Old-fashioned fun
It is the beginning of the Diwali weekend in Bombay, and the city is bright and festive. This time around, however, the excitement has to do not just with crackers, mithai and new clothes, but also, in this film-crazy metropolis, the big movie releases of the weekend: Farah Khan's Om Shanti Om and Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Saawariya. The former was produced by India's biggest contemporary star, Shahrukh Khan; the latter, co-produced by Sony Pictures Entertainment, was the first Indian film made by a Hollywood studio in India.
In many ways, the films promise to be more like each other than may at first seem apparent. They are quintessentially Bollywood: both are over the top, mainstream and steeped in Bollywood heritage. We have been reminded innumerable times of the legacies and lineages at play here: that actor Ranbir Kapoor comes from the fourth generation of Prithviraj Kapoor's family ("the 'first family' of Indian Cinema", declares the Saawariya website) and is the grandson of showman Raj Kapoor; that Sonam Kapoor is the daughter of established film star Anil Kapoor; and that Salman is the son of scriptwriter Salim Khan. We know, too, that choreographer Farah Khan grew up in Bollywood, where her father was a producer, her mother the sister of Honey and Daisy Irani, and that her brother is the comedian-turned-filmmaker Sajid Khan.