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  • Bollywood Blockbusters Popular Among Students

    BOLLYWOOD BLOCKBUSTERS POPULAR AMONG STUDENTS
    By NADIAH JOHARI

    The Statesman
    http://www.usustatesman.com/bollywood-blockbusters-popular-among-students-1.2697067
    Feb 8 2012
    Utah

    The recently aired movie "A Cinderella Story: Once Upon A Song"
    featured Bollywood elements that incorporated Indian dance, music,
    costumes and colors. For Yeva Muradyan, the film was part of a
    Bollywood trend spreading across campus.

    "It has opened new ways for me to view the world and find out ~E
    other cultures can be interesting," said Muradyan, a junior majoring
    in public relations.

    Muradyan, a native of Armenia, said she started watching Bollywood
    movies with her mother when she was a child. She said Armenians
    are familiar with the Indian culture because Bollywood movies are
    common there.

    She said she is interested in Indian culture and Hinduism, and watching
    Bollywood movies is a way for her to feel the culture.

    "It's very unique, it's very old, it's something that is different,
    and I find it pretty amazing ... the way they dance, the way they sing,
    and the way they dress," she said. "I can't adapt to their culture
    because it's very different from mine, but I love to watch it. I'm
    fascinated with it."

    Ashwin Kumar, a graduate student studying electrical engineering,
    said Bollywood is a large industry in India, and almost all Bollywood
    movies are love-oriented.

    "Bollywood for Indians is more like an escape," Kumar said. "It has
    a lot of dance and colors. They put in a lot of hard work into stage
    performances and the music that they play."

    Pooja Kavathekar, a graduate student studying computer science, said
    even though there are political differences between Inida and Pakistan,
    everyone - Indian or Pakistani - comes together for Bollywood.

    Bollywood creates a cultural union, Kumar said.

    Kavathekar said the average budget for a Bollywood movie is $8 million
    because of the jewelry, costumes, sound effects and travel. Kumar
    said he thinks it's funny that the production crew loves to shoot
    outside India.

    "One thing about Bollywood, which Hollywood will probably never have,
    is that there is no movie (that) can (have) a bad ending," he said.

    Kumar said other differences between Hollywood and Bollywood include
    musical and dancing elements. He said family values are emphasized
    in Bollywood movies, too.

    "I think this is one thing that Bollywood cherishes. No matter what,
    basic family values, such as not going against mother and father,
    having special respect for (parents) and treating women as they should
    be, are given a lot of concentration, and generally movies never go
    against those values," he said.

    Kumar said in old Bollywood movies profanity and kissing scenes were
    not allowed. However, he said today Bollywood accepts those elements
    because of Western influence.

    Kavathekar said movies containing elements of nudity are controversial
    in India. She said movies are evaluated before they are released and
    inappropriate scenes are often removed.

    Carrie Miller, a USU graduate, said she sees Bollywood as a cinematic
    tradition.

    She said she was first introduced to Bollywood when she and her sister
    were looking for a movie in high school. She came across the movie
    "Bride and Prejudice," which featured some Bollywood actors and
    actresses. Although the movie was entirely in English, there were
    some Bollywood elements she said she liked.

    Initially, Miller said she did not know whether she liked the movies,
    but she said the more she watched the Indian films, the more she came
    to enjoy them.

    Miller said she likes that there's no swearing, sex or kissing scenes
    in the Bollywood movies she has seen - they seem to promote values
    that correspond with her own.

    "I don't think I've ever seen a Bollywood movie that I would have
    rated PG-13," she said.

    Miller said she has greater appreciation for other cultures as a
    result of being exposed to Bollywood.

    "I grew up in a small Utah town - predominantly white, predominantly
    Christian," she said. "If it weren't for Bollywood and my interest in
    other cultures, I wouldn't really have a lot of access to other ideas."

    To sum up Bollywood in one idea it would be "controlled chaos in
    wonderland," Kumar said.

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