Live
- ‘Get Set, Grow Summit 2024’ Focuses on Digital Detox for Families
- Stokes motivates his team to put in extra effort, says England pacer Potts
- From overcoming setbacks to leading India in U19 Women’s Asia Cup, Niki Prasad's amazing journey
- Driving Enterprise Security: Inside Venkata Reddy Thummala’s Leadership Journey
- Constitution debate: PM Modi hails 'Nari Shakti'; makes strong pitch for 'United Bharat’
- Abhijeet Bhardwaj: Revolutionizing Enterprise Analytics with Innovation and Expertise
- Bihar: Inquiry initiated against principal who went to buy veggies during school hours
- Press Sri Lankan Prez for release of Indian fishermen: TN Cong MP to EAM Jaishankar
- TN: DMK postpones executive meet due to heavy rains & Parliament session
- Porous silicon oxide electrodes can fix durability issues in batteries: Researchers
Just In
x
Highlights
Aliya Bhatt\'s 2 States a welcome relief, It goes without saying that a well-made romantic film can make your day.
It goes without saying that a well-made romantic film can make your day.
“2 States” made mine! The movie came as a respite!
Long, long ago, I remember my grandfather grumbling: “Today’s movies are meaningless, they only show ‘dhishum dhishum’.” A die-hard fan of Dilip Kumar, Dev Anand and Pardeep Kumar’s style of romance, he used to find the emerging film culture of the 1980s, led by the likes of Amitabh Bachchan and Shatrughan Sinha, distasteful.
His disparagement of those action thrillers, stemming from the then political unrest with several actors playing the victimised working-class hero fighting corruption were not good enough to impress an old hat like him who used to savour social dramas and serene love stories like “Andaaz”, Tarana”, “Madhumati”, “Patita” and “Munimji” made me cringe.
He felt those films offered a rather myopic view of contemporary youth and would discourage us from watching them.
At that time I had somewhat different views on the movies, but I could relate to his views when I went to catch “2 States”, the big screen adaptation of Chetan Bhagat’s novel of the same name, a delightful depiction of how cultural differences pose a threat to a Punjabi boy and a Tamilian girl’s love life and marriage plans and how skillfully and maturely the duo handle the situation.
Despite being familiar with the story, which I read when Bhagat’s literary work hit the shelves in 2009, and enjoyed the book not for its romantic escapades, but for the way the problems were treated and meted in the book, I was pleased with its celluloid presentation too.
It’s heartening!
Even though plots and sub-plots, characters and obstacles were the same, the slightly sluggish drama was thoroughly entertaining.
Refreshing content with a feel good factor was a much-needed break from the appalling love sagas that telly is serving day in and day out.
Not that I’m a big fan of the genre, but enjoyed the watch more so because romance has been criminlaised, brutalised, scandalised and demoralised on the tube, one’s staple source of entertainment, so much so that it has lost its quintessence.
In the last few years, there has been a deluge of crime-based shows on the telly and the so-called outrageous real-life stories showing the revolting and repulsive side of romance, in which most often lovers are abused, murdered, tortured, or blackmailed for various reasons – be it to avenge hurt egos, cheating lovers or spouses etc, are being shoved down viewers’ throat. And to my surprise, they are grabbing maximum eyeballs.
Not denying the existence of such crimes in real life, but too much of anything is bad.
Mind you, “2 States” is also a real life story of the author, but unlike the shows, here the lovers do not kill anyone for their union or have any hidden agenda behind falling in love or getting married.
In most of the crime shows, falling in love or getting intimate lead to MMS scandals or YouTube videos followed by heinous crime, thus making romance a forbidden thing.
In fact, similar plots recently dominated the celluloid with stories like “Love Sex Aur Dhokha” and “Ragini MMS” hitting the screens.
In the current scenario, technology is a boon and bane. Bane, because it is being misused, and abused!
Yes, international shows are there, but they are for the classes, not the masses.
In a quest for de-stressing light drama, viewers end up watching the shows.
In the 1980s and 1990s, telly treated viewers with shows like “Kashish”, “Farmaan” and Lekh Tandon’s “Phir Wohi Talaash”, which had beautiful ghazals like “Mere humsafar mere saath tum”, "Kabhi haadson ki dagar mile kabhi muskilon ka safar mile" and “Na jee bher ke dekha na kuch baat ki badi aarjo thi mulakat ki”.
It’s time television producers do the needful!
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com