Saturday, July 02, 2005

un-iyan

watched this movie called anniyan yesterday.touted as a mega hit and marketed as a commodity this movie claims to be on of the most expensive movies made in south india.(not sure of the exact price though heard it was close to 25 crores) where that money went i still wonder because besides the songs(which i admit were shot in amazing locales) the rest of the movie seems like any other movie.

anyways getting to the point.the movie is about fighting corruption and the protagonist is a tamil iyengar youth(the hero is in his 40s)called rules ramanujam alias ambi and his multiple personalities.

wat got to me was the way in which the iyengars were portrayed.comic was what they tried to show. pathetic was what i felt. their food, their music,their clothes,their customs ok u get the point basically everything abt them. its not just this movie most south indian movies these days.so decided to make a classification of our filmy
tamil brahmin or tam brahms as they are stylishly called!!
TYPE 1
in thick soda buddy glasses with a huge namam on his head and clad in dirty faded kurta and veshti.

TYPE 2
poor wud be an understatement.miles below the poverty line.invariably an upright government clerk or koil pujari.if he is the former then he wud strongly be against corruption and hence cant rise in the ranks and has his entire family against him.and if he is the latter then he believes his God will take care of everything but she is not doing that at the moment.

TYPE 3
the one who is a stickler for rules and customs that were followed even before the rough draft of the Gita came into the picture.and what but the obvious can happen his daughter(it CANNNOT be his son) will fall in love with a christian/muslim.Father wont give up on his customs daughter wont give up on her love.

TYPE 4
extremely rare case but variation of the former- son who is against his father and so does everthing against his father's wishes. proves himself rite in the end.

and so the story goes.i think as the indian film industry is growing in all aspects so it can grow out of this cliche. none of the tam brahms i know are anything like this.they just like the rest. as in hit the disco saturdy nite, have grl frnds and eat a lot of other stuff besides curd rice!! and most often than not their folks cool abt it. i think its appreciable that there is a community that still follows its traditions and sticks by them.and this brahmin bashing is doing no one any gud.

6 comments:

Sriram said...

I echo your sentiments...people who dont understand the virtues of "brahminhood" indulge in making fun of "brahmin community". But what pains me is more often than not its we brahmins who are responsible for giving them a chance to do so...

i think therefore i am said...

hey yeah it irks me a lot that ppl dont say anything

v_tel001 said...

Instead of ridiculing the Brahmins and repeatedly criticizing them for what they had done in the past (manusmriti days), people should try to emulate their good characteristics, which include adherence to culture, customs, discipline etc.
I remember the Telugu movie 'Seshu', where the hero Dr.Rajashekhar falls in love with an innocent Brahmin gal (Kalyani), having similar jokes. One of them was when his friend tells Rajsekhar - '..pappulo kaalu pettaavu kada raa' referring to his falling in love with a person he refers to as 'maami' (a brahmin girl).
btw..plz. don't think im supporting my community here...coz im a non-brahmin.

Vishnu said...

What irks me most is in the movie the man is not normal when he is donning the role of a perfect son emulating the role of a perfect citizen trying to adhere to rules. but when he cuts short his hair and leaves all the strictness about rules then he is normal. Is appearance in anyway an index of normalcy. It sends an almost indirect message as if innocent looking brahmins adhering to their customs are but abnormal people not fitting into the society.

prasie said...

*drumrolls*

Nice post...such fims making fun of brahmins have become a real pain recently, Vivek's comedy track in Saamy is a classic case in point. What's even more surprising (or disturbing, depening on your view point) is that the dialogues are written by Sujatha, who is an iyengar himself, he of all peole should know about the ground realities and should not have stooped so low.
While I (a brahmin) am fuming at this, there is a group that is criticizing the movie because it is pro-brahmin, their argument is that the one's who get killed in the movie are all non-brahmins and Sadha
(an iyengar girl) dos not get killed, when will these guys ever get a life?

Crystal Ball said...

Its a cliche and i feel our film makers need to start thinkin...