Sharmila Tagore and Sanjeev Kumar in Griha Pravesh
going back to my roots (posting indian film stills)

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Sharmila Tagore and Sanjeev Kumar in Griha Pravesh
going back to my roots (posting indian film stills)

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Charulata (AKA The Lonely Wife) | Satyajit Ray | 1964
Madhabi Mukherjee

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1.
Sridevi asĀ Working Girl
ChandniĀ (1989) was a huge commercial success and the late superstar Srideviās breakthrough as a lead protagonist in a Yash Chopra film, with arguably more screen time than both the male leads, Rishi Kapoor and Vinod Khanna, combined.
The film accelerated Srideviās metamorphosis into a bonafide top heroine, at-once siren and dame. Sridevi is Chandni; she is also Chandni; āIn & As.ā Carrying a film on her shoulders as the protagonist and only lead, her task was gargantuanā to emulate both the virginal and sensual, to play, in equal parts, daughter and working girl; a dutiful fiance and conflicted lover.Ā
Chandniās turn toward leading a young, professional life in the metropolis is seen in the second-half of the film, where we also meet Mita Vashisht in a brief cameo as Kiran, Chandniās friend and confidante.
In the following scene, Kiran is urging Chandni to stand her ground, and not return to her former fiancĆ© Rohit (Rishi Kapoor), who she thinks Chandni must move on from. Previously, Rohit, who turns paraplegic after being in a plane crash, purposefully rejects Chandni in order to āallowā her a life of ease with someone more able-bodied instead of him. But before this scene, he has now gained mobility in his legs and wants to make a comeback into Chandniās life (sigh).Ā
In this scene, the camera registers Chandniās turmoil and interiority by closing up on Sridevi. Sridevi simmers, imploding, leaking a longing and a tension, dilemma, anger even. Although the scene is written for Chandni, Vashishtās Kiran holds her own with a believable ease and a lived, characteristic intensity.
Vashishtās screen presence and delivery of dialogue energizes the scene; Kiranās questions complicate the viewerās understanding of Chandniās longing for Rohit, speaking to an implosive sense of being wronged that Chandniās character has harboured after her separation.
The female protagonistās ābest friendā historically emulates extremes; they are often visual foils,Ā highlighting or underlining the heroineās virtue, worth, potency. Many a time, theĀ āfriendā provided the audience with comic or moral relief at the expense of theĀ her own body or lifestyle choices. Even more frequently, the heroine-adjacent character offered us more possibility, a breach of gender; soft, perceivable rebellions.
It feels as though writer Kamna Chandra, along with Sagar Sarhadi, Arun Kaul, and Umesh Kalbagh, subtly attempted to push the protagonist Chandniās arc towards transforming into Vashishtās urbane working-woman Kiran. The writing surprises pleasantly in the second half, in its telling of Chandniās economic emancipationābeginning from her sheltered, small-town, familial domesticity to her courtship in Delhi to a cosmopolitan life of single womanhood in corporate Bombay. On the verge of an almost biting social-realist bent that feels somewhat provocative for a Chopra flick, the script is forced to encounter a negotiation, fraught with a burden to return to convention: the heroineās singular marital bliss of first love.Ā
So it seems the writers were probably met with some tension from the makers, made to culminate the story into a relatively conservative, unruffled narrative resolution. When Srideviās Chandni returns to Rohit, a certain sociological mesh is held into place; maintaining traits of dutibound sacrifice, emotional generosity, and porcelain, conventional beauty that arguably fuel a culture of the quintessential Yash Chopra heroine.
And yet, despite the conservatism surrounding the airbrushed heroine figure in the late Chopraās body of work, his typical romantic melodramaābuilt with a fashionable, restrained excess and economic abundanceādoes, in fact, regard its female protagonist with a prolonged closeness and an emotional depth. The Yash Chopra heroine is often dolled, dreamy, love-lorn, integrated with ease into society and its conventions. At the same time, she is often reclusive, inebriated with a sensual imagination and spilling with poetic musings, absorbed by her fantasies, a select longing, in a sea of people. The eventuality of his heroine is this: her spectacle marries her intensity; Chopraās gaze intertwines with the genre of womenās melodrama, the Womanās Picture (think Bette Davisā quiet fragility and newfound independence in Now, Voyager or Audrey Hepburnās outward transformation and inner turmoil in Sabrina).
Yash Chopraās heroines, Sridevi included, are famously celebrated for their pitch-perfect styling and stellar beauty, setting trends ablaze, from the flowing chiffon sari to sleeveless blouses to monochromatic sheer, translucent salwar kameez.Ā
After Chandni,Ā Sridevi became synonymous with her characterās blindingly white salwar kameez donned as an amorous girl-next-door. More widely pictured is the ultra-traditional yet risquĆ© white outfit she dressed in when imagined by Rohit in a ādream sequenceā (musical montage). Here, her midriff is exposed as she sways and dances sensually, alone and surrounded by Chopraās signature scenery of pristine snowcapped mountains. Her movements are languorous, her limbs seducing, then swivelling, faster, building into a crescendo while the music swells.Ā
With much talk around the attention to detail Chopra exercises in visually presenting his heroines as both virtuous and desirable, many often overlook the emotional complexity and internal strife of his women. He afforded his characters with a dimensionality that mainstream Hindi-film heroines of the 80s and 90s seldom had the chance to essay. The Yash Chopra heroine had the opportunity to portray a substantial, meaty speaking role with dramatic heft and career-defining, scene-stealing moments. She held a bated breath, a quiet applause, among audiences; a winner of hearts, she shined while delivering her turns of phrase, the length or gravitas of which were mostly, if not only, afforded to leading men in films of the time.Ā
Chandni, in particular, sees Chopraās heroine helm the narrative, testing social boundaries. Veering in her dilemma between her former amour and current admirer, she toes the line of taboo and tradition. Between the timeline of two men, one exiting and the other entering, Chandni finds a room of her own, retreating, growing into the self, her scenes of solitude and reflection imprinting an image of an aspirational working girlhood in the city. That Chopraās rose tint filters Chandniās unconventional choices is combative in itself, but it also makes the ground tremble in secret, ever so softly, ChandniĀ ushers a new heroine in a new decade of commercial Hindi cinema.
Nirbhay Arjun's New Movie "BEWAFA" Releasing on 23rd July Only On RajShivaay Films
In Association With Dev Shivaay International & Glamour Worlds Music
Trailer Out Now https://youtu.be/uj9N44x_jts?si=aa3GKHr8k0sQnxfE
Starring - Nirbhay Arjun, Shikha Raghav & Aks Adi
Produced by Rajbir Singh & Satnarayan
Director - Vijay Divyanshi
Project by - The Glitter Entertainment
Filmart Production Presents: Love All Bollywood Movie
Love All: A Bollywood Badminton Film starring Kay Kay Menon delivers a thrilling blend of sports and romance, captivating audiences with its heart-pounding action and heartwarming love story. A must-watch for sports enthusiasts and Bollywood fans alike.