Bollywood's 100-year kiss sparks debate on gay films

Posted In : Gossips
(added 27 May 2013)

New Bollywood film "Bombay Talkies" is billed as a milestone not only for marking 100 years of Indian cinema - it is also one of the country's few mainstream movies ever to have shown a gay kiss. The centenary film, which had a special screening at Cannes, comprises four self-contained short stories by leading directors looking at the impact of Indian cinema on people's lives. The short film from director Karan Johar features a kiss between a young man and his best friend's husband as part of an exploration of sexual identity and marital discord. While such scenes in the past may have elicited catcalls in India's populist single-screen theatres, this time the kiss has been winning applause from audiences, according to gay rights advocate Nitin Karani. "That's a positive reaction, which may indicate that society is more ready than film producers when it comes to gay stories," he said.

Bollywood's 100-year kiss sparks debate on gay films

And with one of the characters in the kiss played by 'sex symbol' actor Randeep Hooda, the film "shatters stereotypes faster", Karani believes. In another of the short stories, director Zoya Akhtar shows a young boy exploring his feminine side by emulating and dressing up as Katrina Kaif, his Bollywood heroine. "Bombay Talkies was an important film for Karan and Zoya as it was projected as a movie celebrating 100 years of cinema," said Karani. "So for them to take up issues of sexuality and gender was commendable." The tales in "Bombay Talkies" have sparked debate over such issues in Bollywood, where homosexuality has long been kept in the closet - or portrayed in stereotypical roles. "Mainstream Hindi cinema has portrayed gay characters as feminine, over the top, obsessed with sex, and to be laughed at," said director Onir, who only uses his first name.

"When they are not stereotyped like this, they are shown as boyfriend stealers or home-breakers," he said, pointing out than even "Bombay Talkies" shows "the gay boy hitting on his best friend's husband".Onir's 2005 film "My Brother... Nikhil" won acclaim for portraying the story of a gay relationship and the issue of HIV with both maturity and sensitivity - traits that remain confined largely to the independent and documentary fields. But alternative films are gaining ground with wider audiences: last week saw the fourth Kashish Mumbai International Queer Film festival, the first such event to be held in a mainstream Indian theatre.

(added 27 May 2013) / 1070 views

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