Dubai’s iconic skyscraper Burj Khalifa lit up with a special message for Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan on his 57th birthday.
A video posted on Burj Khalifa’s Instagram page shows the world’s tallest building sparkling bright to wish SRK a very happy birthday. The text “Happy Birthday Shah Rukh, Happy Birthday Pathaan. We love you” flashed on the screen as the track ‘Tujhe Dekha’ from Shah Rukh’s iconic 1995 film ‘Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge’ played in the backdrop.
After seeing images and videos of Burj Khalifa lit up with the message for SRK, fans were extremely happy.
“How beautiful,” a social media user commented.
“Shah Rukh is a global star. Hail the king,” another one wrote.
Reportedly, it’s for the fifth time that SRK has appeared on Burj Khalifa. In 2021, Burj Khalifa honored Shah Rukh on his 56th birthday. Burj Khalifa was lit up with the name of the actor to honor the actor on his birthday in 2020 as well.
Meanwhile, on the work front, Shah Rukh is all set to make his silver screen return after four years with ‘Pathaan’, which also stars Deepika Padukone and John Abraham in the lead roles. The action-packed film is scheduled to release on January 25, 2023.
Apart from ‘Pathaan’, SRK will be also seen in Rajkumar Hirani’s upcoming film ‘Dunki’ alongside Taapsee Pannu and in south director Atlee’s upcoming action thriller film ‘Jawan opposite south actor Nayanthara. (ANI)
Contradictions constantly rush at one another in India
where the most progressive and the most regressive trends co-exist at any given
time. The context here is society and cinema.
It was Deepika Padukone and her film Chhapaak two months back. Now it is the turn of another landmark film, Thappad. The former was trolled and boycotted by those angry at Deepika’s expressing solidarity with agitating students and teachers at the turbulent Jawaharlal Nehru University. The latter faces similar wrath since its director Anubhav Sinha and many of the actors led by Taapsee Pannu were part of similar protests at Mumbai’s Gateway of India.
While Chhapaak reportedly suffered at the Box Office and bowed out of most cinema halls, Thappad is seemingly surmounting the boycott from quarters preoccupied with violence in Delhi and its aftermath. Taapsee has dismissed prospects of any damage to her film coming from “a few thousand trolls.”
The basic argument of both the actors is that it is
stupid to condemn and punish a film because those behind it have publicly
expressed their views on issues that is controversial. But we are living in
highly polarized times.
Coincidentally, but significantly, both films
challenge set social norms and prejudices that presumably cause discomfort to
the trolls, their allies across the social media and more importantly, their
political mentors. Chhapaak, already written
in detail in this space earlier, is about brutal acid attack on women who
reject unwanted male advances. Thappad
is about domestic violence and the impact on an individual’s sense of
self-respect, especially when it comes from loved ones and life-partners.
Domestic violence afflicts all societies, but more so those where patriarchy rules, where men dominate, irrespective of their ability to earn and carry out other responsibilities as family persons, family heads in most cases. Inbuilt male supremacy boosts male ego.
One can argue endlessly whether it is prevalent more
in traditional societies or those that follow Western norms, or whether it is in
the joint family or a nuclear one. But the universality of it is not in doubt.
Conventional wisdom is that education (for all) and
economic independence in the case of the woman help better relationship. But
there is no rule of the thumb with changing societal values and perceptions and
complexities of growing urbanization and the rate race to make it big in
material terms. In India, dowry deaths and in-laws’ harassment may or may not
have diminished, but a working woman’s autonomy to spend from her earnings does
lead to domestic violence.
India’s Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 begins and ends with the issue of violence. But it does not, and cannot, touch upon long-set social norms where a woman once married is expected to leave her parental home and not expect any relief or help if she is in trouble. They could include dowry demand, ill-treatment by in-laws who often side with the son against the daughter-in-law. Not just the mother-in-law, but the sister-in-law could also play a negative role. A daughter-in-law, but not daughter, is advised to accept a flawed relationship, occasional violence, even the son’s cheating. These are the realities.
Traditional social norms in India have ensured that
women by and large live with injustice and violence for fear of losing ‘izzat’
or else, being socially ostracized. A million women complained of domestic violence
between the year 2005, when the law was enacted and 2016. Yet, the rate of
reporting such incidents to the police are still considered small compared to
the Western societies. Though illegal since 1961, dowry demand, at times
camouflaged, remains ingrained in Indian society. Data reveals that 72 women
die every day.
The law works, but only to the extent the society
evolves and the State helps. For instance, “honour killing” is the norm, if not
so much in India then certainly to its West where in some societies, women
complaining of rape are punished.
This is all in the public domain, while domestic violence mainly occurs within the four walls of the home. In Thappad, it is a mix of the two. One tight slap falls on the cheek of a loving, caring wife from an equally loving, caring husband. It is delivered at home but in the midst of a party, before several guests.
It triggers a mini revolution. After failing to
reconcile, the wife is determined to preserve her self-respect, even if it
means a divorce. Just everyone, particularly women, including her woman-lawyer,
dissuade her. Your place is there, not with us, parents tell her. All this is
when each of them has story of aspirations suppressed at the altar of family
life.
Reconcile and move on, the in-laws advise. All
relationships are flawed, the lawyer counsels. Much ado over “just one slap?”
she is told. “Not even one slap,” she responds. It is a wake-up call, not one
to revolt. It’s a thin line, though.
The most effective parts of the film are the ones in
which we are shown just how women are always being told how to feel, how to
keep their feelings in check, how not to give into them.
Indian Express film critic Shubhra Gupta sums up: “Thappad
bears its message, more essential than ever, on its chin: Women are not
property. Wives are not owned. Dreams have no gender, and everyone is allowed
to realise them. And how all it takes, from a woman who just wants
self-respect, is a decision to say no, Not Even One Slap.”
Sadly, films speaking out against dowry are passé
these days. But like domestic violence, there is another ‘No’, as more and more
women join India’s work force. Pannu was the lead actor in another remarkable
film, Pink (2016), about consent in
sexual relationship. Amitabh Bachchan played the lawyer whose baritone “No
means no. Only no”, drew the Lakshman Rekha.
All three films cited here are well-written,
diligently performed, are not preachy, yet convey their respective messages
forcefully.
This is where, and how, cinema comes, as it should. Undoubtedly,
it has its limitations. The society cannot duck its responsibility. Not even
when political leaders attribute increase in cases of rape and divorce to women
going to work. The society has itself to set acceptable norms armed with legal
sanctions and follow it diligently.
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