• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Sport
  • Cricket
  • Odisha
Protest Through The Lenses: People’s Alienation In Our Cinema

Protest Through The Lenses: People’s Alienation In Our Cinema

5 years ago
Bangladeshi Government Ackowledges Lynching And Burning Of Hindu Man In Mymensingh; Promises Action

Bangladeshi Government Ackowledges Lynching And Burning Of Hindu Man In Mymensingh; Promises Action

3 minutes ago
Odisha Secures Rs 70000 Cr Investment Intent; Signs Key MoUs At Hyderabad Roadshow

Odisha Secures Rs 70000 Cr Investment Intent; Signs Key MoUs At Hyderabad Roadshow

18 minutes ago
No Foul Play In Zubeen Garg’s Death, Says Singapore Police

No Foul Play In Zubeen Garg’s Death, Says Singapore Police

35 minutes ago
Bhubaneswar, Cuttack Sees Slight Drop In Mercury; 12 Places In Odisha Record Temp Below 10°C

Bhubaneswar, Cuttack Sees Slight Drop In Mercury; 12 Places In Odisha Record Temp Below 10°C

37 minutes ago
Priyanka Gandhi Attends ‘Chai Pe Charcha’ With Modi, Rajnath Singh After Meet With Gadkari

Priyanka Gandhi Attends ‘Chai Pe Charcha’ With Modi, Rajnath Singh After Meet With Gadkari

52 minutes ago
marital rape

Minor Rape Survivor Delivers Baby At Private Hospital In Odisha, Both Rescued By CWC

1 hour ago
Armed Cops To Man Border Check Posts In Odisha’s Mayurbhanj To Stop Illegal Paddy Movement From Bengal, Jharkhand

Armed Cops To Man Border Check Posts In Odisha’s Mayurbhanj To Stop Illegal Paddy Movement From Bengal, Jharkhand

1 hour ago
Experts Assess Mental State Of UP Man Who Murdered Wife, Daughters Over Burqa Row

Experts Assess Mental State Of UP Man Who Murdered Wife, Daughters Over Burqa Row

2 hours ago
Murder, Rape Convicts Lodged At Jharpada Jail In Bhubaneswar Disappear After Parole

Murder, Rape Convicts Lodged At Jharpada Jail In Bhubaneswar Disappear After Parole

2 hours ago
Can’t Breathe Anymore…: Bangladeshi Journalists Recount Horror Amid Violence After Osman Hadi’s Death

Can’t Breathe Anymore…: Bangladeshi Journalists Recount Horror Amid Violence After Osman Hadi’s Death

2 hours ago
Schools In Odisha’s Khaira Block Closed As Tusker Wreaks Havoc, Tramples Man To Death

Schools In Odisha’s Khaira Block Closed As Tusker Wreaks Havoc, Tramples Man To Death

2 hours ago
Indian And Australian Investigators Probe Bondi Beach Attacker’s Travel And Financial Trail

Indian And Australian Investigators Probe Bondi Beach Attacker’s Travel And Financial Trail

3 hours ago
  • Home
  • About us
  • Career
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Usage
Friday, December 19, 2025
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
No Result
View All Result
Home OB Special Decoding Democracy

Protest Through The Lenses: People’s Alienation In Our Cinema

by Akshaya Mishra
August 28, 2020
in Decoding Democracy, Featured, Guest Column, OB Special
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Protest Through The Lenses: People’s Alienation In Our Cinema
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

In our movies many decades ago, the police landed on the scene after the hero was done with his heroics. They always arrived late. The officer, wielding a megaphone, asked him to surrender or hand over whoever he was dealing with to the police so that ‘kanoon usko sazza degi’. He was advised not to take the law into his hands. The nicety of lip service to ‘kanoon’ was virtually abandoned in later times, particularly after the trend of the policeman turned avenging hero became popular.

The 1983 film ‘Andha Kanoon’, remake of a Tamil movie, with Rajinikanth in the lead and Amitabh Bachchan in an extended cameo, loudly proclaimed that the law was blind. It has spawned many clones, and still does. A decade later, the film ‘Damini’ pointed unapologetically at the travesty of justice through the legal process. Sunny Deol as the lawyer for Damini, witness to a rape and murder by family members, mouths one of the most memorable dialogues on the practice of courts on postponing dates of hearing: ‘Tarikh pe tarikh, tarikh pe tarikh, tarikh pe tarikh, tarikh pe tarikh milti rahi hai. Lekin insaf nahi mila my lord, mila hai to sirf tarikh…’

ADVERTISEMENT

Through the decades, in our movies the voice of no confidence in the police and justice systems has only got sharper. The films have been denouncing both as either incompetent or ineffectual or corrupt or untrustworthy or all of these. The logical extension of this has been the normalisation of avenger justice, encounter killings, and the general irreverence for the processes of law and justice on screen. If there’s loud applause for encounter killings these days, it’s rooted in the negative public perception accumulating for long. Cinema can only be accused of amplifying reality.

What goes for the police and the judiciary goes for the negative portrayal of politicians too. From criminalisation of politics to manipulation of the electoral process to leaders in cahoots with shady businessmen, we have it all in reel life. The solution is hardly in throwing out the wretched leader in an election. Because he is too powerful and too networked to be brought down, he has to be physically eliminated. In the 1984 Amitabh-starrer ‘Inqilaab’, the protagonist shoots down a bunch of them and claims he has ushered in ‘inqilaab’ (revolution). In ‘Singham’, a 2011 film with Ajay Devgn in the lead, the entire police force unites to kill one dirty politician. The choice of films in this article is random — there are many with similar themes — the point is to only highlight that through decades, the negative public image of our public servants and institutions has persisted, and grown stronger.

The noble slumlord in our movies – from Shakti Velu in Vinod Khanna-starrer ‘Dayavaan’ to Karikaalan in Rajnikanth-starrer ‘Kaala’ — are in many ways benign feudal lords of rural and semi-urban India of our movies transplanted in the cityscape. The loyalty to them is absolute, because unlike the impersonal and indifferent system, they are perceived as fair, considerate and capable of producing quick solutions to grievances. They are the problem-solver, justice-dispenser, basically the one-stop solution to everything. The loyalty they command is because they make good use of power. So long as end justify the means there’s not much to complain about.

The fact that people would go to the extent of electing actors playing these characters and even worship them as deties in real life underlines general hopelessness. Such attitude reveals frustration at the public expectation of performance from those manning the institutions of democracy – the political system, the police, the judiciary etc — and the actual performance they get.

It also reveals something about our attitude to power. In an evolved democracy, popular power is exercised through institutions, which follow rules that are supposed to be neutral and fair. Power, which people surrender collectively to bigger entities in a democracy, is meant to act to their benefit, not against it. The more institutions become manipulable and corrupt, the more people feel cheated. Popular culture such as cinema try to project the true meaning of power through protagonists — heroes as we call them — who can be an honest police officer, a good slumlord or a zamindar or even a principled politician. It might appear crude, irrational and extreme, but it articulates expectation substantively.

However, the hero in our cinema is fiction, a product of fantasy, while the villain is rooted in reality. Over the decades the villain in real life has become more powerful and omnipresent, with firmer grip on the system, and thus lives of people. The ordinary masses feel alienated from power even more. Given these circumstances, if they prefer authoritarian rulers with better delivery potential, it should not be considered out of the blue. Same goes for institutions. If they are perceived to be irrelevant to people’s lives then the reason for their existence becomes questionable.

[This is the 12th part of our series titled Decoding Democracy] 

Share196Tweet123
ADVERTISEMENT
Akshaya Mishra

Akshaya Mishra

Senior Journalist & Writer based in New Delhi

Related Posts

Research Project Or Spying Act? Seagull Fitted With Chinese Device Found Near Indian Naval Base

Research Project Or Spying Act? Seagull Fitted With Chinese Device Found Near Indian Naval Base

by OB Bureau
December 18, 2025

Bengaluru: Is China spying in India? This suspicion was sparked among locals in Karnataka after a migratory seagull fitted with...

Odisha’s Paradise Lost: How Littering Is Turning Our Serene Beauty Into Plastic Wasteland

Odisha’s Paradise Lost: How Littering Is Turning Our Serene Beauty Into Plastic Wasteland

by Tarana Ahad Sayed
December 14, 2025

Odisha, once India’s best-kept secret, is fast becoming one of its most littered states. We are blessed with breathtaking landscapes—rivers,...

Plastic and garbage

Litter Litter Anywhere… Here, There & Everywhere! When Will Odisha & India Wake Up?

by Tarana Ahad Sayed
December 13, 2025

‘Odisha’, the best kept secret of India, is becoming one of the most littered states of India! We have a...

Male Odissi Dancers’ Stubble Look At Odisha’s Konark Festival Sparks Outrage

Male Odissi Dancers’ Stubble Look At Odisha’s Konark Festival Sparks Outrage

by Pradeep Pattanayak
December 12, 2025

Bhubaneswar: A fresh controversy has erupted in Odisha’s cultural circles after some male Odissi dancers took the stage sporting stubble...

OdishaBytes

Copyright © 2025 Frontier Media

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • News Feed

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review

Copyright © 2025 Frontier Media