"Thodi Si Jo Pee Li Hai" – Full Video Song "Department (2012) feat. Sanjay Dutt
Bollywood’s 9 Eleven Hits the Big Screen
For many, the numbers 9-11 trigger an understanding of the terrorist attacks upon New York and Washington on September 11th, 2001. But in the new Bollywood movie “9 Eleven”, terrorism takes a different form.
“9 Eleven” is a new thriller written and directed by 36-year-old Manan Katohora. The film concerns the kidnapping of a seemingly random group of 11 people who are handcuffed and locked up in an empty cell. They are threatened with death by a masked kidnapper every nine minutes who promises them a way out if they can answer the question “Why are all of you here?”
While some of the hostages appear law-abiding, others do not. Their often earthy and occasionally funny conversations to find a solution ultimately unravel the mysterious link which brings them together but not without deadly results.
Watch the Official Trailer for “9 Eleven”
Katohora suggested his movie is “about things we do and their effect on other people.” An independent American film inspired the Silver Spring, Maryland based Katohora to write something similar for Bollywood and the Indian speaking audience. Katohora said, “Typically Indian films have lots of songs and dances and romance but there haven’t been a lot of films in this genre.” “The new generation is looking forward to some different topics beyond your typical running around the trees and five songs and dances,” he added.
“9 Eleven” is the first Bollywood film shot in Washington DC. The actors come from the Washington metropolitan area and cities along the U.S. east coast, mainly New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore. Several of them have lived in the United States for up to 20 years. Katohora said some “had a mixture of Indian and American accents.” Voice coaching was needed because the movie “required them to have a pure Hindi… Continue reading
Bollywood songs
Bollywood songs, more formally known as Hindi movie songs, are songs featured in Bollywood films, often performed in item numbers.
The language of Hindi movie songs, generally termed Hindi, can be complex. Some songs are saturated with Urdu and Persian terms and it is not uncommon to hear use of English words in songs from modern Hindi movies. Several other Indian languages have also been used including Braj, Bhojpuri, Punjabi and Rajasthani. Occasionally a few lines in other Indian languages are used as well.[1]
The Nine Rasas
A rasa identifies the dominant emotion of a composition (a song or a text). In Sanskrit and Hindi literature, nine different types of Rasas are often enumerated.
Shringar – Romance,
virah: separation
milan: being together
Raudra – Furious
Hasya – Comic, Humorous
Beebhatsa – Disgust
Veera – Heroic, Brave
Karuna – Pathos and Compassion
Bhayanak – Fear and Anxiety
Adbhuta – Wonder and Curiosity
Shanta – Serene, Contemplative
This classification goes back to when the chief patrons of literature were kings and nobles. The filmi songs are however written for common people and thus there are some common themes that are often encountered – songs for children, songs of betrayal and dejection, marriage songs, etc. that ordinary people can relate with.
