't/haven't watched many of the newer ones, but I must agree with Anusha on the general sentiment expressed. I'm tired of doling out praise because to the makers because they 'try' to do something different. Asking that women not be objectified or shown as stereotypes is not a 'feminist' view - it is a humanist one. There are rare rays of hope, but they are few and far between.
Like Ravishanker, I too have several bones to pick about KB's portrayal of womanhood, but that'll serve for another day.
Thank you for a balanced blog post on this issue. Easy to rave, rant and find fault with everyone that makes a Tamil film but I liked that you offered a measured point of view.
I am surprised you didn't mention the movies by Mahendran, a director who represented women interestingly and with lot of depth. Johnny was a great movie.
Very well put Anonymous. Well balanced article by Ram Murali
Hello everyone - thank you for all your comments. Not responding individually like I usually do lest I repeat my points of view and explanations from my write-up. The varied reactions were very interesting to read. Disagreeing on these things is par for the course given the nature of the topic! :)
Ram
Since I belong to an older generation, I can think of movies that Lakshmi made in those days-Sila Nerangalil Sila Manidargal was way ahead of times in Jayakanthan's thinking and Lakshmi's portrayal of Ganga was so well groomed and I think a shade better that than that envisaged by the author. Similarly Sirai was another trendsetter where the woman defied society in her bold decision.
Yes-KB was the first to do women oriented movies in a male dominated Shivaji MGR days and for that reason alone he needs to be lauded.
Haven't seen VIP 2 but as pointed out by many in BR's blog, it appears that Dhanush's character does come across as condescending in the climactic sequence, where he talks about gender equality. Also, it seems that the character is some sort of a "new age" feminist that obfuscates gender inequality by using the modern day definition of feminism - that men and women were ALWAYS equal.
GVM's characters have never looked real to me. Even the clip that you've posted here begins with Trisha saying, "Ippadi smart ayitae pona naanga ellam enna panradhu". The Ajith character doesn't convince me that he would marry a single mother. On the other hand, Kamal asking Saranya to marry him in Nayagan/Vijaykanth asking Revathi to marry him in Chatriyan convinces me a lot. Simply put, GVM is a poor clone of the 80s Mani Ratnam in many aspects.
I think Mahendran and Balu Mahendra wrote better women characters partly because they both were inspired by Ray. Ray followed the Tagorean approach rather than the feminist one - which is why his characters have aged very well.
KB ya pathi inimey solradhukku onnum illa. Okay, let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater. :)
Venkatesh: "Okay, let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater" :) Ha Ha :)
Venkatesh - thalaiva, pora poakula that will be rephrased, "Let's not throw KB out with the bathwater" :) May his soul rest in peace. :)
Ha ha. Just realised it after seeing Ravishanker's comment. :)
Ram Murali : Nice turn of phrase :)
Ravishanker - nandri :)
I got a couple of interesting responses via e-mail to this article, which I have requested permission to share.
Comment from Iswarya via e-mail. Thank you, Iswarya, for your kind and, as always, measured response.
"Thanks for sharing the link here. I read through your blog post. I liked the points you made about the Meera Jasmine role and Agni Saatchi. But on the whole, as Anu and others have said, I have limited patience with filmmakers still walking away with praise in 2017 just for "trying". I guess you must have sensed that even in my response to Taramani. I suppose it's the impatience that stems from the annoyance of everyday life as a woman in India. :)
However, you've written from a very balanced position not letting personal frustration cloud your judgement and I sometimes feel KB deserves a more sympathetic appraisal than what he currently gets from many women. That way I appreciate your giving him his due.
I am glad you shared with me your thoughts on this subject that obviously interests me a lot."
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