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A love tangle
GAUTAMAN BHASKARAN
Raj Kapoor clapped for films. Once, that is. Born in Peshawar,
son of Prithviraj Kapoor, Raj was a clapper-boy at the Bombay
Talkies, before his dream and fantasy took him to dizzy heights.
In 1948, he opened his own studio, R.K. to make "Aag". Two years
later, the studio was expanded, and today it stands at Mumbai's
Chembur as a symbol of all that the man himself was renowned for.
Although Raj Kapoor was often compared to Charlie Chaplin's
tramp, what is not as well known is the fact that the Hindi
actor/director/producer was also deeply influenced by Capra and
De Sica.
Kapoor's canvas was wide all right. From his early passion for
social reformation - in a country that was savouring the first
flush of political independence - he went on to explore finer and
more delicate nuances of human behaviour. Later, his movies
became sexually explicit, one of the reasons for this being a
couple of box-office failures in the early 1970s.
But "Sangam" came before this disillusionment. Released in 1964,
it was Kapoor's first colour work. It is a glossy (Raj was truly
a showman) love triangle, where the affection between two men
(Kapoor and Rajendra Kumar) is spoilt by a woman
(Vyjayanthimala).
Both men love the woman, but shunned and ridiculed by Vyjayanthi
and her parents, Kapoor lays aside his bagpipe and music to join
the Air Force and ultimately win national honours.
Kapoor also gets his lady love, thanks, of course, to Kumar, who
steps aside.
"Sangam" is a poignant tale with songs that have the power to
move you even today, almost four decades after it ran to packed
houses for weeks on end. "Yeh mere prem patra..", "Har dil jo
pyar karega... and so on were on just about everybody's lips in
the 1960s.
One of the very early pictures to use breathtaking European
backdrops, "Sangam" was a veritable feast for the eye as well.
From the snowy Alps to the delightfully decadent Paris, this
piece of celluloid had a magnificent sweep.
"Sangam" also had a couple of thought-provoking messages. One, it
seemed to say that the most valuable relationship a man can have
is with another man, and we see this in Raj's pining for Kumar in
the song, "Dost dost na raha..."
The other was a plea for a fairer treatment of women.
All these are debatable, but what is above such discussion is
that "Sangam" leaves a wonderful impression even when one sees it
today.
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