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Raj Kapoor
Raj Kapoor is a megastar,
director, actor and all-round showman. He has permanently carved for himself a special
niche in commercial Hindi cinema. The son of actor Prithviraj Kapoor, Raj Kapoor started
his career as a clapper boy but bagged his first film role at the age of eleven. In 1948,
he set up his own studio and made his first feature film, Aag (Fire), which would become
the first of his many early successes, including Barsaat (Rain) in 1949 and Shri 420 (Mr.
420), a reference to someone who has a reputation for theft and deception, since
apprehensions for such crimes are usually section 420 of the Indian Penal Code in 1955.
See also: The Number 420.
Raj Kapoor whole-heartedly embraced the Indian popular cinema from the very beginning. He
made every effort to ensure that his movies appealed to every section of society, in
particular the common man. Film historians and buffs have spoken of him as the
"Charlie Chaplin of India," since he often himself played a tramp-like figure
who, despite adversity, could still be cheerful and honest, a gem of a man. He appealed
also, as in his films Aag and Jis Desh Mein Ganga Behti Hein (The Country in which the
Ganges Flows), to patriotic sentiment, nowhere better commemmorated than in the famous
lines from one of the songs in his films:
Mera joota hai Japani
Ye pataloon hai inglistani
Sar pe lal topi roosi
Phir bhi dil hai hindustani
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The songs of his films
endeared Raj Kapoor not only to the masses in India, but to audiences in large parts of
Africa, the Middle East, and the former Soviet Union, where his films were to become
enormous commercial successes. Many of his films were to be characterized not only by
lively music, but by the extensive use of elaborate sets. The angst of the common man is
portrayed through heavy brooding landscapes and sets with sharply contrasted light. Visual
imagery would always be an important part of his films.
However, after the box office failure of his ambitious Mera Naam Joker (My name is Joker),
which took six years to complete, his movies took a more sensual turn. The film Bobby
(1973) introduced Dimple Kapadia, who would go on to become one of India's superstars, and
established itself as the fore-runner of a new generation of romances targeted for
adolescents. But the film owed its phenomenal success to other considerations as well. By
the restrictive if not puritan standards of commercial Hindi cinema, Kapadia appeared in
suggestive, some would say rather sexually explicit, poses and scenes. Raj Kapoor kept up
with this trend of titilating sexuality in later films like Satyam Shivam Sundaram (1978)
and Ram Teri Ganga Maili (1985).
Though Raj Kapoor has been described by one critic as exhibiting "the carnality of a
schoolboy" in his films, it remains indubitably the case that he has been among the
most successful film-makers for nearly four decades. Thus his sensitivity to the
requirements of film audiences should not be dismissed. The present generation of films
from Bollywood still borrows several themes that had been perfected in his films, and some
believe that it is still a compliment for a commercial film to be compared to one of his
works.
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