The patriotic card in Hindi films is getting stale

It wouldn’t be wrong to say the patriotic card has become dog-eared. Akshay Kumar who owns the patriotic slot now looks jaded doing the same old self righteous flag waving in film after film

Photo courtesy: social media
Photo courtesy: social media
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Subhash K Jha

What happened to all the great patriotic films that would light up our movie theatres every year, and not only for Republic Day and Independence Day? All the great films of Manoj Kumar from Upkar to Roti Kapada aur Makaan now seem greater than ever, as patriotism is reduced to a mere formula in the films that still go in that direction .

Admit it. This Independence Day, the supposedly patriotic films look extremely predictable and somewhat dull. I am not doubting the patriotic integrity of Reema Kagti’s Gold, a film that recreates the Olympian zeal of the first Indian hockey team to win a Gold medal. It has Farhan Akhtar as producer. He did the patriotic classic Bhaag Milkha Bhaag. Milkha ran. But the theme of nationalism is on the run.

Everything in desh-bhakti genre since then is honourable but bland. We’ve seen the sportive spirit wrapped in the Indian flag over and over again, most recently in the under rated under-performing gem Soorma where Diljit Dosanjh took proprietarily control of hockey player Sandeep Singh’s life.

Gold, the Independence Day release last year, is again about hockey, and that too just week after Soorma. I don’t know if the game is gaining any credence. But we are certainly being force-fed too many motivational sports films that follow the familiar trope of Reluctant Player(s), Motivational Incident, Daunting Setback, Ultimate Triumph….applause. Finger crossed….Tax exemption.

It wouldn’t be wrong to say the patriotic card has become dog-eared. Akshay Kumar who owns the patriotic slot now looks jaded doing the same old self righteous flag waving in film after film. I am not sure whether he needs a change, or whether the patriotic genre, once a thriving inspiring means to inculcate a sense of nationalistic fervor in the audience, have lost its sheen.

The other Independence Day release this year goes by the blatantly jingoistic title of Satyamev Jayate. I remember Vinod Khanna made a comeback with a film by that title after serving Rajneesh. This Satyamev Jayate has John Abraham taking on corrupt politicians, etc. I am sure the gardens that Vinod Khanna tended in Oregon were far more interesting.

This is so familiar, it can actually work. Sometimes the comfort of the familiar pays off. Akshay Kumar has been basking in that comfort for years now. Last seen selling the idea of economical sanitary pads on Republic Day, he is now gone periodically parochial sporting what he thinks is a Bengali accent playing the hockey coach Tapan Das.

I still prefer Akshay’s alleged Bengali accent to Kangana Ranaut’s royal arrogance. Yes, patriotism for Republic Day 2019 would entail a bedecked haughty and hopefully fiery Kangana Ranaut as Jhansi Ki Rani in Telugu director Krish’s Manikarnika.

I can hardly wait….to see Kangana get off that high horse this January.

Pandering to patriotism is all very fine. But the formula needs a serious reinvention. Just waving the flag is not enough. The Indian patriotic cinema needs to ensure that our interest level doesn’t flag.

It is time to stop portraying only one aspect of patriotism, the jingoistic aspect. There are many obfuscated sides to the patriotic conundrum. Anubhav Sinha’s Mulk which according to me a truly patriotic film. It shows the subversion of patriotic zeal by an aggressive majority who feel they own the nationalistic sentiment. But as Rakeysh Mehra had shown in the last truly remarkable patriotic film Rang De Basanti, if you push the patriotic impulse in the wrong direction you get anarchy, chaos and annihilation.

Be warned. Patriotism in our cinema is now at the brink. A revolution is pending.

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