The Indian Superman
Our rating: one LAVA motion lamp.
Bea Arthur... strength fading..." |
Superman is one of those rare movies that manages to offend on every level. It is badly acted, badly directed, badly filmed, and makes no sense whatsoever. And just to add that extra level of offensiveness, the whole project is probably illegal. This Superman, namely the Indian Superman, is a stone cold rip-off of the 1978 Richard Donner film. It steals story elements, special effects footage, and even music from that far superior film. Because the entire movie is in Hindi with no subtitles, we have spent many hours in the Stomp Tokyo Secret Labs deciphering its plot. With the help of specially trained translators (okay, a friend who speaks Hindi) and sophisticated Bad Movie Shielding technology (okay, the pause button and lots of root beer), we have successfully dissected this Holy Grail of bad movies. We present a detailed synopsis and analysis of this 150-minute monstrosity as proof of our dedication, our courage, our insanity.
art form in India. |
What follows is familiar to fans of the Superman legend. The couple names the child Shekhar, and he begins to show signs of super strength. The first of these occurs while his adopted father (played by Ashok Kumar) is watering the garden, and Shekhar bends the hose. This doesn't seem all that super, but it impresses Dad. Later Shekhar lifts his parents' truck when it gets a flat tire. (We don't see the flat tire, however. You know a movie is on the skids when they can't afford to show you a flat tire!)
princess from Mario Brothers, right?" |
Shekhar grows up (and is thus played by the grown-up Puneet Issar) and goes to college. He is quite enamored of Gita (Ranjeeta Kour?), another student. But bad guy K. K. Verma (Shakti Kapoor) also has designs on Gita. Of course, he doesn't really have a chance because of Shekhar's super powers. At one point Shekhar is left behind on a school trip, but using his super-speed, Shekhar actually manages to beat Verma and Gita to their destination. Seeing Shekhar there, Verma comments, "There is something black in my lentils."
Thank you... thank you very much." |
Shekhar throws a party at the college to celebrate a visit by his Dad. At the party Dad speaks with Dr. Verma (who may be the father of the younger Verma, but we're not sure), the only other person who knows that Shekhar is adopted. Shekhar uses his super-hearing to eavesdrop and discovers the awful truth, which is probably a story with a moral, but since we don't have super powers we're not sure what it could be. When Shekhar confronts his father with the information, Ashok Kumar seizes the opportunity to get out of this movie and fakes a heart attack. But before leaving the film, Dad tells Shekhar where to find a device that was in the spaceship with Shekhar as a baby. This device looks a lot like a Kryptonian vibrator, but we won't mention that because such jokes are beneath us.
was well worth it!" |
But hey, we don't really care about Superman and all that flying jazz, right? Instead of showing Superman doing anything, uh, super, the film immediately dumps in a romantic subplot. Shekhar goes to Bombay and looks up Gita, who lives in a hostel for young female professionals and works as a reporter for the local Daily Times. Shekhar shows up at the hostel and, under the guise of looking for Gita, begins peeking in random doors to see what women really do when they're alone. It turns out that they get dressed and slow dance. Shekhar seems fascinated by this, which really makes us scratch our heads. He's Superman! If he's really into this kind of thing, why doesn't he just fly to the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders' dressing room and put his X-ray vision to good use?
No Money Down' programs really work!" |
Shekhar then tries to get a job at the Daily Times. He goes to the editor's office and tries to convince the man there to give him a job. A long, allegedly humorous conversation follows, but in the end it turns out he is not even the editor! Ha, funny! The real editor is a woman who is not amused by the impostor's antics. Since we never could be bothered to learn the impostor's real name, we'll call him Mr. Odious. He is played by an actor named Jagdeep and he runs through the majority of the film allegedly scoring laughs with his buffoonish behavior. We're sure his style of humor is very popular in certain circles' of Hell!
volleyball team ever!" |
A bit later, we meet Verma's cadre of young female enforcers. No, really. These teenagers wear little white shorts and red T-shirts that have what looks like a stylized "D" on them (no, not their cup size). Verma sends them to kung fu fight members of his organization who betray him. This is a pretty bizarre subplot, considering that the women never clash with Superman.
In an attempt to let Superman do something in the movie, the scene moves to an airplane. Both Gita and Mr. Odious are on it for some reason, so it is naturally hijacked minutes later. But first, wackiness ensues! Mr. Odious needs to go to the bathroom, but it's occupied. Ha! He stands there for a few minutes, his face in positions of anguish as his bladder distends. (We think that was anguish ' it's difficult to separate all of Jagdeep's different facial contortions, since they mostly resemble what any one of us looks like after a hammer has been dropped on our foot.) When he is finally released from his watery torture, he is waylaid by an amorous woman who introduces herself, in English, as "Ms. Muscle Woman from Zambia." Hilarious! Kill us!
Having failed to establish a romantic rapport between Supes and Gita in the airplane scene, the movie puts Gita and Shekhar together on an assignment to investigate a gold smuggling ring. They follow a car (not any particular car, just a car) and are confronted by thugs on a deserted road. Shekhar tells the thugs he needs to go to the bathroom, and they let him go. Then the thugs attack Gita, and Superman shows up to kick their butts. When Shekhar returns as his civilian identity, Gita asks him what took him so long. His answer (and you can tell this by his hand gestures), is that he had to do "number two."
Verma is disturbed by Superman's interference in his plans, so he sets a trap. Some of his lackeys smuggle some gold (from where to where isn't clear... but then, it never is in Bollywood films). Superman follows them, and when he enters the building, it blows up (in footage from some other film, we'd guess. The fact that it changes from night to day is a bit of a tip-off). Verma then proves that he stayed up all night studying his super-villain playbook by assuming that Superman is dead even though he hasn't seen a body. To celebrate, he throws a party with ' you guessed it ' dancing girls!
Oh dear God, we're only an hour in.
enemies is... The Lounge Lizard! |
Superman performs a few more random acts of Hindu kindness, then calls Gita for a quick chat. At the newspaper office, Gita mentions the call to Mr. Odious, which makes him very jealous. He goes to Shekhar to talk about ways to show up Superman so that he might win Gita for himself. Shekhar, in a bit that recalls that old joke about Clark Kent being a mean drunk, suggests to Mr. Odious that he should become a super villain! Unfortunately, Mr. Odious doesn't fall for this, thus robbing us of the sight of Superman crushing his skull like a grape. Instead Mr. Odious waits until everyone has gone home for the night except Gita, then dresses up in a Superman costume and tries to convince her that he is the Big Blue Boy Scout. The odious comic relief that follows is so odious we refuse to write about it.
Let us pause to reflect for a moment. So far we've seen Superman beat up some thugs, save some orphans from corrupt caretakers, outrun a train, and stand in for a broken tire jack. With the exception of rescuing a hijacked plane, he hasn't done much with his superpowers that wasn't strictly in his own interest. Why, then, are we watching a movie about Superman? Couldn't this be a film about a curly-haired high-school teacher given powers by extraterrestrials? Did the makers of the Indian Supermansomehow miss the fact that Superman represents all of the best human characteristics? Why is the name of Superman being sullied thus? For Pete's sake, why isn't he performing altruistic actions worthy of the Man of Steel?
better door than a window. |
At his hideout Verma declares, "I want to be the richest man in the world. And you need money for that." That Verma ' he doesn't miss a trick! Armed with a complicated plan that involves depopulating an area of India and selling it to a foreign country, Verma prepares to make the land uninhabitable by setting disasters upon it with a high-tech gadget, which is cleverly disguised as a sound mixing board. Perhaps used to Verma's hare-brained schemes by now, none of his lackeys mention the fact that the unnamed foreign country might not want to buy land that had been destroyed by earthquakes.
Ever mindful of Superman's potential interference with his plans, Verma lures our hero to his lair, where he renders Supes harmless with a bit of Hindu magic involving an amulet. At least, that's the way our highly trained translator explained it to us. What matters is that Supes ends up face down in an Olympic swimming pool with a piece of Mr. T's gold collection around his neck, and must be revived by his personal pep squad (the ghost of his dead father) before he can kick Verma's ass. And in the meantime -- you guessed it -- more dancing girls!
The dancing girls prance about to a victory tune for Verma, which goes something like this:
We haven't lost and we never will
Today you came into our grasp
We are going to kill you
We are going to kill you
By giving you lots of water to drink
We swear, we are not making this up.
getting smaller? |
Eventually Superman casts off the evil amulet and springs back into action. Confronting Bob and Verma in their other secret lair, Supes discovers that they have set their plan in motion. The villains' comeuppance must wait until our blue-suited hero can stop the earthquakes, which he does by reversing the flow of time. In the originalSuperman, this was done to save Lois Lane's life. In this film, it's more of a party trick. Afterwards, Supes rounds up Verma and his gang, handing them off to the police and leaving just enough room for Jagdeep to inflict his Mr. Odious character upon us one last time.
The End.
As you can probably make out through the fuzzy screen captures, the production values on Superman weren't very high. We suspect that more thought was put into the costumes of the dancing girls than was put into selecting the film stock, and it's a sure bet that the script was written after a drunken weekend of watching the original 1978 movie. Every cost-cutting measure possible was taken, from the cheap flying effects to reversing the film when Superman lifts a baddie into the air.
do a recruitment drive badly! |
The concept behind the film, no doubt, was to make the Superman legend a little more palatable to the Indian film going public. They do this by adding elements familiar to the fans of Bollywood films. Bollywood films are pretty surreal all by themselves, so an attempted rip-off of a movie based on a 60-year-old American comic book is going to be odd duck indeed. As per the rules of Bollywood cinema, there are dancing girls every 15 minutes, almost like clockwork. And the almost insufferable altruism of the American Big S has been all but removed completely.
After about an hour of this film, we stopped trying to figure out if D.C. had approved of this project in any way. Clearly, they hadn't. They probably don't even know the film was made. Or maybe they do, and they called in a hit on director B. Gupta and the rest of the crew. That would explain why none of them seem to have any other screen credits we could find with even the most thorough net search. At least we got a little justice, if not the American way.
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