Capital Celluloid 2024 — Day 327: Sat Nov 30

Om Dar Babar (Swaroop, 1988): Close-Up Cinema, 8.15pm

This film is showing as part of the Deviant Traditions of Desire: Asian Cinema at the Intersection of Folklore and Transgressive Desire season at Close-Up Cinema.

Close-Up Cinema introduction:
To summarise the plot of Om Dar Badar is to attempt articulating the truly incomprehensible. Steering clear of the modernist collisions of meaning and desire, Kamal Swaroop spins an 'ism' denying prism of absurdly fragmented surrealisms, positing Indian society as intrinsically postmodernist, regardless of prevailing religious conservatisms and contradictory philosophical musings, or rather, because of it. On the face of it, the film is a portrait of life in Ajmer, Rajasthan, telling us the story of a boy named Om during his carefree adolescence, gifted with the skill of holding his breath for a long time. His father, Babuji, a government servant, leaves his government job to dedicate his life to astrology. His sister, with a sense of independence and agency, dates a spineless good for nothing. He studies science, but grows increasingly fascinated with magic and religion, visiting a fantasy city and taking a home close to a frog pond. Avowedly non-committal to any theme or plot, the film whimsically satirises the interspersing of Western concepts with Hindu religion, blending the sacred with the profane, the carnal with the divine, and antiquity with modernity. In doing so, it mocks the sacred pursuits of meaning and desire, weaving together an idiosyncratic pastiche of consciously contradictory nonsense. The kind of nonsense that happily subverts all cinematic expectations into a satirical anti-cinema of scientific and religious aphorisms, pseudo moralistic science fiction, pop mythologies and ingenuously purposeless musical numbers.

Screen Slate review:
Considered an idiosyncratic anomaly during its festival run in 1988 and an established masterpiece of Indian parallel cinema when it finally released commercially in India in 2014, Kamal Swaroop’s Om Dar-B-Dar is no longer a secret. Swaroop acknowledges the inspiration of foreign artists such as Godard, Warhol, Buñuel, and Man Ray, along with his “teachers,” the giants of India’s Parallel cinema movement Mani Kaul and Kumar Shahani. The results are a radical combination of surrealist montage and formalist camerawork and editing – like the montage of Jagdish being caught with the lock of hair that turns the movie into not only an experimentation of form but of concept. His screenwriter Kuku’s approach is also singular, littering his dialogue with non-sequiturs and jocular double-entendres that jump between Hindi and English – a favorite of mine is the repeated phrase “frog keychain,” which when said in Hindi can be understood also as frog ki chaeen, meaning “the frog’s love.” Peerless in its vision and esoteric in its details, Om Dar-B-Dar is a movie that can hold true to the moniker of being “unlike anything you’ve ever seen."

Here (and above) is the trailer.

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