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http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/35682/

Eighty elephants, fifty-five camels, and over four thousand kilograms of gold 
jewelry reportedly went into its production. In addition to “Braveheart” style 
battles and courtly intrigue, Ashutosh Gowariker’s “Jodhaa Akbar” also features 
several lavish musical interludes. 

Welcome to Bollywood cinema, the internationally popular flamboyant films 
produced in Mumbai (formerly Bombay). Growing in recognition and popular 
acclaim with American audiences following the success of 2009 Oscar winner 
“Slumdog Millionaire,” the Film Society of Lincoln Center launches “Muslim 
Cultures of Bombay,” a retrospective of Bollywood’s most ambitious and socially 
conscious historical dramas, this Wednesday with a special screening of 
Gowariker’s three and a half hour epic.

The young Emperor Akbar has finally consolidated the Muslim Mughal Imperium’s 
hold on all of Hindustan. For the sake of peace with the restless Hindu Rajput 
principalities, Akbar has taken Jodhaa, a Rajput princess, as his bride. She 
also happens to be very beautiful but is less than thrilled by the proposed 
union, only acquiescing when the Emperor promises to respect her faith and 
build a modest Hindu temple for her within the palace. While duly married, it 
will take a serious campaign of wooing for Akbar to win her heart.

Of course, India has experienced years of Hindu-Muslim conflicts, even 
predating Kashmir and the Partition. It is that subtext that deeply informs 
“Akbar.” While Rajput reaction has been highly critical, accusing the film of 
whitewashing the anti-Hindu campaigns of the historical Akbar and his heirs, 
western audiences will likely interpret it as a rebuke of militant Islam.

Whether historically accurate or not, the film’s pivotal decision to lift the 
tax on Hindu religious pilgrimage clearly celebrates religious tolerance. While 
the disapproving mullahs of the Mughal Court are unflaggingly portrayed as 
deceitful and intolerant, the heroic Akbar’s observance of Islam comes across 
as simply a requirement of his position rather than an examined faith. By 
contrast, the only unambiguous example of pure religious devotion is that of 
Jodhaa’s Hinduism.

Notwithstanding the important social and religious significance of the story, 
it is very definitely grandly epic story telling. Wild elephants are tamed, 
pitched battles are joined, and there are indeed musical numbers, courtesy of 
“Slum Dog” Oscar-winning musician A. R. Rahman, perhaps the best being the 
Sufis serenading Akbar on his wedding night. 

It also has Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, often heralded in Internet polls as the 
world’s most beautiful woman, as Jodhaa, and Hrithik Roshan (soon be seen in 
“Kites,” a major Bollywood trial balloon for mainstream American commercial 
acceptance) as Akbar. 


JODHAA: Bollywood star Aishwarya Rai Bachchan portrays half of the title 
character in "Jodhaa Akbar."While their chemistry is okay, the film is most 
successful when luxuriating in the grandeur of its enormous scale and lush 
design. It even inspired a Jodhaa Akbar collection from the Indian jeweler 
Tanis.

With some cool battle scenes and most of its courtship done through fencing, 
“Akbar” certainly satisfies the audience looking for more on-screen swordplay. 
It also has plenty of romantic yearning and high tragedy as befits a sweeping 
epic. Old fashioned in an entertaining way, the extravagantly produced “Akbar” 
is a perfect choice to kick-off the FSLC’s new retrospective, “Social Dramas 
and Shimmering Spectacles: Muslim Cultures of Bombay Cinema,” this Wednesday 
evening (May 19) at the Walter Reade Theater.


      

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