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The
hero has changed. It has been happening for the last so many years but,
finally, it has come to stay. Thank God, we are out of the image of the
so called conventional hero and heroine. When I say “we” –
I mean both the makers and the viewers.
Well, change is the spice of life, and change is the only thing that brings
progress. In the thirties and forties, we had the hero who was very slow
and sluggish. Of course, that was the pace of that particular era. The
hero had to sing himself. At that time singing was not only an added qualification
but the foremost prerequisite for being a hero. The same applied to heroines
also. They also had to sing songs, and since the pace at that time was
slow, they sang slower, sad songs and eventually landed up as tormented
lovers. Slower pace resulted in sad endings. |
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The fifties and the sixties brought to fore the dancing hero, dancing
heroines and plots with more pace. But we got stuck with Mr. Clean and
Ms. Sati Savitri as hero and heroine. The hero never ranked second in
the university but always stood first. The hero never lied. He would do
or die for his family which generally consisted of a mother and younger
sister. He may have danced and gyrated with any number of girls but once
he met the heroine, he fell in eternal love with her which was termed
as ‘SAAT JANAM KA BANDHAN ‘. He was also the lad of the community.
He sparked off all the “Gali Ka” songs, and the entire mohalla
joined him in the festivities. He was God-fearing and never question God’s
decisions. He could single- handedly take on any number of goons and come
out victorious with at the most a red band with a dot of blood on his
forehead. Generally, he had a sick mother and didn’t have a father.
The main qualification for the hero in that era was his ability to dance.
He had very competent playback singers, so he didn’t have to bother
on that front.
The heroine, on the other hand, had to be devout and pious. She was slightly
naughty and played pranks with the hero at times. She would get into the
act of coquetry but when the hero came near to embrace her,she would keep
her two arms in between, right in front of the chest of the hero so that
the hero doesn’t get a feel of her body. She was so pious. Generally,
she didn’t have a mother. Her father only had given her both ‘MAA
KA PYAAR and BAAP KA PYAAR’. Since she was a symbol of purity, she
did not supply any sexy scenes for the film. Film-makers had to depend
upon other female character artiste to fulfill this demand. These roles
were of vamps. For her the ability to dance was a major qualification,
and if she knew classical dance also, it was ‘SONE PE SUHAGA’.
The heroine, her mother and her younger brother were a vulnerable lot
and, quite often they were kidnapped and locked up in a remote place by
the villain just at the pre-climax of the film so that the climax could
end up in a nail-biting finish.
Then we came to the seventies and eighties when the image of the conventional
hero went for a toss. It changed totally and the main protagonist for
this being Mr. Bachchan,. The ANTI-HERO was born. Now we had a hero who
was victimized by the society, who was anti-establishment and who didn’t
give love first priority. His first priority was to set the system right,
which he did single- handedly. The audience just loved him for that because
through his heroic deeds, the viewers could give vent to their own anger
against the system. He was a One-Man Army. He was larger than life. Ability
to jump into action was his main qualification. He had to excel in fight
and action sequences and, at times, he didn’t use a double for stunts,
and got hurt too. In this period the hero was either an upright and honest
police officer or he was a commoner fighting a corrupt police officer
who led him the hierarchical ladder right up to the senior politicians
and ministers.
The heroine in this period was not in the spotlight because most of the
films were male oriented. The heroine was mainly used as a showpiece.
All she had to do was one or two dance numbers, and one of them was definitely
to lure the hero and bring him back into a happy mood as he was always
upset fighting the system.
And now we come to the present era where definitions of hero and heroine
have changed once again. Hero is now a person who does not necessarily
fit into commercial yardsticks. He may not be tall. He may not be well-built.
He may not be a good or a classic fighter. In this era he has to be a
person with a good sense of humour. And he may also be the main comedian
of the movie. This is also the period of MATRIX, so the hero has to be
intelligent and computer savvy. Brain power before the muscle power. So
hero could be a man with ordinary looks, height and body.
The heroine in this period has also transformed. These are the times of
MTV so the heroine does not hesitate to twirl her pelvis on sexy numbers
and that too scantily clad. The makers do not now need the help of other
actors and dancers to provide the required dosage of sex in their films.
The heroine fits the bill.
So change is imperative. Change has to come and change is a must. Let’s
see what we have in store for Generation next. You never know some alien
might just become the hero,s as the trends indicate. Well, isn’t
he already!
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