3-9 Nov, 2011
small world
Flick-lit
Casting a Second Thought

MUMBAI ~ Rina Golan, an Israeli Bollywood struggler turned author, who has recently been reported as someone ‘who has exposed Bollywood’s dirty casting couch secret’ in her first book, Dear Mr Bollywood, is upset. The writer, whose website tells you she is a drama therapy major at New York University, says that’s not what the book is about.

“The media has only focused on those chapters, and I am very upset. The book is about my journey here since 2007, my experiences and my love for India, acting, and Shah Rukh Khan.” The book, written as a letter to SRK, is an account of Rina’s life in Mumbai as a struggler trying to make it big. Newspapers have been full of excerpts that speak of Rina being propositioned for sexual favours by Bollywood bigwigs such as Subhash Ghai and Anees Bazmee. She has alleged that Ghai tried to take her to his bedroom, Bazmee asked her out to dinner when she approached him for a role in his movie Thank You (2011), and told her, “We would have some fun,” and the singer Anup Jalota confided in her that he ‘wants to cheat on his wife’.

Golan now just wants to forget these events. “When I first came here, I didn’t expect anything. I did the whole struggler routine—went to auditions, got portfolios clicked. But I was very sure that I would never compromise on my integrity and morals, as I have seen others do. But that’s not the moral of the book. This kind of stuff can happen anywhere—in any kind of work. So why is everyone focusing on this aspect? I don’t even want to talk about it anymore. I am not here to malign Bollywood. My book is only about a person who wants to follow her dreams.”

Last heard, Bazmee had decided to sue Golan for these “allegations”. Golan, for now, just wants to promote her book, and never do a Bollywood movie. “If I had done all this for publicity, I would want to do a movie, right? But I don’t. Ever. I just want to write now. My books are meant to inspire people through things I feel passionately about. Even if somebody gave me a big movie, I wouldn’t do it. Now, I just want to write.”

Take Two
Theft under Threat
What accusations of plagiarism against Ra.One mean for Bollywood

In India’s entertainment history, Ram Sampath will some day be acknowledged as the man who changed the DNA of Bollywood. He did that by raising the spectre of serious losses for filmmakers who stole ideas. This Sampath did by strategically filing a court case against Rakesh Roshan just days before Krazzy4 was to be released, and then demanding—and getting—Rs 2 crore for not insisting on a stay on the release. Roshan had lifted a tune composed by Sampath.

Last week, Yash Patnaik, in a copycat tactic, did the same thing to Shah Rukh Khan. He was not as successful as Sampath but he still achieved something. The Bombay High Court asked the makers of Ra.One to deposit Rs 1 crore till it decided whether Ra.One’s story was stolen from Patnaik. It found prima facie merit in Patnaik’s claim. His supervillain had even been named One. So whoever stole the idea was in fact lazy enough to do it with not too much subtlety.

You could debate why Bollywood steals so much and so often, but what is obvious given its history is that it detests originality. This could be because large sums of money are riding on a project and anything unknown is by definition untested, and, therefore, to be kept at an arm’s length. Or it could be the simpler explanation that it is easier to steal than to pay. A scriptwriter, who should probably be the most important creative person in a unit after the director, is probably paid as much as an established lyricist gets for one 16-line song in the same movie. And a fraction of what a music director might be paid.

Earlier, it was impossible to do anything when an idea was stolen because the aggrieved party was some poor struggling survivor. Sampath changed that. He showed that it was possible to hit them where it hurts. And instead of being ostracised, he returned to become a success in Bollywood with the music of Delhi Belly. Yash Patnaik, an unknown TV producer, suing Khan and almost getting the film delayed is yet another shock to the system. The court was generous enough to let the film’s release go on as planned, and now, Patnaik probably won’t get anything—with no looming crisis, lawyers will work their magic. Even so, the idea that stealing an idea is theft with consequences has now become a little more firmly entrenched.

endurance
Long Run

Last Saturday morning, a total of 32 marathon runners started the most gruelling run in the country. The runners, divided into three groups, participated in races of 30 miles (48 km), 50 miles (80 km) and 100 miles (160 km) on the harsh terrain of the Aravalis, 30 km from New Delhi. Going by the length of the run and the extremely humid conditions at the Bhati Lakes of Suraj Kund, it was not until Sunday evening that the last runner was clocked in. Only four of the group completed the 100-mile course that required participants to run 8 loops of a 20 km stretch near the lakes.

The event, dubbed Globeracer, featured participants of ages 23–71 from India and abroad. Seven runners, including model and actor Milind Soman, attempted the 160-km run. Bhupendra Singh Rajput, a 41-year-old marathon enthusiast from Pune, clocked 27 hours and 28 minutes to win the race. He beat his nearest competitor by six hours.

Allowance
Old Tricks, New Bones

There was mayhem in the Kerala Assembly after police action on agitating students in Kozhikode. Two CPM legislators were also suspended. What went relatively unnoticed in the ensuing commotion was the bipartisan support for the recommendations of the R Rajendrababu commission, submitted to the speaker of the Assembly, and which got bipartisan support from legislators. The commission recommends that salaries of ministers, the speaker, the deputy speaker, the leader of the opposition and the government chief whip be increased from Rs 1,000 to Rs 10,000 a month. It also proposed that their allowances be doubled. The fixed allowance is expected to be increased from Rs 300 to Rs 8,500. The overall increase in allowances will be from Rs 20,300 to Rs 40,250 a month. As it turned out, these increases, meant to match the current rate of inflation, were tabled in the Assembly when the opposition had staged a sit-in at the well of the house. Unsurprisingly, the opposition and treasury benches were united in agreement with the commission’s report.

Scavenging
Subterranean Suffocation Blues

Less than 100 km from Bangalore, the Silicon Valley of India, three workers suffocated to death while cleaning a septic tank. The incident occurred on 23 October in Kolar, while the three were manually emptying the tank. Though manual scavenging of night soil is officially banned, and not encouraged, many workers continue to make a living of cleaning such pits. The police say seven safai karmacharis (professional hygiene workers) were called to dig the underground pit and clean it. One of them went inside to retrieve a sickle. When Kutty Prasad started to suffocate, Ravi and Babu jumped in to rescue him. In the melee, all three died, while the others fled.

Strangely, the continuance of this abhorrent practice had been highlighted last year too, and the state government had decided to ban manual scavenging. Authorities now say that the three who died had already been provided alternate employment. And they were not sure why they had gone back to emptying septic tanks with their bare hands. This is clearly a case of one arm of the government not knowing what the other is up to.

Declaration
Policing the Police

In Kerala, 28 IPS officers have failed to file their annual immovable property returns (IPR) for 2010, despite three deadlines given to them by the Home Ministry. The Ministry of Home Affairs has issued a notice to chief secretaries of all states, warning them that defaulting officers will not get vigilance clearance. This could adversely affect their posting and promotions. As the last deadline of 10 October has lapsed, the Ministry has made public the names of officers who are yet to file their IPRs. Kerala has around 90 IPS officers. The defaulters include officers of ADGP rank. Across the country, 864 officers are yet to file their IPRs. The list includes the state police chiefs of Delhi, Bihar, Sikkim and Uttar Pradesh.