Art & Entertainment

From Inquilab To Simmba, How Bollywood Has Glorified Extra-Judicial Killings As A Heroic Act

Cyberabad Commissioner of Police VC Sajjanar, who gunned down four men accused of raping and killing a woman veterinary doctor in Hyderabad, won kudos for his Bollywood-styled act of a 'supercop'

From <em>Inquilab</em> To <em>Simmba</em>, How Bollywood Has Glorified Extra-Judicial Killings As A Heroic Act
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A real-life Simmba! It바카라™s a moniker Cyberabad commissioner of pol­­ice V.C. Sajjanar appears to have earned from twitterati after the Telangana police recently gunned down four men acc­­used of raping and killing a woman veterinary doctor.

Minutes after news broke of the 바카라˜enc­ounter바카라™, the 1996-batch IPS officer was hailed by many on social media platfo­rms as a 바카라˜supercop바카라™ for having executed a Simmba-like operation against the alle­ged rapist-killers within days of the ghastly crime. Some went so far as to suggest that the police might have watched the movie before venturing out.

Were similarities between the reel and the real so acute? In Simmba, the leading man바카라”a policeman played by Ranveer Singh바카라”kills a rape accused in custody, ignoring the justice delivery system. The Telangana cops have been charged with having committed a similar offence. The jury is still out on it being a case of life imitating art, but there is no denying the fact that Bollywood has unabashedly glorified extra-judicial killings as a macho, heroic, therefore necessary, way of dispensing speedy justice that the 바카라˜system바카라™ unaccountably tarries over. From Inquilab (1984) and Gangaajal (2003) to Ab Tak Chhappan (2004) and Simmba (2018), many a movie has projected law-breaking protagonists as her­oes waging a lonely fight against an unjust system from within.

But can a movie like Simmba, or for that matter, Dabangg (2010) or Singham (2012), where unlawful acts of a trigger-happy cop are exalted, influence a real-life policeman into taking the law into his own hands? Not on your life, avers film-maker Maann Singh Deep. 바카라œReal cops do not get inspired by their reel counterparts,바카라 says Deep, who has produced movies like Gunehgaar (1995), Jurmana (1996) and Raja Bhaiya (2003). 바카라œOn the contrary, producers, directors and screenwriters get ideas from real-­life incidents in a policeman바카라™s life.바카라

Deep, who claims to have had a close association with so-called encounter specialists of the Mumbai police, says his contacts have often told him amazing stories about the force바카라™s anti-criminal activities. 바카라œI was often inspired to incorporate those incidents in the scripts of my films,바카라 he says. 바카라œBut never did I hear of any policeman getting swayed by anything that he might have seen in a film.바카라

Deep admits that audiences are inf­luenced by certain aspects, like  fashion adopted by top stars, but for sensitive subjects like police encounters, directors themselves draw inspiration from real incidents, then take cinematic liberties.

Screenwriter Rajat Aroraa concurs. 바카라œWhat is shown onscreen is more often than not a reflection of what is happening in society,바카라 says Aroraa, who has scripted blockbusters like Once Upon A Time in Mumbaai (2010), The Dirty Picture (2011) and Kick (2014). 바카라œFor instance, Prakash Jha바카라™s Gangaajal (2003) was based on a true incident (Bhagalpur blindings). But no such incident took place after the film바카라™s release.바카라

According to Aroraa, cinema and society are like shadows of one other. 바카라œThe Hyderabad police encounter is not the first of its kind in India. Mumbai witnessed quite a few in the past, which later inspired movies,바카라 he points out.

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Top Draw

Sanjay Dutt in Shootout at Lokhanwala; right, Ranveer in Simmba.

Just like the Hollywood trend of the antagonistic cop was established by Dirty Harry (1971), starring Clint Eastwood, the Bollywood cop movie took off after the mega success of Prakash Mehra바카라™s Zanjeer (1973), which cemented Amitabh Bachchan바카라™s enduring angry-man image. Its success led alm­ost all leading actors of the time to play upright policemen. The newish trend, revolving around a tough hero such as a policeman (often in dark shades) who has no qualms about staging a fake enc­ounter to kill outlaws, came about with the rise of gangster flicks at the turn of the millennium. In the next two decades, films like Encounter (2002), Risk (2007), Shagird (2011), Department (2012,) Shootout at Lokhandwala (2007) and Shootout at Wadala (2013) tackled extra-judicial killings as their central or sub-plots. The most popular was the Nana Patekar-starrer Ab Tak Chhappan, which was based on Daya Nayak, the controversial encounter specialist of the Mumbai pol­ice. In the past decade, stars like Salman Khan, Ajay Devgn and Ranveer Singh starred in big-ticket extravaganzas such as Dabangg, Singham and Simmba, where they took out outlaws with impunity despite being custodians of law.

National Award-winning writer Vinod Anupam believes that movies on extra-­judicial killings are merely an extension of Bollywood바카라™s penchant for anti-establishment cinema. 바카라œContent-wise, Indian cinema does not appear to be enamoured of democratic traditions. It always targets the weakest link, be it the legislature, the judiciary or the executive,바카라 he says. 바카라œHere, cinema caters to average people. If they believe that a person acc­used of committing a heinous crime should be shot dead, the film tries to show exactly that. In no way does it try to challenge the intellect of audiences.바카라

Cinema, therefore, becomes the voice of people who are dissatisfied with the existing system, Anupam states. 바카라œEverybody likes to see justice being del­ivered instantly. Even in Rang De Basanti (2006), the only solution offered to end corruption is to shoot the culprit even if he is the defence minister,바카라 he says. 바카라œWay back in the 1980s, in the Amitabh Bachchchan-starrer Inquilab, the protagonist enters the Vidhan Sabha to open fire at corrupt politicians.바카라

Social scientist Gyandeo Mani Tripathi points out that cinema brings to the fore the latent aspirations, desires and feelings of audiences. 바카라œAudiences clap when they see something which they are not capable of doing,바카라 he says. 바카라œThat is why filmmakers play to the gallery.바카라

Tripathi says that glorification of enc­ounter killings onscreen does influence moviegoers, especially youngsters. 바카라œIt may even influence policemen.... But it will not be proper to blame cinema for any Hyderabad-like incident. Cinema, after all, plays a tiny part in our lives.바카라

As of now, there is no let-up in Bolly­wood바카라™s interest in the good cop-bad cop trope. Rani Mukherjee is playing police superintendent Shivani Shivajirao, out to get a serial rapist in Mardaani 2, which is releasing next week. A week later, Salman Khan will be back with Dabangg 3, where he reprises his playful 바카라˜policewala goonda바카라™, Chulbul Pandey. Akshay Kumar returns early next year as a cop in Sooryavanshi. These cops will not play by the virtuous rulebook as their yesteryear바카라™s counterpart. They would rather bare their murky souls in the pursuit of justice. It is only a matter of time when a movie based on the Hyd­e­­rabad encounter will hit the screen.

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