Home      Advertising      Classifieds      Directory      Restaurants      Forums      Writers      Jobs      Contact Us      About Us      Archives        Preview Chanel
    

0
Hosted Ecommerce Solution
Home » Briefs
5 / 5 (1 Votes)

Bollywood 101

By: 

Listen up, students: you can now immerse yourself in your favorite Bollywood movies, and when your parents ask you what you're up to, you can genuinely say, "I'm studying!" Yes, Bollywood is getting a lot of izzat. It's being taught at Pratt Institute. An entire class is devoted to Amitabh Bachchan! Its very hard work - involves sitting through lots and lots of Bollywood musicals and then discussing them! You get to drool over Shahrukh Khan and Aishwarya Rai and this semester the course could be offered for credits at Pratt Institute. That's like being told your butter drenched giant tumbler of popcorn and huge soda qualify as a weight-watcher's meal!

 

The course is the brainchild of Mareena Waheeda Daredia, a filmmaker who's had several photography exhibitions. She is especially equipped to teach Bollywood since she grew up living and breathing cinema. One of her distant relatives was a co-producer on the legendary Mughal-E-Azam in the 40's before he migrated to Pakistan; in Pakistan one of her uncles was into bringing in films and having them dubbed while another was on the censor board! She herself grew up in Dubai where Hindi films, dubbed in Arabic, were shown on public television every Thursday. Recalls Daredia, "All the video stores were owned by Indians or Pakistanis, so there was no shortage of Hindi films." Her father was mad about dialogues, and so they would have to sit through several rewindings of popular film videos.

"It's important to be taught, it's the biggest industry in the world in terms of production it beats Hong Kong, it beats Hollywood by far," says Daredia, "It needs to be standardized and taught and people need to understand that's there's a lot more than songs and colorful cinematography and costumes."

Daredia teaches Bollywood cinema by the decades and there are special classes about cult classics, and the films of icons like Raj Kapoor and Guru Dutt. Recently she opened a screening of Kal Ho Na Ho, which was shot in New York, to the entire university. She says, "I feel whatever I was doing was working, because they showed up and they were able to identify with NY City and see what a more modern film is like."



Home » Briefs
Articles Toolbar



Post Your Comments:
Please Note: Entering Incorrect Security Code After The Comment Box Will Cause No Submission Of Data. Please read instructions at end before Submitting the comment.

Your name:
Your email:
Subject:
Comment Text:
Limit to 150 words.



Please enter the Case Sensitive Security Code that you see in image in the box above before Submitting the Comment. Upon successful submission, the form above would disappear.

You may submit lengthier letters to the editor using the Feedback Form

Visitor's Comments
More Articles In Category

•  Howzaat! Sachin's Out!
•  Indian BPO's Generate US...
•  US Tops In India Tourism
•  India's Highest paid CEOs
•  Eight New IITs
•  Audit Unnerves Green Card...
•  The Indian Stock Mrket...
•  Sam Manekhaw's Fine Line
•  $1 Million for 3 Hours
•  Travel While Sikh
•  Hacking Their Way To Good...
•  Rambo's Bollywood Roll
•  Phone Yoga
•  Yes, Prime Minister
•  South Asian Hate Crimes
•  Chairman Hanuman
•  Indian Motelier Gets Life...
•  Shivaji To Rival Statue Of...
•  Sports Museum
•  Indians Top UK's Under-40...
•  Three Charged With LSU...
•  Too Smart For Valedictorian
•  Indian Physician Questions...
•  Chastising The Chaste
•  Charged With Child Abuse
•  BigBlog
•  Nepal Abolishes Monarchy
•  Indians Genetically...
•  Professor Threatens To Sue...
•  Window, Aisle Or Toilet...
•  Who Is Starving Whom?
•  Great Khali
•  Komagata Maru Apology
•  Death By Gulab Jamun?
•  Don't Go There!
•  Raining Money
•  World Kabbadi League?
•  Berry Bitter Harvest
•  Sri Lanka Is Promoting A...
•  9/11's Last Victim?
•  IAEA on Board?
•  Indian Aviation Industry...
•  Tata Unveils $2,500 Nano
•  Fast Track for NRIs in...
•  What Price Happiness?
•  India Surpasses China In...
•  Gujaratis Lose $1 Billion...
•  Whose Pashmina
•  Reliance Power IPO
•  Scrabulous: Not Fabulous?
•  Hit On The Head. Pain In...
•  Better Than Queen
•  No Millionaire, But Fun All...
•  Canadian Sikhs Rally For...
•  See You Again, Sarkozy?
•  Ticketmaster
•  Suicidal Palm Tree
•  Guess Who's Coming To Dinner
•  IT Doesn't Pay
•  Oriental Hotels Snubs Tatas
•  India, China Shrink
•  Dollar Dive
•  Preaching Gita in US Motels?
•  1 in 5 IBM Employees Indian
•  Fecal Art
•  Hanuman: Summoned To Court
•  UK's Missing Indian Girls
•  Ethnic Groups Trust Whites...
•  Boyfriend Charged in...
•  Smells Bad
•  Electric Discpline
•  Indian Doctor Wins Right to...
•  $100,000 Sari
•  Hanuman: Action Hero
•  Grave Threat
•  Malay Indians Seek $4...
•  Million Dollar Arm Hunt
•  Who is a Hindu?
•  Kiss My Chuddies
•  Estranged Husband Suspected...
•  No Dollars at the Taj
•  NRI Deserters
•  Big Ben in New Delhi
•  Immigration Applications...
•  Serial Litigant
•  Indian Art Auction in France
•  Scaring Elephants With...
•  Right Wing Indian Gets Boot
•  India eyes Mars
•  Unions Back Tatas in Jaguar...
•  India's AIDS count HALVED
•  India-ASEAN free trade...
•  Expats Swell in India
•  Dubious Distinction
•  Turning Green
•  Carrefour On Walmart's Heels
•  Dollar's Fall Bruises...
•  Love Him Till He Hurts
•  Breaking Up is Hard To Do
•  Outing An Indian

powered by scorpio informatics