Drawing from genres as
diverse as Hong Kong martial arts films and “spaghetti Westerns,” Sholay engages in a discourse that roots
the audience in the experience of the other. Shot in the desert-like
environment of Southern India, Sholay is
a transnational epic that features narrative and stylistic elements that make
it both a typical masala film and a genre bending innovation, and is the first
example of the affectionately named “curry Western.” The story of a village
imperiled by a band of ruthless bandits who seek the protection from a band of
disreputable warriors has been recycled in numerous formats including the Magnificent Seven and Seven Samurai, with Sholay marking just one installment in a series of revenge films.
The film serves as a backdrop for conversations about brotherly love, frontier
justice, and the hero/villain dichotomy.
Sholay utilized
techniques considered cutting edge at the time, including quick cuts back and
forth between shots, as witnessed in the opening battle scene on the train
where Veeru, Jai, and the Thakur fight off a band of thugs. Later, freeze frame
and slow motion shots are used to heighten the melodrama of the deaths of the
Thakur’s family at the hands of Gabbar and his henchmen. Unlike a lot of
traditional Hindi films which emphasize static shots and close ups Sholay utilizes a number of tracking
shots and inventive angles, including a number of “bottom up” shots where the
camera is position on the ground facing upward at the actor. Sholay often blends traditional Indian instrumentation
with Western style music. Veeru and Jai are depicted playing the harmonica, an
instrument utilized time and again in Hollywood Westerns, but also make time
for the typical song and dance numbers typical in Hindi “masala” films.
The theme of frontier
justice is an important motif in Hollywood Western films, and the same is true
for Sholay. When the Thakur first
catches Gabbar Singh he grips Gabbar’s head in a vice and says, “They aren’t
arms, they’re a noose.” This bit of gritty dialogue harkens to the use of lynch
squads as a form of frontier justice, and serves as a manifestation of the
power of the common man. Like many tortured heroes popular in Western films the
Thakur is a damaged person out for revenge, and his sense of morality is shaped
by the violence that his been committed against him and his people. “In a reversal of the usual hostile imagery, the ‘feudal’
landlord too is shown as fundamentally good, able to act where the state
cannot.” (Metcalfe, 2012) The Thakur
justifies hiring Veeru and Jai to deal with Gabbar by saying, “Only because
iron will deal with iron,” meaning that only strength (meaning violence) can
counter strength, and in Sholay the
strongest characters are those with the greatest martial talent. When the
Thakur later confronts Gabbar after Veeru effectively neuters Gabbar of his
masculine power by decimating his band of thugs the Thakur cripples Gabbar’s
arms by crushing them under his feet. This act of retribution honors the “eye
for an eye” message that is propagated up till the end of the film when the
Thakur’s vengeance is derailed by timely arrival of the police, whose
appearance enforces that notion that law and order is ultimately the realm of
the state. Yet the film also undercuts the effectiveness of traditional forms
of law and order. The jailer who pompously lords over Veeru and Jai while they
are in prison is depicted as a ridiculously ineffective character whose
appearance is clearly influenced by Charlie Chaplin’s depiction of Hitler in The Great Dictator. Simultaneously a metaphor for British
imperialism and national law the jailer serves a laughable foil to the more
gritty and effective methods of justice dealt out by Veeru and Jai against
Gabbar Singh and his evil henchmen.
Gabbar Singh is also as much a creation
of the Western film genre in Hollywood as he is a distinct product of Hindi
cinema. One of Hindi cinema’s first true super villains, Gabbar is a hyperbolic
human incarnation of sadism and greed, and operates as a dual representation of
Western violence and mythological villainy. “Gabbar Singh, by his creator’s own
admission, was modeled on the psychotic, laughing villain, Indio, in Leone’s
For A Few Dollars More. Yet he enjoys the kind of uncontested authority over
his men that Indio can only fantasize about. More evocative is the way that
both men are situated in a moral universe where greed and revenge, violence and
betrayal are the primary referents.” (Banerjea, 2005) Throughout the film
Gabbar repeatedly commits the gravest moral taboos, almost none of which is
more heinous that the betrayal of his own men. Gabbar proves his disloyalty by
shooting three of his men after sparing their lives in a miraculous game of Russian
roulette, and the enigma of his character only grows more complex, because his
true motivations other than sadistic pleasure are never revealed. “By the end
of the film the audience is none the wiser about the substantive location of
Gabbar’s desire. He has no social history, no personal biography beyond the
stylistic markers of criminal excess: the howling, the tilt of the head, the
mad, rolling eyes, that studded belt.” (Banerjea, 2005)
I really enjoyed reading your observations about Sholay. The cinematic techniques you mentioned are a great detail and your knowledge of the theatrical techniques really gave me a better appreciation for the film.
ReplyDeleteDo you think that the frontier justice ideas present in the film came about as a response to the historical context of India in the 1970's?
For the character Gabbar, beyond sadism, what is he really motivated by, or was is just created to represent chaos?
Wonderful examples to show Sholay as a distinctively Bollywood film that still incorporates the feeling of the Western and the strong role of frontier justice. When you mention Gabbar as being this "incarnation of sadism and greed, and operates as a dual representation of Western violence and mythological villainy" I wonder what specific aspects of Gabbar are depicting elements of "Western violence" and what that entails? Is his comic-book level of villainy the reason for dubbing Gabbar as such a character?
ReplyDeletePatrick,
ReplyDeleteI am really amazed of how you pay a big deal of attention to the cinematic elements and techniques that the director used to emphasize the action or melodramatic moments. Your explanation and link them to support the plot of the story made me go back and watch again the scenes you mentioned and enjoy the creativity of the cinematography of the film.
One idea to consider would be the rootlessness of the villain in this film. He truly is motiveless malignancy personified. Whereas in the case of Birju, who became a dacoit, we had a context of impoverishment and oppression, Gabbar seems to be avaricious and violent without any cause. Does the configuration of villainy in Sholay betoken a turn towards conservative social politics in Hindi cinema?
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