I saw a movie last month ‘Agnipath’ and I saw a movie again
this month ‘Paan Singh Tomar’. Last month I was in Goa with Biki and so all the
boys said lets go and watch a movie. This month I went by myself because I
wanted to see Paan Singh Tomar. For me this is a puzzling phase because I don’t
see movies anymore for months and years together. Two movies in two successive
months is an odd change, big time. There was a time twenty five years ago
during 1984 to 1986 when I was new in Nagpur, with no friends and used to see
atleast a movie every week. I maintained a dairy about the date the actors and
the songs and saw more than two hundred movies during that period. The reason
for the sudden surge in movie watching apart from loneliness was also because
my father had a long time ago scolded me for watching too many movies and
therefore I had totally stopped going to the theater. I was kind of doing
overtime then for all the movies I had missed. Slowly over the years I came to
realize that movies were a waste of time. Main stream Hindi cinema is always
over the top, always unrealistic. The non-main stream or parallel cinema was
very boring and the third option ‘slapstick comedy’ movies were only bearable
on certain days. They had stopped making those mythological movies decades
back. Many a times I had suffered because I misinterpreted the life as depicted
in the movies to be real life. The relationship, emotion, thinking, and action
as shown in the movies used to impact my thought process and this led to many
disappointments. I was impressionable and stupid, I still am but then I managed
to move away from the movies. One day the realization dawned upon me that by watching
movies I become completely dependent for my happiness on the happenings with
some fictional character all outside of my control and my life. In fact I was
pawning my personal inner growth for some unrealistic stories and unfortunately
calling myself happy. My friends like everybody’s friends discussed movies with
a passion as if their life hinged on it. The popularity and non-admiration of
the star cast became the central focus of their lives. This behavior is being
justified on the grounds that movies make us forget the harsh realities of
life. But I reckon that we humans like to see movies because we love our image
and our ego and cannot stop imagining ourselves in the shoes of the character
weighing emotions and executing impossible actions. We love to roll in the ego,
firmly believing in the triumph of goodness and in automatic deliverance in a
God fearing society. Therefore emotions that seize and captivate our heart like
laughter, thrill, dare-devil feats, sacrifice, romance, anger, hatred and sex
are very popular. Sadly that takes us away from understanding who we really are,
from understanding what real life is about and what permanent happiness really
is. Ironically the make belief and the false triumph. Alas!
Well, both Agnipath and Paan Singh Tomar are similar in story-line. They are about the vulnerable good folks who when unjustly treated by bad oppressors, succumb to the emotion of anger, seek vengeance and in the process sacrifice their life. The broad theme is about self-respect and the non-tolerance of injustice. But while the former is over the top and loud the latter is very practical, down to earth and artistic. Paan Singh Tomar was a treat to watch. Since it was based on a real individual I wanted to understand why an achiever lost his balance, I should mention that I came back satisfied. The treatment of a man’s vulnerability and his pride has been very delicately handled. After very many years I really wanted to see a movie and I am pleased that my instinct was right.
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