Does 'Raanjhanaa' glorify stalking?

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Posted: 12 years ago
#1
So...everybody is going ga-ga over a movie about a demented stalker harrowing an innocent victim, and calling it a sweet love story! Excuse me! 'Raanjhanaa' is such a ridiculously confused film, it really requires better (and deeper) analysis than the mindless raves it has received.

While there was something deliriously charming about the zany 'Tanu weds Manu' made by the same bloke, this one is seriously psychotic. The problem with 'Raanjhanaa' is in the subliminal message it sends out. The movie actually glorifies a dangerous social crime (stalking) and makes a hero out of a man who ruins so many lives because the girl he loves does not love him back!

What starts off as an innocent schoolboy crush on a neighbourhood beauty is soon converted into a full blown obsession that will stop at nothing - not even death. Dhanush (talented, vaghera-vaghera ...BUT!) is shown hounding poor Sonam (a commendable performance) in a manner so crude and relentless, it is a wonder she doesn't push him off the nearest cliff.

Not only does the lovestruck Kundan embarrass Zoya over and over again, he refuses to take her firm, unambiguous 'no' for an answer. Of course, the plot goes all over the place trying to convince us about the nobility of his single minded passion. But wait a minute - the beautiful, educated Muslim girl simply ain't interested in this scrawny, scruffy, semi-literate son of the local Hindu priest. Doesn't he get it? Everybody else does. Not only does he not get it, he refuses to let the poor girl be.

The rest of the story is just too absurd to merit further discussion. The main point is that the character of this psychohero is elevated, romanticized and projected as the ultimate lover...who will go to any extreme for the girl he has unilaterally committed his life to. Never mind that she really doesn't care a fig about him, uses him ruthlessly and generally treats him like a serf. Wrists are slashed, the girl's fiance attacked and left to die, and several other highly contrived situations get injected into the script in order to depict perfect, unconditional love. Bakwas!

Audiences across India are going home teary and touched by Kundan's maha 'sacrifice' in the end. Now, if only Kundan had taken the hint and stopped harassing Zoya right at the start, so many lives would have been spared. 'Raanjhana' (I had no clue what the title stood for... I assumed it was the heroine's name spelt South Indian style), is many films clumsily rolled into one. The narrative is so scrambled, one wonders what the director had in mind - is it a doomed Hindu-Muslim love story significantly set in Varanasi? Or a statement film about student politics in Delhi?

The first half is about an obsessive, aggressive stalker harrowing the object of his desire. The second half is devoted to a half-assed political commentary. Through all this convoluted mess, Dhanush the Stalker remains crazily focused on tormenting Sonam and her folks. Is this fair? Is this even love? What sort of a signal is the film sending out to all those misguided romeos who think it is perfectly okay to fling acid on a girl's face for having the gall to reject romantic overtures and improper attention?

Kundan's 'love' is entirely one sided and delusional. We read about similar stories in the press all the time. In each case, it is the girl who suffers, through no fault of hers. In the movie, Kundan demolishes several families when Zoya chooses someone else. Hello? Isn't that her sole prerogative? Sorry.

The film may gross 200 crores for all I care. And the actors may walk away with several awards. But 'Raanjhanaa' is a pretty nasty film only because it tries to make a martyr out of a selfish, immature, violent and unstable man who thinks nothing of destroying the peace of mind of an innocent victim who doesn't love him. The 'solutions' offered are to slash your wrists when things don't work out. Well, at the end of this wretched experience, I sure as hell was ready to slash mine.

Author: Shobha De

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fly2me thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
#2
Oh i see Sobha Dee's hate for Sonam still remains. 😆
To borrow Sonam's words..."Who the hell is she...she writes bad books." Hahah.
sub_rosa thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
#3
A very lopsided review. Things were a lot more complex between these two in the movie. And Kundan was not really vicious or anything. He was crude, clownish and hilarious. His attempts at being street-smart around Zoya seemed pitiable, as Zoya was frankly amused by his antics, not scared and definitely not impressed. In fact Zoya quite enjoyed his attention, treated him like an unequal ally, even manipulated him for her own interest. At the end of the day, it was Kundan who convinced Zoya's father to let her marry the man of her choice. But he was also bitterly jealous. Anyway... It's fine to be socially aware, but that should not lead us to over-simplification of a complex scenario blatantly ignoring the context and the nuances.
Edited by sub_rosa - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#4
In no way was Kundan a hero or anything, he had his flaws and so did Zoya. Kundan loved Zoya obsessively--and stalking is part of that obsessive love. His love for Zoya was not perfect but he tried to get Zoya and Akram together and then impulsively teared them apart too. Zoya was no angel either, she manipulated him, put him down, and didn't forgive Kundan for a mistake that was in a way her own doing. And, what does she mean what Raanjhanaa is? Raanjhanaa= Ranjha --from Heer-Ranjha.
Similarties between Ranjha and Kundan--both are useless (do not work), falls in love with Heer/Zoya on first sight, wanders all around eventually reaching a place where Heer/Zoya now lives.
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Posted: 12 years ago
#5
Daily News & Analysis http://www.dnaindia.com/

Movies & misogyny make a dangerous mix

DNA / Yogesh Pawar / Sunday, June 30, 2013 10:16 IST

Would you call it bravado if a man pursuing a woman refuses to take no for an answer? This despite her repeatedly spurning his advances. Is it considered charming, if he slashes his wrists to prove his love?

If you answer is 'no' then you may be in the minority.

Raanjhanaa, a film starring Sonam Kapoor and Dhanush, that released on June 21 in the city portrays the male protagonist ' Kundan as a romeo whose pickup line includes all the above shenanigans.

What's more, the theatre audiences lustily cheered after every such scene.

Dheeraj Kulkarni, a second year engineering student, 24, who caught a show at Juhu's Chandan cinema said, "It just shows how much he loves his woman."

Meanwhile, 20-year-old Rinita said she would feel special to be wooed by a man like Kundan. Shaila, 19, felt otherwise. "If I like a guy, I will say yes. And if I don't, then he should understand that. Why would I want to deal with a moron who doesn't get that?" she said.

Filmmaker Aruna Raje of Tum: A Dangerous Obsession fame says that Bollywood's endorsement of such "boorishness" behaviour can often lead to replication. "Despite however uncouth, impolite or rude the male character, the girl finally gives in. Worst are the films that show the girl finally marrying the rapist."

Assistant professor at the Centre for Media and Cultural Studies, TISS, Shilpa Phadke also explains her discomfiture with the gender politics. "Anything showing that lack of consent is acceptable ' is a problem. When stalking and sexual harassment are represented as forms of romancing a woman, it endorses the idea that women 'just need to be convinced'."

Film historian Mukul Joshi recalls Ishaqzaade set a similar theme in 2012. "We think we have made rapid strides when it comes to our world view about women and yet the box office collections of a films like Raanjhanaa and Ishaqzade provethey are actually feeding a latent male desire to live the hero's life." This is the same nation where citizens were out protesting with candles against the Delhi rape.

What happened to the I& B Ministry guidelines following the furore over the Delhi rape? Sociologist and censor board member Nandini Sardesai said, "The censors often seem to have different sets of rules for big banners and are often willing to make exceptions. If the same thing is shown by a smaller film maker, the censors would reject it immediately."

But Raanjhanaa's scriptwriter Himanshu Sharma stands by his work. "Dhanush's character is from Banaras. I have tried to imbibe him with Shiva-like traits. He can be simple and loving but when he is angry he is on a destructive spree.

Political correctness is okay for drawing room discussions in metropolitan milieus but even there it is restricted to a class. The reality in small-town India where the multitudes live is what we've shown in the film."

He washes his hands off it saying, "What each one takes away from a film can be unique depending on their own exposure, experience and upbringing. As a creative person I cannot start take responsibility for that."

But Raje disagrees. "Even if you are selling soap or talc, you cannot run away from the side-effects they have. Filmmakers too need to own up to their social responsibility."

Will they?

URL of the article: http://www.dnaindia.com/entertainment/report_movies-and-misogyny-make-a-dangerous-mix_1854992-all
Permission to reprint or copy this article or photo must be obtained from www.dnasyndication.com
Edited by you2 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#6
The movie makers and the audience too need to take up social responsibility. Yes, even educated men from B schools refuse to take NO for an answer and resort to stupid and sometimes dangerous ways to pursue the woman. The rising crimes against women in India are a glaring example that the society needs to play its role.
664269 thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago
#7
No the film does NOT glorify stalking...
the review is totally a bull crap..
first of all the male lead kundan, has been already typecasted as a jahil/gavar in the film by the other characters.. as he belongs to a small town,this thing had to be there in his character to ensure that he doesnt lack the typical small town boy image..
secondly, his stalking and following d girl everywhere was invited by the girl.. nowhere the girl felt like a living hell or disturbed becos a local boy followed her or something ..on the contrary the girl was more than happy and enjoying the attention by kundan and his stalking attitude..
so how can this still glorify stalking ? ...🥱

moreover, the way the writer wrote " vagerah and blah " after Dhanush's name as she seems leastcared about his splendid performance shows, hw this lady has no sense of criticism and not even the capability to depict the quality of performance Dhanush has given..
Edited by harshu.sundas - 12 years ago
MeeraXD thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
#8
Honestly, the movie does not glorify stalking at all. And if it does then does stalking make a person happy? Well, Zoya obviously loved the attention that she received from Kundan who I feel was just merely admiring her from a distant and not harming her in any way. Well, that is what made her fall for him in the teenage years... I know it was not love for Zoya but at least she was attracted and not 'SCARED' of him. Seriously, I don't even know why people just stop criticising and watch a movie. If you like it, you like it, if you don't like it, keep to yourself. Anyway, this is business... I loved the movie! Damn, those writers surely are taking out their vengeance on someone...lol.

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