
TOLLYWOOD TRIUMPH. This image released by Netflix shows Ram Charan
and N.T. Rama Rao Jr. in a scene from RRR. India’s film
industry is one of the most vast and varied in the world — it’s
really not one but many separate industries, including Bollywood,
Tollywood, and others — yet few of the country’s roughly 2,000
annually produced movies ever make much of a dent with western
audiences. (Netflix via AP) |
From The Asian Reporter, V32, #8 (August 1, 2022), pages 15 & 20.
Global success of RRR signals breakthrough for
Tollywood
By Jake Coyle
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — India’s film industry is one of the most vast and varied in
the world — it’s really not one but many separate industries, including
Bollywood, Tollywood, and others — yet few of the country’s roughly 2,000
annually produced movies ever make much of a dent with western audiences.
"We have a long tradition of storytelling in India. We have probably the
oldest and most colorful stories," says director S.S. Rajamouli. "Not being
able to travel across borders has been a disappointment."
That has changed emphatically with Rajamouli’s RRR, a three-hour
Telugu- language action epic that has not only become one of India’s biggest
hits ever but climbed U.S. box-office charts before finding an even wider
audience on Netflix. For nine straight weeks, RRR has ranked among
the top 10 non-English language films on the streaming service. Dubbed in
Hindi and subtitled in 15 different languages, RRR is the most
popular film from India ever on Netflix, charting among the top 10 films in
62 different countries.
For many, RRR, based on Hindu mythology and the freedom fighters
that fought British colonialism, is their first encounter with Tollywood,
the Telugu movie industry, or Indian films, at all. What many have seen is a
movie filled to the brim with over-the-top action sequences and sprawling
dance numbers, and an energy that today’s Hollywood blockbusters seldom
match. Motorbikes are juggled. Tigers are thrown. Suspenders prove a
surprisingly pliable dancing prop.
"There is never enough for me," Rajamouli said in a recent interview from
Hyderabad in India. "The only thing too much is my producer coming in and
saying, ‘We’re crossing our budget. You need to stop somewhere.’ That is the
only thing that will stop me. If given a chance, I will go even bigger and
wilder, no doubt about it.
"To the brink, and nothing less."
That go-for-broke style has earned the endorsements of some of
Hollywood’s blockbuster filmmakers. James Gunn and Scott Derrickson, who
have each helmed Marvel movies, have heaped their praise on RRR since
it began streaming.
The RRR success has come while Netflix is reeling from subscriber
loss and a stock decline, a downturn that has thrown its movie model into
debate. But one less disputable aspect of Netflix’s platform is its ability
to foster non-English global hits. RRR comes in the wake of global
series hits like the Korean "Squid Game" and France’s "Lupin."
Theatrical-first movies like the South Korean best-picture-winning
Parasite have already toppled what director Bong Joon Ho has called "the
one-inch barrier" of subtitles.
"Frankly, I didn’t expect this kind of reception from the west," says
Rajamouli. "In the country and across the Indian diaspora all over the world
is what we expected. But the reception from the west was a complete surprise
for me. I always thought that western sensibilities are different from my
kind of films. I mostly cater to eastern or Indian sensibilities."
But while RRR has certain effects-heavy Hollywood characteristics
that make it not so dissimilar from a superhero movie, it’s deeply engrained
in Indian myth and present-day circumstance. "RRR" stands for "Rise Roar
Revolt," but it also refers to Rajamouli and his two stars, N.T. Rama Rao
Jr. and Ram Charan. They’re each from movie-star dynasties that have
previously been more like rivals. This is Charan and Rao’s first film
together, which is a little like a meeting of Al Pacino and Robert De Niro,
if they were also the sons of Marlon Brando and James Dean.
They play real-life Indian revolutionaries Alluri Sitarama Raju (Charan)
and Komaram Bheem (Rao) who team up in 1920s British-controlled India. In
returning to the origins of modern-day India, RRR inevitably relates
to today’s India, where, like in many other countries in recent years,
nationalism has been on the rise. Since being elected in 2014, Prime
Minister Narendra Modi has emboldened India’s Hindu majority, sometimes at
the expense of its Muslim minority.
Rajamouli, 48, has risen as one of the country’s biggest name directors
over the same time period. He launched his two-part Baahubali epic in
2015. Its 2017 sequel ranks as the country’s biggest box-office smash. (Both
are also streaming on Netflix.) But the political subtext of those films
some have found troubling.
"In Baahubali, even though it seems to have no connection with the
political present, what it foregrounds is a muscular form of Hinduism, which
is the worst manifestation of the right-wing nationalism," says Rini
Bhattacharya Mehta, a University of Illinois professor who has written
several books on Indian cinema. "Jingoist, nationalistic Hindu machismo. In
the story, it’s projected into the mythological past."
Baahubali was a Telugu triumph that signalled that Tollywood in
India’s South had perhaps surpassed Bollywood as the country’s top movie
factory. In RRR, the most expensive Telugu film ever made with a
budget of $72 million, Rajamouli is juggling both Telugu traditions and
Bollywood song-and-dance aesthetics in what Mehta considers a Pan-Indian
movie. Muslim characters appear, although not in primary roles.
RRR in this way may not be so different from American blockbusters.
This summer’s top film in the U.S., Top Gun: Maverick, also doesn’t
skimp on muscular jingoism. Rajamouli has heard the critics but disagrees
with their interpretations.
"I understand that point of view. Sometimes, I feel they’re just being
blind," he says. "Personally, I’m an atheist. I don’t believe in god. I
don’t believe in any religion. But I understand the power of spiritualism.
For me, spiritualism is an emotion. And I write stories filled with
emotions."
Surely, many of the cultural references and connections in RRR
will sail right over the heads of most western viewers. But the sheer verve
of its filmmaking isn’t getting lost in translation — and that may mean more
cultural-crossovers for Tollywood and India to come.
"India cinema has had a different life and cycle of its own. If we keep
an open mind, we can see this as the arrival of something," says Mehta.
"Only time can tell. We’ll have to see if this is actually a new trend and
there will be more films like this made. Indian or Telugu cinema might keep
it up, or this might be a one-shot thing."
Rajamouli, meanwhile, is prepping his next highly anticipated film. He’s
now often asked about whether he’d ever want to make a Hollywood movie or a
Marvel one. RRR, though, hints more at western audiences coming to
Indian films, than vice versa. And Rajamouli’s focus is in making Indian
films for India and beyond.
"Because of the success of RRR with western audiences, I am trying
to make a film for the entire world, not just India," says Rajamouli. "But I
wouldn’t try to locate western sensibilities and try to match up and change
my story according to that. I think that would never work."
Read the current issue of The Asian Reporter in its
entirety!
Go to <www.asianreporter.com/completepaper.htm>!
|