SPOILERS: Dedh Ishqiya - what they didnt see & what you must read

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Posted: 11 years ago
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Dedh Ishqiya - what they didn't see and what you must read

Posted: January 11, 2014 by moifightclub in Adaptation, Bet You Didn't Know, bollywood, cinema, film, W*F
Tags: Abhishek Chaubey, Darab Farooqui, Dedh Ishqiya, Ismat Chughtai, Lihaaf, Vishal Bhardwaj

This is a strange scenario. I read review after review after review, every damn possible review of Dedh Ishqiya. Just to figure out one thing - to see if anyone has written about the homage scene in the film, and the inspiration behind the film's spoiler, or scratched it beyond the surface. And i was extremely disappointed to see that not a single reviewer has mentioned it.

They didn't get it?

They don't know about it?

They haven't read it?

Just because the director didn't tell or it wasn't mentioned in the press release?

Because, for me, that is the highlight of the film. The smartest scene in the film. And that *is* the film too. Strange. Seems like we are reading a group of philistines who have been raised on a limited staple diet and don't know how to read a film beyond their radar. Not that such funny things has never happened in the past, but this should straight go to FunnyOrDie section. So which scene i am talking about?

SPOILER ALERT (Don't read further if you haven't seen the film yet and if you hate spoilers)

In the scene where both Naseer and Arshad's hands are tied and they are watching Madhuri and Huma having fun, getting physical. Naseer looks at Arshad and says, Lihaaf maang le. Arshad looks up and smiles. And then we see just a big shadow on the wall which suggests physical intimacy between Madhuri and Huma's characters. That's the homage to Ismat Chughtai's Lihaaf. The setting, Begum, homo-eroticism, huge shadow play - the elements and the incident is the same as in Lihaaf.

That's not all, the entire back story of Madhuri's husband is also from the same story. And the spoiler - their relationship and her back story is the core idea of the film. Rest of it has been just built up to cover this plot. So it can be called a really smart adaptation of the short story. Much respect for the writers of the film - Darab Farooqui, Abhishek Chaubey and Vishal Bhardwaj.

So why is it such a big fuss?

1. Because it involves Ismat Chughtai - one of the most eminent, progressive and feminist Urdu writers.

2. Because it involves Lihaaf (published in 1942) - the most popular and celebrated short story by Ismat Chughtai.

3. Because Lihaaf created a big controversy. Ismat Chughtai was charged with obscenity and was summoned by the Lahore court in 1944. She went to court, refused to apologise and won the case. Click here to read a funny excerpt about the case from her memoir. And if possible, do watch Naseer's play on the same which also includes Manto's trial.

4. And most importantly, because it's still relevant. Chughtai's story dealt with homo-eroticism and lesbianism which created a huge ruckus then. And today, when we are still debating gay rights and article 377 in India, a mainstream Hindi film brings the subject on the big screen with mainstream actors, and connects it so smartly to such an important and controversial literary work, and to its history. And we have no f**king clue! Lilaah!

Strangely, it seems most reviewers didn't even get the historical, social, or literary context. If i was the boss, i would have surely asked for some explanation, rejection, and resignation. Because what's the point of reviewing films if one doesn't know where one is coming from - our art, culture, literature and such an important bit of history. It's utterly shocking and baffling to say the least. It might sound extremely snobbish, but am fine with me being accused of snobbery than being philistine, especially when we are talking about Ismat Aapa and Bhardwaj's cinema.

- You can find the English translation of the story here or here or in the embedded link below (translation by different writers). Do read. And do remember it was published in 1942.

- Found another adaptation on the net - a short film based on the same story


[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=K0Kre1BCHd0#t=0[/YOUTUBE]

- If you were born and brought up in some other planet, Ismat Chughtai's wiki page is here.

- To know what we thought about the film, click here.

Edited by eeyoretel - 11 years ago

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salta thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#2
It is based on Lihaf? Wow...it's an amazing story, obviously chughtai is such an amazing writer. I love her writings and stories. And Lihaf was an impeccable critique of hypocrisy of Indian society, Child molestation and homosexuality.
MissChaos thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#3
Haven't seen the movie but loved to read this info. thanks.
Mallika-E-Bhais thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#4
Oh GOD, THANK YOU SO MUCH!! I thought of Chugtai's story too when I saw the movie just today but then thought I was imagining it!!

I loved it. But it is highly obvious that Begum Para & Munia are in love with each other.

Bharadwaj is a huge fan of Ismat Chugtai & Manto anyway & always finds a way weave it into his movies. 😳




The movie is brilliant in my honest opinion. 😃
chimchimcher-ee thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#5

Why Dedh Ishqiya is one of the most important films of 2014

by Deepanjana Pal 1 min ago



This article contains spoilers. Don't roll your eyes. Dedh Ishqiya is now one-weekend old, which means it's perfectly acceptable for me to disclose that the real twist in Dedh Ishqiya is that Naseeruddin Shah and Arshad Warsi may be the protagonists, but the real stars and criminals in the film are Madhuri Dixit and Huma Qureshi.

There is no shortage of either surprises or questions in Dedh Ishqiya. Is Khalujan (Shah) trying to go behind Babban's (Warsi) back? Can Babban be used against Khalujaan? Will Khalujan abandon Babban once the younger con man has served his purpose in Khalujan's plan to marry Begum Para (Dixit)? Are Babban and Munniya (Qureshi) the real masterminds of whom Khalujan should be wary?

A still from Dedh Ishqiya.

The one part of Dedh Ishqiya that seems unquestionable is that Babban and Khalu will get Munniya and Begum Para respectively. It's a neat, beautiful fit of a senior conman and his chela meeting a begum and her companion. You think it's obvious how this story will progress: sparks will fly, love will flare, the elder couple will retire gracefully leaving the younger duo to live happily ever after, keeping alive the hope of further sequels. When Begum Para tucks her head into the crook of Khalujaan's neck and he tenderly holds her delicate hand in his, it's as though Dedh Ishqiya is paying an ode to images of Mughal-era romances. Meanwhile, Babban and Munniya keep it modern, real and sexy by making out frantically in the oldhaveli.

With this playing out as it does, the question of whether you'll anticipate the real twist in Dedh Ishqiya's tale depends on

a) how much of Indian literature you've read

b) how much faith you repose in director and co-screenwriter Abhishek Chaubey and producer, co-screenwriter and dialogue writer Vishal Bharadwaj.

If you've read Ismat Chughtai and are a true fan of the Chaubey-Bharadwaj combo, then you'll have anticipated the twist, but rest assured, nothing prepares you for the beauty of that ultimate reveal.

Munniya and Begum Para's closeness seems to follow in the long tradition of hired help becoming more trustworthy and close than family. When Begum Para is failed by her husband, it is Munniya who becomes her emotional anchor. As the duo reveal themselves to be a more genteel version of Thelma and Louise, only the truly naive will not suspect there's more than convention allows in a relationship that lets Munniya press kisses in Begum Para's hair. But just then, Munniya jumpstarts her romance with Babban and Dedh Ishqiya seems to falling in line with the prevalent belief that what a real woman needs is the love of a macho man.

This is the elaborate set up for one of the most beautiful sequences in the film. Khalujan and Babban are sitting in a darkened warehouse, slumped, their hands bound. Across from them, on a raised floor, is a fire that casts the wall behind Babban and Khalujan in golden light. On that wall, a shadow play is enacted. We see silhouettes of Begum dancing, Munniya coming so close to her that they become one shadow; the shifting shapelessness of two people coming together to create an abstract, indistinct form that is simply passion. Compared to the women's love projected on the wall as enormous, dancing shadows, the two men are so terribly puny and mundane with their little greed and inflated egos.

Just to confirm literary suspicions, a little before this enchanting vision in gold and shadow, dialogue writer Bharadwaj gives Khalujan a line that seems like a non sequitur. "Lihaaf maang le", a laughing Khalujan says to Babban as it dawns on the younger man that he's been played expertly by Munniya. It seems like a throwaway line, but it's actually an adaab of sorts to Chughtai's short story "Lihaaf", which was banned for being obscene by the government in the early 1940s. Chughtai challenged the decision and won in court, unshackling her short story about an aristocratic woman and her lesbian lover from the straitjacket imposed upon it by the delicate, conservative sensibilities of that era.

In Chughtai's "Lihaaf", Begum Jaan (like Begum Para) is married to a seemingly wonderful nawab who has not time for her because he is somewhat fascinated by young men. Trapped in this unhappy marriage, Begum Jaan suffers for years before finding a lover in her masseuse, Rabbu. Had Rabbu been a man, eyebrows would have been raised but Chughtai probably wouldn't have faced the harassment she did. But Rabbu in "Lihaaf" is a woman. The fact that she is always massaging Begum Jaan and even sleeping in the same bed as her is accepted because no one imagines any sexual intimacy between them. It's when Begum Jaan's young niece comes visiting that their arrangement faces some scrutiny. A bed is made in Begum Jaan's room for her niece and the girl is terrified at night by the slurping noises she hears in the dark and the way Begum Jaan's quilt shakes: "vigorously, as though an elephant was struggling inside."

At the heart of "Lihaaf" is the fear of the unknown, which paralyses the young niece with fear and renders her blind to the harmless simplicity of what is actually happening in the room, under Begum Jaan's quilt. In Dedh Ishqiya, Chaubey, Bharadwaj and Darab Farooqui's (who is credited with writing the story) homage to Chughtai presents a significant difference. Instead of a young girl, it's the grizzled, old Khalujan who is witness and he's not in the dark. Even though he has been rebuffed and conned by Begum Para and Munniya, even though he is bound as a result of his own actions, when he sees the two women together, he is struck by the beauty of their intimacy. The expression on his face is of sheer wonder.

Usually, if there's a potentially controversial or provocative element in a Bollywood film, we're inundated with sound bytes that depict the actors and filmmakers as people who have boldly gone where no one has gone before. But there was none of that hoopla for Dedh Ishqiya. The film treats a love affair between two women the way it treats the camaraderie between two men: normally and delightedly. Not just that, it cheekily shows how the fabulously-inflated heterosexual male ego is incapable of processing the notion of a friendship between a man and a woman. Near the climax of the film, both Babban and Khalujan are intent upon casting themselves as Begum Para and Munniya's saviours even though the women have outwitted them repeatedly and made it quite clear that they're not romantically inclined towards anyone but each other. Still, Babban and Khalujan labour under the illusion that the women need them. Ultimately, not only do the two women manage fine without them, they're the ones who save Babban and Khalujaan from rotting in jail.

Last year ended with the Supreme Court disappointing millions in India when it declared in a judgement that decriminalising homosexuality was not within the judiciary's brief. How deliciously provocative it is to have one of the first releases of this new year to have a lesbian relationship in it. Not just that, the relationship is portrayed as beautifully normal in a mainstream, commercial Hindi film that has all the masala elements that you'd expect from Bollywood (including a completely unnecessary scene of Madhuri Dixit dancing).

To Abhishek Chaubey, Vishal Bharadwaj and Darab Farooqui, bravo! Never mind the depressing statistic that the unwatchable inanity called Yaariyan made more money than Dedh Ishqiya did on its opening day. The fact that Dedh Ishqiya was made and released just weeks after the Supreme Court judgement makes this one of the most important films to be released this year (even if we're only in January). And the fact that it's out in theatres and making money warms the cockles of all liberal hearts, just as possessed quilt did Begum Jaan in Chughtai's "Lihaaf".

salta thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#6
Now...i am thinking about watching this movie...i's quite angry because vidya wasn't in this, but i may watch this.
TallyHo thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#7
Lihaaf is such a strong piece of literature that tries to shake a society out of its slumber... written so long ago, yet the society has still not chosen to wake up...
Chugtai, Manto were writers way ahead of their times!
Mallika-E-Bhais thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#8

Originally posted by: TallyHo

Lihaaf is such a strong piece of literature that tries to shake a society out of its slumber... written so long ago, yet the society has still not chosen to wake up...

Chugtai, Manto were writers way ahead of their times!



ABSOLUTELY! They were brilliant. No wonder they were long-time admirers & of each other & each other's work. 😊
notavailable thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#9
Lol I thought I was letting my imagination run wild thinking that Begum Para and Munniya were actually lovers coz its an Indian movie but they did show that shadow scene well. Hmmm it just shows how much attention the audience pays while watching a movie 🤣
Mallika-E-Bhais thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#10

Originally posted by: howzzat

Lol I thought I was letting my imagination run wild thinking that Begum Para and Munniya were actually lovers coz its an Indian movie but they did show that shadow scene well. Hmmm it just shows how much attention the audience pays while watching a movie 🤣



No, it actually shows how open we've become. 😊

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