Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Ankur: Multiple Narratives of Protest
- Chapter 2 Nishant and the New Dawn: Towards a Sacerdotal–Secular Modernity?
- Chapter 3 Churning Out Change: A Moment of Reading Manthan
- Chapter 4 Where Labour is Performed: The Public/Private Dichotomy and the Politics of Stigma in Bhumika and Mandi
- Chapter 5 Adaptation and Epistemic Redress: The Indian Uprising in Junoon
- Chapter 6 Cause and Kin: Knowledge and Nationhood in Kalyug
- Chapter 7 The Ascent in Arohan
- Chapter 8 From Fidelity to Creativity: Benegal and Suraj Ka Satvan Ghoda
- Chapter 9 Mammo and Projections of the Muslim Woman: Indian Parallel Cinema, Partition and Belonging
- Chapter 10 Adapting Gandhi/Kasturba in The Making of the Mahatma
- Chapter 11 In Search of Zubeidaa
- Chapter 12 Subversive Heroism and the Politics of Biopic Adaptation in Bose: The Forgotten Hero
- Chapter 13 The Rural in the Glocal Intersection: Representation of Space in Welcome to Sajjanpur and Well Done Abba
- Chapter 14 Shyam Benegal in Conversation
- Index
Chapter 12 - Subversive Heroism and the Politics of Biopic Adaptation in Bose: The Forgotten Hero
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 November 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Ankur: Multiple Narratives of Protest
- Chapter 2 Nishant and the New Dawn: Towards a Sacerdotal–Secular Modernity?
- Chapter 3 Churning Out Change: A Moment of Reading Manthan
- Chapter 4 Where Labour is Performed: The Public/Private Dichotomy and the Politics of Stigma in Bhumika and Mandi
- Chapter 5 Adaptation and Epistemic Redress: The Indian Uprising in Junoon
- Chapter 6 Cause and Kin: Knowledge and Nationhood in Kalyug
- Chapter 7 The Ascent in Arohan
- Chapter 8 From Fidelity to Creativity: Benegal and Suraj Ka Satvan Ghoda
- Chapter 9 Mammo and Projections of the Muslim Woman: Indian Parallel Cinema, Partition and Belonging
- Chapter 10 Adapting Gandhi/Kasturba in The Making of the Mahatma
- Chapter 11 In Search of Zubeidaa
- Chapter 12 Subversive Heroism and the Politics of Biopic Adaptation in Bose: The Forgotten Hero
- Chapter 13 The Rural in the Glocal Intersection: Representation of Space in Welcome to Sajjanpur and Well Done Abba
- Chapter 14 Shyam Benegal in Conversation
- Index
Summary
Shyam Benegal directs Bose: The Forgotten Hero at a juncture in his career (the film was released on 13 May 2005 in India) when he has already garnered a lot of experience, maturity, critical acclaim and popular recognition for his trademark parallel films on Indian rural lives and its problems related to caste, gender and economy. Besides, he had behind him the experience of making successful documentaries in television series (for example, Yatra meaning ‘journey’, in 1986 and Bharat Ek Khoj, a TV adaptation of Jawaharlal Nehru’s The Discovery of India, in 1988), as well as a biopic on Mahatma Gandhi (The Making of the Mahatma, 1996) and a bio-documentary on Satyajit Ray (1985). All these experiences and directorial maturity helped him mould an ambitious project such as Bose with an astute clarity and measured eloquence of a veteran filmmaker. Bose as a historical biopic is a grand film that runs for nearly three-and-a-half hours and represents the important historical facts and events in three parts (Faith, Unity, Sacrifice) related to Subhas Chandra Bose’s magnificent attempts to undo British rule in India from 1940 till his controversial death in 1945. It is, perhaps, the first biopic that adapts on screen significant portions of Subhas Chandra Bose’s life and career and tries to reinstate his image in the popular imagination as a subversive hero of India’s freedom struggle against the British.
Before going to a detailed discussion of the film it is equally important to briefly discuss the critical discourses related to biopic adaptation studies. The popularity of biopic as a film genre can be found in every big or small film industry all over the world. But the emergence of a coherent constellation of theories to explain such an interdisciplinary (written biography/real-life accounts to film narrative) act is relatively recent and, therefore, the term ‘biopic adaptation studies’ appears quite novel and unique in itself. For several years, biopic adaptation studies and the critical field of adaptation studies in general has grappled with the problem of ‘fidelity criticism’, as the critics have always placed the principle of authenticity as the benchmark of a good film based on a famous person’s life.
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- Information
- ReFocus: The Films of Shyam Benegal , pp. 196 - 207Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2023