My Yahoo! Movies column, first published here.
As dahi handis and four-storey
structures take centrestage, it might be a fantastic idea to look at movies
where Janmashtami and Sri Krishna have been the centre-stage of the story,
scene or song.
Govinda
ala re, ala... the signature song of Janmashtami, which
is still the first song in the playlist was kicked off by Shammi Kapoor in
Manmohan Desai’s Bluffmaster. The
story of the fibber who turns honest (only to have no one believe him) was
punctuated by a Janmashtami
song
where Shammi Kapoor did his trademark gyrations as crowds gathered, human
pyramids were scaled and pots of milk were burst. And the Kalyanji-Anandji tune
is still as popular as it was fifty years ago.
Every Indian festival has an Amitabh
Bachchan song associated with it. – Old Bollywood Saying.
Just when the Shammi Kapoor song was becoming old, Amitabh Bachchan jumped into the fray with a hit song from Khud-daar. The energy of the matki phod, the chemistry with the womenfolk, the chaos, the mayhem were brought out beautifully to a tune composed by Rajesh Roshan. Parveen Babi was the ideal foil in a nauvari saree.
Just when the Shammi Kapoor song was becoming old, Amitabh Bachchan jumped into the fray with a hit song from Khud-daar. The energy of the matki phod, the chemistry with the womenfolk, the chaos, the mayhem were brought out beautifully to a tune composed by Rajesh Roshan. Parveen Babi was the ideal foil in a nauvari saree.
Every generation has a superstar
reprising the Janmashtami sequence. After Shammi and the Big B, it was the turn
of the Salman Khan who pulled off a similar sequence in Hello Brother. With Rani Mukherji for company, he donned pink
trousers (don’t even ask!) and netted vests to sing a Janmashtami song.
BTW, it also included a joke about his – ahem – not-so-substantial height.
Sanjay Dutt played the typical Mumbai
tapori with a pav-bhaji tapdi in Vaastav.
Before he became an underworld don, he was a simple kid running his business by
the week and running towards his matka by the weekend. A tale of misguided
anger was kicked off by a song
where his mandli went from matka to matka, bursting them and earning prize
money. Not that he needed it. He was sponsoring his locality’s Govinda but the
matki phod had a special charm.
Hrithil Roshan is the final name in the
list of Janmashtami songs. He played the deadpan hero of Agneepath but when it came to breaking the matki of Govinda,
Hrithik came running with all muscles rippling and eyebrows quivering. In the
film, this was the introduction
sequence of the hero – Vijay Dinanath Chavan. Egged on by his
cheering cohorts and supported by his loyal army, Vijay Chavan was the perfect
candidate for bursting the matki.
Not all the Govinda sequences are about
song and dance. Especially when Sunny Deol is involved.
In Narsimha,
Sunny Deol was the hired goon who was out to kill a witness for the state on
the orders his villainous leader. In an elaborate sequence,
Sunny Deol used the grandeur and chaos of the multi-storied matki-phod of
Janmashtami to polish off his quarry.
The tune of the song played during the
sequence – like so many others – was the same as the original Bluffmaster song!
Go
go go Govinda!
The latest Govinda hit is
from the Akshay Kumar starrer – OMG Oh
My God – though the song was performed – not by God Akshay but – by lesser
mortals like Prabhu Deva and Sonakshi Sinha. With skimpily clad backup dancers
in support, the song was less about Janmashtami but more about the energy of
the Govinda song.
Oh – but the matki does get phodoed. By
Sonakshi.
Krishna is not only about Janmashtami.
In Satyam
Shivam Sundaram, a Krishna bhajan was
performed by a child (the young version of Zeenat Aman, played by a child Padmini
Kolhapure) and alludes to the racist complaint about Radha’s fairness and
Krishna’s darkness. The song went on to become one of the biggest hits of the
times.
Krishna is not about love. Krishna is
not about Vishnu’s avatar. Krishna is not about makhan chori.
Krishna is about disco. One sec... what?
In Disco
Dancer, Mithun performed this absolute priceless gem of a song
where he wore sequined costumes, gyrated to pulsating beats and requested Lord
Krishna to appear on Earth (and teach us love). The stage props included one
oversized flute and crown as Mithun made his request, seconded manifold by the
backup dancers.
The T-Series juggernaut of the 90s
churned out a devotional
epic
(complete with jhankaar beats) called Meera
Ka Mohan, which – true to its name – supported devotional music. Starring
the indomitable Avinash Wadhwan, the song was disco number, explaining our love
for Krishna as the ‘greatest musician of this world’ and the message of love he
passed on. We got away with murder in 90s, I tell you.
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