> ... the person put on the map, this time, is AR Rahman. He may find 
doors opening to him in Hollywood. But it is still the traditional 
symphonic score that drives most of Hollywood, so is important that 
Rahman capitalise on his win and bag a few "non-exotic" projects, so 
that he doesn't become the go-to guy only when a "Bollywood-style" Jai 
Ho number is needed. (This isn't to say that Rahman should reject any 
such offers., but he should also look out for projects that allow him 
to stretch.)

perfectly said. these are the exact thought coming to my mind after 
his win: even that he has won it, it will not exactly mean that he 
will start getting many offers from hollywood. probably only when some 
similar asian/indian type of music will be required for some similar 
type of asian/indian based film. ARR strongly needs to get a few 
traditional hollywood projects (like Elizabeht: The Golden Age) to 
show them what he is truly capable of and to get the A-league 
directors to hire him. 



--- In [email protected], Prakash Balaramkrishna 
<prakysn...@...> wrote:
>
> http://www.desipundit.com/baradwajrangan/2009/02/21/between-reviews-
a-one-dog-race/
> 
> Comment : 33
> 
> brangan Says: 
> 
> By the way, I was asked to write an instant editorial on the Oscar 
business. This is what I came up with:
> As expected, AR Rahman won the most prestigious film award in the 
globe. As expected, he thanked his mother (“Mere paas maa hai,” he 
joked, invoking a line from Deewar that, unfortunately, no one in the 
audience understood), all his musicians from Chennai and Mumbai, and 
above all, God. This is the first time Tamil was spoken on the Oscar 
stage (“Ella pugazhum iraivan oruvanukke,” Rahman said, meaning 
that all praise goes to the Almighty). This is the first time an 
Indian won two Oscars. So it would all seem to add up to something 
big.
> But the victory of Slumdog Millionaire is just a flash in the pan, a 
sweet little feel-good moment and nothing else. As several people have 
pointed out, it’s first and foremost a British film, not an Indian 
film, and among the reasons for its success are that it followed the 
Hollywood model of storytelling, familiar to audiences worldwide. (The 
Bollywood elements were merely spicy gravy.) So the grand night at the 
Oscars doesn’t imply that Mumbai will have to gear up for an 
avalanche of production crews from other parts of the globe. There’s 
Gandhi as a precedent. It won eight Oscars â€" and what happened? It 
was nearly three decades before Danny Boyle landed up with his crew 
and told a story about India.
> Slumdog Millionaire will go down in Oscar history as a kind of 
Rocky, a film that was hugely loved during its time and now remembered 
mainly as the film that put Sylvester Stallone on the map. And the 
person put on the map, this time, is AR Rahman. He may find doors 
opening to him in Hollywood. But it is still the traditional symphonic 
score that drives most of Hollywood, so is important that Rahman 
capitalise on his win and bag a few “non-exotic” projects, so that 
he doesn’t become the go-to guy only when a “Bollywood-style” Jai 
Ho number is needed. (This isn’t to say that Rahman should reject 
any such offers., but he should also look out for projects that allow 
him to stretch.)
> But all that can wait. Let’s just savour his win for now. This is 
a moment that’s not likely top be repeated, at least not via 
projects made within the country. The wise minds that submit films for 
Oscar consideration (in the foreign film category) always manage to 
pick movie that underwhelm, so even that solitary Oscar doesn’t look 
likely. And this only makes Rahman’s double win so special â€" a 
global recognition for a truly global musician.
>



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