Asia India Bombay IiLIFE Photo Collection
Cinema has long since recognized that each city has a distinctive personality—a dynamic identity that shifts with time and perspective— and can therefore be mobilized to embody a different character in each narrative. It is now a cliché to state that cinematic cities slide into narratives to embody characters as crucial and rooted in materiality as the humans who inhabit the city.
Photographic still of Kalpana Kartik from the Hindi film, Taxi Driver (1954) by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
In fact, in Taxi Driver (1954), “City of Bombay” appears in the title credits as a cast member.
Film poster for 'Dosti' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
But the pivotal characters played by cities in several landmark films of Hindi cinema’s Golden Era have walked around with fluid grace even decades after their creation, leaking into discourses around Hindi cinema, and the geography of actual cities.
These embodied cities have survived in collective imaginations, inspiring the aesthetic of several Hindi films over the course of the next few decades, not merely because they formed the fulcrum of filmic narratives, but also because they appeared as visually pivotal. Urban spaces confidently strode into posters and promotional material, occupying a place of importance in the identity of the film in which they appeared.
Film poster for 'Mr. X in Bombay' by Poster Center, Bombay (printer)Museum of Art & Photography
Selected film posters and photographic lobby stills in the collection of the Museum of Art and Photography afford glimpses at the ways in which several films of Indian cinema’s Golden Era visually personified cities in their promotional material.
While a city looms large as menacing and shadowy silhouette in a poster of Guru Dutt’s superbly melancholic Pyaasa (1957), another appears as a modern technological playground where all things are possible in a poster of the effervescently improbable science-fiction drama Mr X. in Bombay (1964).
The City of Work
The imaginary of the city in popular Hindi cinema of the Golden Era was deeply influenced by Italian neorealism, a cinema movement that was characterized by narratives revolving around poor and the working class protagonists in the wake of World War II, filming on location, and frequent use of non-professional actors.
Film still of actor Balraj Sahani, from the Hindi film Do Bigha Zamin (1953/1953)Museum of Art & Photography
Bimal Roy’s highly feted Do Bigha Zamin(1953) was inspired by Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves, an immensely influential Italian drama that follows a man and his son as they search Rome for a stolen bicycle that was meant to ensure the starving family’s livelihood. Do Bigha Zamin, however, frames its narrative within a familiar rural-urban divide.
It depicts farmer Shambhu’s (Balraj Sahni) desperate dash to Calcutta- a last-ditch attempt to retain ownership over a small patch of farmland that his family has cultivated for several generations. The city is a stranger to him and his son, and as a rickshaw puller, he is required to make intimate contact with its unforgiving hardness. As his body negotiates with the unfamiliar topography of the urban landscape, its foreignness becomes a source of persistent mental and physical exhaustion.
The Inventive City
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Karigar' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The influence of Bicycle Thieves is also amply evident in Karigar (1958), which centers on newly employed labourer Shankar (Ashok Kumar) and his son’s quest for stolen implements. Unlike Shambu, they are not migrants in the city, and can claim it as their own, but their pursuit of the stolen goods gradually reveals the true character of the city to them. They come to realize that negotiating with Bombay requires money.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Boot Polish' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Karigar is also marked by the presence of that peculiar urban figure of the boot polish boy. Shoeshiners frequently appear as tangible manifestations of the city’s inventiveness, embodying the meaning of street-smartness in the urban topography. While the shoeshine boy's tribulations were immortalized in De Sica’s Shoeshine (1946), Raj Kapoor’s Boot Polish (1954) is considered as the figure’s moment of reckoning in Hindi cinema.
The Duplicitous City
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Boot Polish' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
As Boot Polish (1954) charts the journey of two poor slum-dwelling children Belu (Baby Naaz) and Bhola (Rattan) who have been told not to beg for money, it exposes the duality of the city. Bombay, the film attests, reveals itself differently to people of different classes and ages.
This is captured in the moment where Belu, who has been adopted by a rich childless couple, leads her foster parents to her erstwhile slum residence via an extremely strange route: she crawls below railings and leaps over piles of garbage because that is the only face of the city she has seen as a desperately poor child.
The City of Hope
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Boot Polish' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The streets of Boot Polish’s Bombay are also sites of grand imaginations of progress and development. As John Chacha (David) sings to nudge the street children onto a path of ethical growth, the city watches and makes spaces for their celebratory dance routines.
If, as cultural theorist Ashis Nandy claims, popular Hindi cinema indeed offers a “slum’s eye view of Indian politics”, then Boot Polish’s city offers up a fantastic meta moment: it frames the city, and by extension, popular Hindi cinema, as a patched-up and endearing creature that is comfortable commenting on its own inadequacy, and confident of a better future.
Tap to explore
The Inauthentic City
After India acquired independence from the British in 1947, the colonial experience functioned as a fulcrum around which Indian nationalism was organized. While rural spaces came to be mobilized as the crucibles of the country’s cultural heritage, urban spaces became adversely implicated in a nationalistic discourse that regarded cities as pallbearers of western modernity.
Poster produced for Hindi feature film 'Shree 420' (1955) by Globe Art Printers, DelhiMuseum of Art & Photography
Several theorists note that in the decade after Indian independence, its cities became entangled in contradictory narratives. While Mahatma Gandhi repeatedly called for mechanisms that could make villages self-reliant, Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first Prime Minister, staunchly rooted for industrialization. Film theorist Ranjani Mazumdar has pointed out in Bombay Cinema: An Archive of the City that these arguments are often wrongly cited as irreconcilable ends of a binary. The cities embodied in Raj Kapoor’s films reflect the meeting points in the two perspectives.
In Shree 420, for instance, Bombay is a den of iniquity, a space where moral and ethical codes do not hold any currency. However, the city also appears as a benevolent guide whose street economies still carry a nationalistic authenticity.
The Commercial City
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Karigar' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
When Raj (Raj Kapoor) arrives in the city, he is appalled by the commercialization of its spaces and brashness of its residents. Raj’s entry into the city is baptized by an advertisement for Coca-Cola, which appears in several popular Hindi films of that era, including Karigar (1958) and Aakhri Khat (1966), as an icon of urbanization. The presence of that effervescent, artificially sweetened, and spectacularly unhealthy drink hints at the purported character of the city, and underscores the binary of unrelenting urbanism and pastoral bliss.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Shree 420' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The Rooted City
Raj is eventually seduced by the charms of the city in the guise of the femme fatale Maya (Nadira), and led into a life of petty crime. He accumulates wealth, begins to dress and speak differently, and has his eyes firmly set on a prosperous future. However, Raj’s certitude is shaken when the city street beckons him with the song Ramaiyya Vastavaya.The voice of the street thrusts him back in time and space, reminding him of the strand of his identity that he had once hoped to forget, or at least elide.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Shree 420' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Shree 420 also dwells on the erotic and sensual pleasures of the night-time urban street, which plays matchmaker for the protagonists. Raj leads the morally upright school teacher Vidya (Nargis) to a bench that he calls ‘Footpath Palace Restaurant’, which is served by a street vendor peddling hot tea. The cityscape- curiously barren and gently accommodating- offers them space to declare their love for each other. It begins to pour with rain, and the couple share an umbrella while strolling down the city streets and singing of their new-found love.
The symbolically loaded moment, which eventually went on to become emblematic of Hindi cinema, marks the start of their shared future: the couple does not have much money, the world is materialistic, but the city streets will look after them.
On the other hand, Pyaasa underscores the materialistic underpinnings of the dark city streets’ eroticism, molding it in the role of a pimp for Gulabo (Waheeda Rehman). She croons the seductive melody Jaane Kya Tune Kahi, with the inky, cinematic lushness of the city as her aide, to solicit the attention of a stranger who seems respectable and wealthy.
The Strange City
The figure of the stranger, who appears for a fleeting moment and then recedes from narrative and history, is a central figure of urban life. As film theorist David Clarke notes in The Cinematic City, modern cities can be characterized as “a world as experienced by the stranger, and the experience of a world populated by strangers”.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Jagte Raho' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
The modern city demands the figure of the stranger—a person who could be anyone and no one simultaneously—and educates its residents to fill that role. Consequently, a person new to the city sticks out as an oddity whose different-ness is incompatible with urbanism. He is as yet uninitiated into the city’s strangeness, and because he does not know how to assimilate into the city’s uniformity, he comes to be regarded as an anomaly.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Jagte Raho' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
This figure is the central character of Jagte Raho which traces a village migrant’s (Raj Kapoor) night-long quest for water in an urban colony of eerily similar apartments. He is unable to blend into this uniformity because of the strangeness of his need, which causes him to be branded and hunted down as a thief. As he painstakingly negotiates with a hypocritical urban landscape, he is initiated into the character of the city.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Jagte Raho' by UnkownMuseum of Art & Photography
He is only able to stand up to the city when he becomes willing to stand out. After a melodramatic confrontation with the residents who find his strangeness unpalatable, he is lured by a curiously pastoral scene. A woman (Nargis) is going about her morning rituals, which include watering the holy basil in the courtyard of a temple.
As dawn breaks over the horizon, the man is finally given a drink of water in a space that has been conceived as a distinctly rural oasis in an urban desert.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Aakhri Khat' by Possibly Jal MistryMuseum of Art & Photography
Akhri Khat (1966) begins with the figure of a homeless woman and her baby- showing them as integrated into the fabric of Bombay’s uniformity. But after the woman dies, unable to leave the boy in the care of a father who had once refused to acknowledge him, the toddler becomes a strange creature- unmoored and helpless. He begins to cultivate a new relationship with the city, which has pockets of softness and kindness tucked away in the folds of its rough cultural fabric.
The City of Utopia
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Ab Dilli Dur Nahin' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Ab Dilli Door Nahin (1957) traces the story of a boy travelling alone to the capital. He hopes that a meeting with Prime Minister Nehru will enable him to exonerate his father, who has been wrongfully accused of murder. As the boy navigates with its streets, and befriends its mostly large-hearted people, the city of Delhi becomes symbolic of a utopian India: an idea enshrined in the pun of the title of the film, which idiomatically translates to “the ulitmate destination is not far”.
Film still for 'Jagte Raho' featuring actor Raj Kapoor by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Cinema is inextricably intertwined with the experience of urbanity. As such, it bears testament to the mechanisms by which narratives that personify cities enliven various other parallel discourses. As Clarke observes, filmic narratives around the city have “reflected and helped to mould the novel forms of social relations that developed in the crowded yet anonymous city streets,” and also “documented and helped to transform the social and physical space that the modern city represented”.
Photographic lobby still for the film 'Jagte Raho' by UnknownMuseum of Art & Photography
Cultural theorist Jean Baudrillard remarks that just as Italian and Dutch cities appear to be reflections of classical paintings, American cities seem to have just stepped out from their cinema. “To grasp its secret,” he adds, “you should not, then, begin with the city and move inwards towards the screen; you should begin with the screen and move outwards towards the city.”
As this exhibition demonstrates, decoding this secret in Hindi cinema is possible by way of a different outward journey: from the posters of the film that once adorned cityscapes, to the screenscapes of the city.
Curation & Content: Damini Kulkarni
References:
Introduction: Popular Cinema and the Slum's Eye View of Indian Politics by Ashis Nandy, in The Secret Politics of our Desires: Innocence, Culpability, and Indian Popular Cinema
Bombay Cinema: An Archive of the City by Ranjani Mazumdar
The Cinematic City by David Clarke