By the time you read this, *Jodhaa Akbar, a UTV production of Ashutosh
Gowarikar's film, will be out in a nearby theatre. It is a significant
event, not just for the production house which is vying for the top spot in
today's fiercely competitive Hindi film industry, and for the director whose
Lagaan still remains a benchmark, but for a genre which has had a rocky
innings so far.

A phone conversation ahead of the movie's release with Siddharth Roy Kapur,
Director of UTV Motion Pictures, starts with precisely the last thorny
point: were there major apprehensions that Jodhaa Akbar was a historical,
given that movies of that nature have neither a popular mass base, nor a
critical niche in India? The answer is clear, and revelatory. Yes, there was
an initial pause, but only briefly. UTV exhaled, because the director was
very clear that though the backdrop was historical, the movie's focus would
be the love story between Jalaluddin Akbar, (the most popular Mughal emperor
of India, according to most historians), and Jodhabai, a Rajput princess.
Romance central

 So, the intrigue and the internecine warfare between the local satraps and
the marauding Mughals, and the bloody struggle for ascension to the throne,
all become the setting against which Akbar and Jodha's relationship flowers.
They are a prince and princess, sure, but in the movie they are also
newly-affianced and, a little later, newlyweds, trying to find a way to each
other. Which is why the release date: February 15, just after Valentine's
Day, by when the roses should still be in bloom, and sweethearts still in
the mood.

It's not as if the film was always intended for today, though. It's been
long in the making, and a tentative release last year got postponed because
of the work that remained; there was an order of magnitude about the
post-production, the music tracks, the computer-generated images (CGI) that
no one had anticipated. The one suitable date was set to clash with the two
winter biggies Taare Zameen Par and Welcome. In retrospect, pushing the date
further, to this Friday, has turned out to be a wise move: both TZP,
distributed by UTV, and Welcome were huge draws from day one, and would have
split the audience.

And given the fact that, traditionally, historicals haven't been widely
embraced by our audiences, the Rs 40 crore Jodhaa Akbar will need all eyes
on board. The only record-breaker in the genre has been the evergreen
Mughal-e-Azam, where the chemistry between Dilip Kumar and Madhubala is what
everyone remembers, as well as the songs and dances, in the face of
Prithviraj Kapoor's thunderous grandstanding.
Hrithik and Aishwarya

 Will Hrithik and Aishwarya be able to match up? They sizzled in Dhoom 2,
but that was a modern-day caper, where both the hero and heroine could dress
up or down, mostly the latter; Aish in a barely-there sky blue bikini and
skirt, and Hrithik in a red shirt, flying open, buffed chest all bare. To be
a 16th century king and queen, clad in heavy costumes and jewellery, and
using a very different body language and dialogue delivery, is altogether
different.

Kapur is upbeat. "We are very happy it turned out the way it did, because we
couldn't have asked for a better product." Talk veers towards editorial
control, an issue which can potentially have extremely contentious results:
between the producers and the director, who decides what the final take will
be? He agrees that there is much back and forth when the film is in the
planning stages. "But once we know we are on the same page on the script,
schedule, other creative aspects, and the budget, and we know we share the
same point of view, we let the director do his thing." Ultimately, he
affirms, a film is the director's vision.
UTV: content is king

 Stepping back from the specifics of Jodhaa Akbar, we switch to UTV's
current trajectory. Begun back in the 1980s as a content creation company
for TV, it included movies in its ambit in the mid-1990s. "Distribution was
a first step, because we wanted to test the waters, but we always knew that
making movies is where we wanted to be," says Kapur. Refusing to get drawn
into comparisons with other production houses (Yashraj is the biggest
rival), he says their biggest strength is "content creation." So it is for
most production houses.

What makes UTV stand out from the clutter is the choice of content, most of
which is decidedly different from what the other players put out, especially
in terms of range. So it's been a decade and more of expanding their wings,
distributing such movies as Parineeta, Bluffmaster, Taxi No 9211, and
Don(these are some of the more recent ones), as well as their own such
big-ticket productions as Rang De Basanti, Metro, Lakshya, and Swades, the
latter being Ashutosh Gowarikar's last outing with them.

Swades, in fact, is a case in point. Not too many other producers would have
risked such a subject — NASA scientist coming back home to spread the light
back in his village in India. It made a difference, of course, that Shah
Rukh was willing to play the lead, and that it turned out to be one of his
best performances. But to greenlight an offbeat project like that one
requires the courage of a producer's conviction. And cash.

This is just the beginning of the year for UTV Motion Pix, which seems to
have put behind the less-than-great showing of Dhan Dhana Dhan, Goal, a
combo of football and feisty Asians in London, which didn't find too many
takers. It's going full steam ahead with its studio model (a bunch of
directors is on board to make movies with complete backup: Shyam Benegal is
busy wrapping up Mahadev, about a letter writer in a village, and Anurag
Kashyap is doing Dev D — a contemporary take on Devdas, among others). A
music division has been launched with the A. R. Rehman-helmed music of Jodhaa
Akbar, to be able to exploit their movies on all platforms.

Next up, in mid-March: Abbas Mustan's slick thriller Race, which UTV is
distributing worldwide.

Fasten your seat-belts.
*
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/life/2008/02/15/stories/2008021550130400.htm

-- 
regards,
Vithur

AIMING TO BE A TRUE RAHMANIAC

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