Sunday, July 18, 2010

Ek Udaan

When I was in school in Iraq I had this classmate of mine whose mother was our English teacher. She was a decent teacher, but the reason I remember her now is because she used to slap her son in front of us in the class. It used to be painful seeing it. Her son, my friend, was quite intelligent, and not being so would not still be reason enough for that sort of cruelty, but I could never figure out why she would subject her son to such humiliation in front of his classmates. And the most harmless of things would prompt the beating. He would be so ashamed of his daily beatings in the morning that he would rarely come out to play in the evening with us. Even at that time, and we were just about 8-9 years old then, we could feel that she was unhappy with herself and that's why she would beat her son.

This came to me today after watching Udaan.

It's a beautiful film. Not the least for some of the best acting I have seen in a Hindi film in recent times. But also because it hit home in some way.

No, my parents were (are) much much better than Rohan's father in the film (who goes to rather unbelievable extents of cruelty), and I sometimes wish they were a little cruel, for it might just justify my craziness, and selfishness, but it hit home because unlike many of my friends from Delhi, Kolkata, Bangalore and Mumbai, I know what growing up in a place like Jamshedpur is.

Of course, Jamshedpur stands in for hundreds of small Indian towns where thousands of people dream and then give up. I have come to take for granted a lot of things I have been given in my life and am wont to forget that so many others I knew, a lot more talented, a lot more capable, will take up that dreary job in the factory, will get married, will have children and will hope to see their children achieve what they could not. And then their children would repeat the same thing, maybe move a notch higher if they are lucky, but still lead stifled lives.

Jamshedpur is actually a lot more happening than the movie portrays it to be. I had my first pizza there, way back in 1991. I grew up in a township about 80km from the place, and it used to represent a weekend of freedom when we would take a monthly trip to my aunt's place, having that fabulous south Indian breakfast at Anand restaurant in Bistupur, having lunch occasionally at Kwality, buying audio cassettes for the latest hits, buying a comic or novel at that small shop in the basement of Kamani Centre, going through the collection of Commando comics that my cousins had - Jamshedpur was almost like being in New York for someone growing in the backyard of Jharkhand.

Jamshedpur also represents the pain that preparing for JEE was the first time around (I moved to Kota after a failed first attempt, stopped living for 9 months, and cracked the exam). My Brilliant Tutorials centre was in the town and making those periodic trips to the place knowing that I would do badly in the mock tests, gradually losing all hope and confidence in my chance to get to an IIT, that perceived gateway to a life of prosperity - so many young students must go through that.

I wanted to take up Arts after Class X. Study Literature. Write. But, you see, I was good in studies. Science made more sense. But then, that's a story we have heard so often and is hardly worth talking about.

I also saw Inception this weekend. The movie will go on to become one of the most talked about movies of the year, if not of our generation. But I think Udaan is a better movie. It's about dreams we actually saw.

I love it when a film makes me go all crazy. That is what films are for.

7 comments:

Reema Sahay said...

:-) nothing more to say....it seems ages ago. Jamshedpur...Kamani Centre, I used to frequent a small shop called 'Anand Circulating Library' across Kamani Centre; and I used to get bags full of novels from there. I regret only one thing in my life, not to take up Arts for Graduation, I don't know what I was thinking when I took up Commerce, I never could relate to it! Apart from that I pretty much did what I wanted to. Unfortunately, Commerce too was my own choice but in retrospect it was always on my mind that Arts is taken up by people who can't do anything and won't do anything. My parents have been extremely supportive in everything, jut one small thing was my mom used to look down upon Arts and Commerce. Well....surely look forward to watching UDAAN!

zubin said...

Amazing. The movie and your post, and I am actually having trouble deciding what I like more. There is nothing more to say about the movie. You have captured it all. A masterpiece of the movie. Especially like the 'I wanted to take up Arts para. In my case, it was History. But the irony is, I myself took the decision to take Science, because, as you said, it made more sense. One of the few movies, and posts, which actually moved me. Thanks, to you and the movie.
PS: Also see Tere bin Laden, its a good laugh riot of the Jaane bhi do yaaron genre. Looking forward to Inception.

Atish said...

Brilliant post indeed. Havent seen Udaan. But now feel that I have to. Your Jamshedpur and Kota were my Bokaro and Delhi respectively. And yes, at one point of time I had wanted to give up the great Indian IIT dream and go to DU instead.
Had listened to the Udaan soundtrack after reading your earlier post and have loved the songs!

Captain Subtext said...

[penandpaper] Yeah, I remember that place (or think I do), but never got down to getting anything from there.

[zubin] Thanks. I hope Mr Motwane doesn't read your comment. Saw TBL the day after Udaan. Nice film, with real laugh-out-moments on some occasions.

[atish] Thanks! Of course, I really don't know if I would had been happier taking up Arts. It's not that I was forced to take up Science - there are multiple poems waiting to be written comparing the charm of getting into an IIT to a moth attracted to a flame or a fly to a venus fly trap!

Geetika said...

Speaking of movies, is Despicable Me out back home yet? I insist you watch it :P It's a really nice little story.

Captain Subtext said...

Nope, it isn't out here yet. I am waiting for it quite eagerly.

Geetika said...

Yes, science made more sense.
I wanted to be a chef :)

Template Designed by Douglas Bowman - Updated to Beta by: Blogger Team
Modified for 3-Column Layout by Hoctro