My Yahoo! Movies column, first published here.
As Aurangzeb jumps out of the underworld
and into our lives today, it would be a worthwhile exercise to look at his
ancestors. Mughal emperors – with their pomp and grandeur – have been a big
favourite of Bollywood directors. Here are some of them, in reverse
chronological order.
The first name in the list enters somewhat
slyly. Because the film never got made!
Aakhri Mughal was supposed to be
Abhishek Bachchan’s launch vehicle. Directed by J.P. Dutta, it was the tale of
Bahadur Shah Zafar’s relationship with his son. Apparently,
the rights were with Kamal Amrohi once upon a time and he had wanted to make
the film with Amitabh Bachchan, after
seeing him in Zanjeer. It did not
happen then. It did not happen with the son.
With all star sons getting launched in
all-singing-alldancing-all-muscle-flexing roles, a debut like this would have
been very different (to the point of being risky). But then, so was Abhishek’s
actual debut film—Refugee—with the same director.
A monument as timeless as the Taj Mahal has
been accorded not one, but two movies named after it. Quite unfortunately,
neither of Shah Jahans evoked much excitement.
In the 1960s version, Pradeep Kumar played
Shah Jahan and the movie was famous for excellent music composed by Roshan. The
soundtrack included the superhit Jo vaada
kiya woh nibhana padega which the hero sang soulfully for the benefit of
Bina Rai.
Emperor Trivia: Pradeep Kumar has the
distinction of playing Shah Jahan in this movie and Jahangir in another movie
called Anarkali.
Akbar Khan made Taj Mahal: An Eternal Love Story with a lavish budget and not much
commercial success. Zulfi Sayed played the young Shah Jahan while Kabir Bedi
donned white tresses to play the old version. Pakistani actress Sonya Jehan
played the object of affection and devotion. The romance of Prince Khurram and
Arjumand Bano Begum reached its culmination in the white mausoleum – a symbol
of eternal love as well as a place where a king’s dreams lay buried.
Jahangir was immortalised by his birth
name – Prince Salim – where one of India’s greatest actors played him in Mughal-e-Azam. K Asif directed Dilip
Kumar in the magnificent saga of a prince rebelling against his father the
emperor for the love of a woman. Before he became the ‘conqueror of the world’,
Salim was just a man in love and frustrated by his class-conscious father. In
some of the largest battle scenes filmed in Bollywood, Prince Salim took on
Emperor Akbar and lost spectacularly. Prithviraj Kapoor played the baritone
voiced emperor whose kingship forced him to take up arms against his rebellious
son.
And there was Madhubala, who was worth
every war fought in the history of India.
Emperor
Trivia: In Anand, Johnny Walker
also played Salim in a theatre production and uttered the immortal lines that
Anand would make his death speech. Zindagi
aur maut uparwale ke haath mein hai, jahanpanah...
More
Emperor Trivia: In an absolutely obscure film Angaar, Kader Khan played a Robin Hoodesque Mafia don – Jahangir
Khan – who ruled Bombay with an iron hand and velvet gloves. His (and his
sons’) run-ins with hero Jackie Shroff formed the crux of this eminently
forgettable movie.
In Jodha
Akbar – a film which was historically before and chronologically after
Mughal-e-Azam – Akbar was no longer the spoilsport but a rather flamboyant
lover. Hrithik Roshan – he of the sculpted body and chiselled looks – romanced
Aishwarya Rai – she of the dulcet voice and mesmerising eyes – in the grand
film.
Ashutosh Gowariker invented several new
historical ‘events’ to concoct this tale of love and honour between the Muslim
ruler of India and his Hindu wife. When Akbar acquiesced to each of Jodha’s
demands in order to marry her, who knew he would soon be haranguing his son for
marrying a girl of his choice?
The final name in the list in Babar or –
more accurately – Baabarr, a crime
drama set in the ganglands of Uttar Pradesh where one Baabarr Qureshi ruled the
underworld with aggressive help from the police and politicians. It traced his
rise from a poor little boy to a dreaded gangster and pitted him against two
charismatic actors as police officers – Om Puri and Mithun Chakraborty. The
movie’s tagline ominously declared “I was... I am... I will be... Baabarr” which
did nothing to improve the collections and Baabarr collapsed at the box office.
Historical
Alert: The last time Om and Mithun formed a team was when the former was
the latter’s manager in Disco Dancer
and you could say Mithun was the Emperor of Disco!
Comments
The Jehangir Khan touch was very good, but the movie Angaar was not bad at all I feel. Jackie, Nana & Kader Khan gave powerful performances and the climax had created quite a ripple, wherein Kader Khan blows up the entire parliament! Also, Jackie’s fathers (Achyut Poddar) “Ae Jagguuuuu” screams were quite popular in school at that time!:)