Thursday, April 25, 2013

THE CHOCOLATE BOY AND THE GIRL NEXT DOOR: CELEBRATING THE 25TH ANNIVERSARY OF QSQT

Okay, let's get some things straight. I am a big Aamir Khan fan, and when it comes to talking about his films, I conveniently see no flaws. I would happily jump through fire hoops and climb Mount Everest for him, although I don't think he would really put me up to those tasks, but I cannot say an unkind word about him or his films. I loved him as the incorrigible Sanjay in Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar, as the handle-bar mustachioed Mangal Pandey in Mangal Pandey, heck - I even love him in the new Godrej ads, where he is in drag.

In this blog, I discuss one of his earliest blockbusters  - Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak, considered to be a landmark film in popular Hindi cinema. 23 April 2013 marked the 25th Anniversary of this film. QSQT was released on the very same date in the year 1988 and starred two freshly minted young stars - Juhi Chawla and Aamir Khan. The lead pair created history, as the film went on to become the biggest hits of that year.

                   
The poster of Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak


Juhi Chawla had recently been crowned Miss India and had also done some modelling, but her face was largely unknown. She brought the genuine innocence and optimism of a young girl just out into the world to the role, not to mention a lovable dorkiness - a quality that would mark many of her later roles as well. Contrary to popular belief, this wasn't the debut film of Aamir Khan. He had earlier worked in a film called Holi (Dir. Ketan Mehta,1984) as a teenager and also in the critically acclaimed Raakh (Dir. Aditya Bhattacharya, 1989) as Supriya Pathak's brother. In fact, he has also won a Special Jury Mention National Award for the latter. [ You can watch the film Holi on YouTube here and the promo of Raakh here] Though his roles in his first two films were quite edgy, in QSQT, Khan epitomized the new-age romantic hero. His character in the film was a welcome break from the angry young men that had ruled over the Hindi film industry in the 80s decade.

QSQT was the first and last of its kind in more than one way. It was one of the first films whose loo..oong and weighty title was compressed into a pithy, catchy acronym. This spawned a whole generation of similar bonsai titles like HAHK, DDLJ, KKHH, KANK, MNIK etc. Also, it was one of the last films where the much-in-love Raj and Rashmi rebel against parental authority, and elope to fulfill their love for and commitment to each other. Later films like Hum Aapke Hai Kaun and Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, on the other hand,  featured young lovers who were tame and boringly virtuous, and wouldn't even kiss each other without maa-baauji's aashirwaad.

                  
The lead pair of  Juhi and Aamir which stole everyone's hearts


The film, as everyone knows, is an Indianized reworking of Shakespeare's tragic play about two ill-fated teenage lovers - Romeo and Juliet. In QSQT, the youngsters negotiate personal desire and individual choice against a rigid and orthodox feudal family set-up. In this respect, the film does something rather brave. The family, especially the mother figure, in Hindi cinema has always been the site of protection and nurture, and most film plots drive towards the consolidation of this unit through the marriage of the hero and the heroine at the end of the film. In QSQT, there is no such consolidation, as the protagonists realise their desire of being together inspite of family opposition in death at the end of the film. Death, in this case, is not simply a tragic end but the final rebellion that the young people stage against the stifling value system of their respective families.

My favourite moment in the film is when Rashmi, instead of waiting around for the hero to bachao her izzat, rescues herself from a bunch of goons. Rashmi is accosted by a group of young boys looking for trouble, after she misses her bus and is lost on a jungle. (The leader of the pack is a very young and convincingly goony looking Makarand Deshpande and Aamir Khan's brother, Faisal, also does a cameo here.) As they chase her and finally capture here, she uses her presence of mind and some grit to knee the goon in his business and proceeds to hide in a pit covered with dry leaves.

The film, needless to say made history, and so did it's lead stars.
The promises of eternal love may seem anachronistic in this age, when dating someone is as easy as "friending" them on Facebook. Yet the film will always remain a classic for its breezy music, its engaging melodrama and twists, its teen love story, and of course, some very good acting by its lead pair.

Happy 25th, QSQT!

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