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Starvation, Sin and Salvation
Nov 06, 2005 01:02 PM 4096 Views
(Updated Nov 06, 2005 01:02 PM)

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Bhara Ho Pet To Sansaar Jagmagata Hai


Sattaye Bhookh to Imaan Dagmagata Hai


-Shailendra


For you and me, and many of us, the footpath is just a path that leads us to our destinations…. To some, however, the footpath with its hard stony ground below and the cold, open sky above is an accommodation and sometimes a little more than that.


These are the forgotten people…. People who live from sunrise to sunset, from dawn to dusk hoping for life and the money that is needed for this life. On these footpaths are dug the graveyards of talent and merit, within these footpaths lie the coffins of dignity, self-respect and morals, on these footpaths are born the protégé of crimes, the children of paucity and the brokers of the malice that sells the self again and again for a loaf of bread, a drop of water and a shred of clothing. Here is born crime and chaos for a stomach that fails to get food would happily feast on anything and everything. Hunger knows no God.


From the footpaths of the sprawling metropolises of Bombay and London to the pavements of mighty New York and Tokyo, with their imposing skylines and sprawling penthouses, they are found everywhere … poor men and starving men, homeless families and vagabonds for whom the biggest concern is not the rising prices of the commodity markets or the fluctuations in the international stock markets; but whether they would live to see the morning the day after. These men don’t live… they survive!


And then one fine day they die away as slowly as did their dreams and aspirations before them … such that the knowledge of a dying flame is not the last flicker of a flame reaching out for life but the omnipresent gloom of darkness that pervades death.


It takes a lot of courage to face this sort of depravity and still more to live it but to portray it on a marquee that’s more interested in stories of kings and princes and feasts on the love tales of the rich and the powerful, requires a suicidal mind frame, for the end result of such films is nothing but a ‘flop’.


Even so Footpath (1953) is a stark depiction of life on the footpaths and it’s close cousins – the rented tenements of the 50s, of the lure of the world of crime, the ruthlessness of a system that feasts on its constituents and a face-off between morals and morale, ethics and money, hunger and conscience.


Dilip Kumar as Noshu carries the entire film on his broad shoulders. The entire film is a look into the psyche of a man who has failed to earn money by honest means and whose conscientious will may not allow him to remain a freeloader at someone else’s expense. Noshu is attracted by the lure of money, seduced by the free availability of money on the black markets and arrested by ethics and morals that condemn him to death by starvation in the white markets. Having entered the market, he’s again confronted by a difficult choice…. kin versus cash. Enacting a moral dilemma requires a deep understanding of the character. With this complex role of varied dimensions, the actor proves once and for all his mastery over a very difficult genre of acting…. for here is a role that delves deep into the psyche and is very difficult to perform and only accomplished actors may dare do so…. Dilip does it and does it with élan and finesse.


This is one of the few films, in which the thespian has enacted the negative side of human psyche and the emperor of acting cannot be faulted in this movie that’s a classic only due to two reasons, Dilip’s performance and Zia’s direction. Some of the scenes, which confirm his status as the greatest actor of Hindi cinema, include his confrontation with his brother on his choice of profession, his scenes with the legendary Meena Kumari, the mischievous glint in his eye on making his first profit on the black markets and finally the monologue where he accepts his crime. In addition, Dilip in this movie also moves away from his image of clean-cut decency and adds panache and style to a highly controversial role. In sync with the role, the thespian dons a cigarette on his lips throughout the film exuding a raw sex appeal; that was so far the reserve of the stylish actors. Undoubtedly, an out and out Dilip Kumar film


Meena Kumari is underutilized in the movie but, although the movie focuses on Dilip, Meena still manages to hold her own in all her scenes. The desperation and frustration of a starving woman has never been bettered and her confrontations with Dilip are excellent set pieces for studies in acting. Ramesh Thakur shines in his role as Noshu’s idealistic elder brother – one who prefers a death by starvation to a life in the shadow of crime. Anwar Hussein is brilliant in his portrayal of an opportunistic black-marketer. Achala Sachdev is also competent in the role of a self-seeking and venom-spewing housewife.


On the whole, the music score of the film leaves a lot more to be desired, considering that the movie carries the Khayyam stamp. However, the film boasts of one of the most memorable Talat Mehmood gems “Shaam-e-Gham Ki Kasam”. One rendition of the song and you will be quick to forget the inefficacy of the remaining songs, for this is undoubtedly one of the greatest songs ever sung by the great but underrated Talat Mehmood.


Zia Sarhady is undoubtedly one of the greatest directors of Hindi Cinema… In fact, Zia was the front-runner of the neo-realistic brand of movie making and hence belonged to the elite circle of Bimal –Abbas – Satyajit - Rithwik and others of the movement. Followers of the cinema of De Sica and Kurosawa and Bertolucci would do well to see the movies made by this great director before denouncing Hindi cinema of frivolity and formula fare.


Foot path is one of the darkest films ever made in India and it’s to the credit of the director that you feel trapped in the inner psyche of Noshu for the entire length of the film and more. The film depicts all the stark realities of life in the lower echelons of society, to the extent of the bath scene wherein a naked Meena Kumari is shown taking a bath under a tap in the open – a brilliant statement on the erosion of values and morality in society. Although many films have been made on the subject of youth turning towards the world of crime, Footpath surpasses all of them in the study of the psyche that forces a man to look beyond the right and embrace the writ of the wrong.


If you love neo-realism, this is definitely not a movie to miss.


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