Dev Anand was a futuristic film maker in Indian cinema in many ways -
which includes beating Yash Chopra to Switzerland.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ONDviMDa3Hc

Prem Pujari - 1970 Grimsel Pass, is actually quite a historic location
in Swiss history, but not the easiest to get to - and so by Bollywod
standards a non-obvious choice. It's a cliched mountain and train
scene - but it's a good mountain to pick.


Bollywood's Big-Screen Love Affair With Switzerland Fades To Black
22.07.13 03:46:54- APIN

(FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 7/22/13)

   By John Letzing

  ZURICH -- Last year, film producer Aashish Singh was planning overseas
 shooting for his Mumbai studio's latest epic, the tale of an amnesiac bomb
 disposal expert and the sweetheart he can't quite remember.

  In one scene, the lovers soar into the clouds and croon in each other's arms,
 a Bollywood motif commonly dubbed the "Cut to Switzerland" because so many
 montages have been staged in the country's picturesque mountains. Mr. Singh's
 crew, however, opted for London rooftops rather than Alpine glaciers.

  Audiences today "like films a bit more real," says Mr. Singh, who works at
 Yash Raj Films. He says in this instance, money wasn't a factor -- though
 Bollywood filmmakers have generally been put off by the increasing price of
 filming in Switzerland. "Everybody likes to save money," he said.

  For reasons both artistic and financial, there has been a plot twist in a
 relationship as enduring as those at the heart of Bollywood romances.
 Switzerland has been Indian cinema's A-list destination for movie interludes
 since the 1980s, when over-the-top duets set in the Bernese Alps were featured
 in genre hits like "Chandni." Since then, hundreds of Indian film crews have
 slipped on parkas and made the 5,000-mile trek from packed Mumbai to
 Switzerland's snow pack.

  Now, other locales are driving a wedge between Switzerland and Indian
 production crews as they try to capitalize on Bollywood demand for saccharine
 serenades. Some destinations, like the U.K., offer incentives such as cash
 rebates. Others, like the Himalayas of Kashmir, are simply closer.

  The interlopers are getting help from the changing tastes of Indian
 moviegoers, who continue to value starry-eyed interludes but want to see them
 better meshed with a realistic story line or staged in new places. Some
 producers say they are scouting for new foreign locations because Switzerland's
 snowy peaks and lush valleys have been featured in Bollywood love stories so
 often they are now cliches.

  Romantic dance numbers are "more likely to be on Trafalgar Square than on a
 glacier," says Urs Eberhard, a Switzerland Tourism executive, who has worked
 with Indian film producers in the past. Bollywood film shoots in Switzerland
 have dwindled to about two or three per year compared with more than a dozen
 annually during the 1980s and '90s, Mr. Eberhard says.

  The late director Yash Chopra introduced his audiences to Switzerland in 1985,
 shooting chunks of "Faasle," a story of forbidden love, in the Alps. A later
 movie, 1989's "Chandni," established Switzerland's mountains as the go-to
 location for Indian cinema as the movie chronicled the ordeal faced by a
 helicopter accident survivor and his beloved, who sing and dance their way
 through snow-capped mountains and verdant valleys.

  Akin to a dream sequence, a typical Cut to Switzerland abruptly whisks the
 protagonists of a movie away from its story line to frolic in a vivid setting.
 Many montages feature elaborate dance routines and costume changes that put the
 most ambitious music videos to shame. Eventually, the sequences became so
 popular, Bollywood producers considered them de rigueur.

  "If you had a good budget, you did it," said Rachel Dwyer, a professor of
 Indian cultures and cinema at SOAS, University of London. She calls a scene in
 Mr. Chopra's 1993 film "Darr" that involves a couple dancing out the door of a
 home in India and emerging in a Swiss meadow as "the sort of classic case."

  Before Switzerland won its place, Bollywood filmmakers set similar scenes in
 Kashmir. But military tension in the region between India and Pakistan pushed
 film crews to look elsewhere for snowy peaks. "Switzerland became the upgraded,
 offshore version of Kashmir," said Bollywood director Imtiaz Ali.

  Switzerland's success with Bollywood didn't go unnoticed by other locations,
 many of which eagerly rolled out the red carpet to entice Indian producers.

  About seven years ago, Film London, the agency that supports shoots in the
 city, journeyed to India on a trade mission and made a concerted bid to lure
 Bollywood filmmakers, according to spokeswoman Colette Geraghty. Now up to a
 dozen Bollywood productions shoot in the city every year.

  Few locales have tried to woo Bollywood more than the Tirol region in Austria,
 which plies Indian producers with financial incentives and can also pitch "the
 same mountains and lakes" as neighboring Switzerland, says Johannes Koeck, who
 heads the Cine Tirol Film Commission.

  Mr. Koeck is so eager to accommodate Bollywood producers he will oblige their
 most unusual requests.

  With a crew in the area to shoot the story of an inept secretary's forbidden
 love for an actor, Mr. Koeck says he was assigned to rustle up a troupe of
 lederhosen-wearing dancers for an early morning shoot after a last-minute
 addition to the script. He dutifully roused a local folklore group, although
 when the groggy members showed up to perform they were told the shoot had been
 scrapped.

  On another set, Mr. Koeck rode a cable car down a mountain to retrieve a
 coconut Bollywood filmmakers had forgotten but needed for a traditional
 ceremony performed before a shoot could start.

  "It's kind of a challenge to ask for coconuts on a Tirolean glacier," Mr.
 Koeck says.

  Mr. Eberhard, the Swiss Tourism executive, says that Indian film crews are
 missing out if they skip Switzerland for Austria, which doesn't offer "the same
 majestic or impressive range of Alps." Still, he acknowledges Bollywood crews
 are willing to walk away if they don't get the star treatment.

  Ashwin Merchant, an official with Swiss Business Hub India, a group that
 promotes trade between the countries, has advised filmmakers shooting in
 Switzerland. He says Bollywood film shoots tend to spend lavishly when they are
 in town. That makes it difficult for him to understand why Switzerland isn't
 wooing productions with financial help when so many other countries are.
 "Everyone's jumping in," he said.

  ---

  Preetika Rana contributed to this article.

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