It's not about Shakespeare and not based on "King Lear," but fans of the Bard may find traces of both in a new Bollywood film set in modern-day India.
Amitabh Bachchan, Bollywood's biggest star, plays a reclusive stage actor in "The Last Lear," one who quotes Shakespeare with relish and is making his movie debut at an old age.
Passages from some of Shakespeare's best known works are sprinkled into the film's dialogues and, in one scene, Bachchan chases a reporter out of his house for misspelling the name of Oberon, the king of the fairies in "A Midsummer Night's Dream".
"Shakespeare almost becomes a character in the film," director Rituparno Ghosh told Reuters this week.
"He acts as the divine power, and his presence in certain moments almost acts as a divine intervention."
"The Last Lear," one of few Bollywood films to be made in English, opened in Indian cinemas on Friday, a year after it premiered at the Toronto film festival.
Ghosh said his film's protagonist is also similar to the ageing monarch of Shakespeare's "King Lear".
"Metaphorically, the vulnerability of old age, an old man who is taken advantage of, is represented in the film," he said.
Amitabh Bachchan, Bollywood's biggest star, plays a reclusive stage actor in "The Last Lear," one who quotes Shakespeare with relish and is making his movie debut at an old age.
Passages from some of Shakespeare's best known works are sprinkled into the film's dialogues and, in one scene, Bachchan chases a reporter out of his house for misspelling the name of Oberon, the king of the fairies in "A Midsummer Night's Dream".
"Shakespeare almost becomes a character in the film," director Rituparno Ghosh told Reuters this week.
"He acts as the divine power, and his presence in certain moments almost acts as a divine intervention."
"The Last Lear," one of few Bollywood films to be made in English, opened in Indian cinemas on Friday, a year after it premiered at the Toronto film festival.
Ghosh said his film's protagonist is also similar to the ageing monarch of Shakespeare's "King Lear".
"Metaphorically, the vulnerability of old age, an old man who is taken advantage of, is represented in the film," he said.
Source-reuters.com
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