Friday, August 1, 2008

The story so far

It was the 31st of December of the year 1989. I was in a cinema hall watching the movie Siva. The very popular song on the ‘Botany class’ had just started. I was hardly able to hear the song. The crowd was in splits throwing papers all around and cheering their new star. The fight sequence that came 10 minutes after the song is still fresh in my memory. (I am sure it still lingers in the mind of anyone who watched the movie.) Siva picks up the cycle chain and fights the goons. It wasn’t the typical ‘dishum dishum’ fight that was very popular in Telugu cinema at that time. There was an element of intensity in the fight, something that was never witnessed before. For the first time, the silence spoke for the protagonist. He never spoke instead he let his eyes do the job. Amitabh, I thought let his eyes do the talking in the latest RGV movie ‘Sarkar Raj’.

Well, RGV is a popular name now When Siva was released RGV was known by the name Ram Gopal Varma. I guess one would be very familiar with the line ‘A Ram Gopal Varma film’ I can feel the kick that I derive as this line appears at the beginning of the movie. It would usually be a dark screen, pitch black with the credits line slowly scrolling across the screen. Ram Gopal Varma or RGV as he is popularly known as these days has a sense of realism in his movies. This aspect of real life becomes critical when one is dealing like a sensitive subject like the underworld. One cannot think of creating a Bollywood style underworld where one finds the don behaving as if he never had any feelings toward others. At the end of the day, an underworld don is one among us, who turned out to be one because of certain circumstances in his life. It is interesting to note that in most of RGV’s underworld movies, it’s not the villain but the hero who plays the central underworld character. By doing so, RGV makes a point that the don of the underworld is just like any one of us and any of the other Bollywood heroes- he laughs, he cries, he has friends, he loves a woman and wants her to be in his life. More importantly, the underworld don doesn’t have a happy end in the movie just because he happens to be the hero.

This write-up attempts to do a semiotic analysis of the underworld movies of Ramgopal Varma. Semiotics is the study of signs. Signs consist of two parts- the signifier (sound, object, image, or the like) and the signified (concept).While the signifier or denotation is the literal meaning of a meaning of a term, figure or a text, the signified or connotation is used to describe the cultural meanings attached to a term. This write up analyzes through semiotics how RGV has effectively used the signifiers to effectively narrate his story to the audience.

No comments: