Matrubhoomi
Matrubhoomi: A Nation Without Women (Hindi: मातृभूमि, translation: Motherland) is a 2003 Indian dystopian tragedy film written and directed by Manish Jha. The film examines the impact of female foeticide and female infanticide on the gender balance and consequently the stability and attitudes of society. Its storyline bears some resemblance to real-life instances of gender imbalance and economics resulting in fraternal polyandry and bride buying in some parts of India.[1] It depicts a future in an Indian village populated exclusively by males due to female infanticide over the years.[2]
Matrubhoomi: A Nation Without Women | |
---|---|
Directed by | Manish Jha |
Written by | Manish Jha |
Produced by | Patrick Sobelman, Punkej Kharbanda |
Starring | Tulip Joshi Sudhir Pandey Piyush Mishra Sushant Singh Aditya Srivastava |
Cinematography | Venu |
Edited by | Ashmith Kunder Shirish Kunder |
Music by | Salim–Sulaiman |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Matrubhoomi received widespread critical acclaim[3] and was shown at festivals through 2003, including the 2003 Venice Film Festival, where it was presented in the Critic's Week (Parallel Sections) and later awarded the FIPRESCI Award "For it's [sic] important theme on women's issues and female infanticide handled with sensitivity by a first-time director".[4][5]
Plot
The story begins in a rural village in Bihar,[6] with the delivery of a baby girl to a village couple. Her disappointed father, who was hoping for a boy, drowns her in vat of milk in a public ceremony. Many years later somewhere around 2050 A.D.,[6] this unchecked trend leads to the village being populated mainly by males and a tiny number of older women. The now uncouth and aggressive young men of the village are desperate for wives and release their frustration through group screenings of imported pornographic films, cross-dressed dance performances, and even bestiality. They are shown to be willing to go to the lengths of human trafficking and courtship-driven emigration to procure spouses for themselves.
Ramcharan (Sudhir Pandey) a wealthy man and the father of five young men finds out about a single young girl, named Kalki (Tulip Joshi), living some distance from the village and buys her from her father. She is then married to all the five sons simultaneously. Each night of the week, she is forced to sleep with one of the men, including Ramcharan. Of all the men in the boorish lot, only the youngest son Sooraj (Sushant Singh) treats her with respect and tenderness.
Kalki develops a preference towards Sooraj, causing him to be killed by his jealous brothers. Kalki asks her father to help her escape but he is blinded by the money given to him as dowry, and he turns her down. A sympathetic domestic servant boy helps her to escape but he is brutally murdered by the brothers, while Kalki gets recaptured by them and they chained her to a post in a cow shed. She becomes a pawn in a game of revenge, in an inter-community conflict. The lower caste community of the village hold her responsible for the death of the servant boy, and decide to avenge the murder through gang rape. Kalki is then sent back to her husbands.
Kalki becomes pregnant and everybody rejoices. A new servant boy is appointed for her care. As the news spreads, every man in the area claims paternity of the unborn child, which causes violence to break out in the village. The men kill each other off over rights to Kalki and her child. In the meanwhile Kalki goes into labour. The film ends on a violent but hopeful note, as she births a baby girl.[2][7]
Cast
- Tulip Joshi – Kalki
- Sudhir Pandey – Ramsharan
- Sushant Singh – Sooraj
- Vinamra Pancharia – Raghu
- Aditya Srivastava – Raghu's Uncle
- Piyush Mishra – Jagannath
- Mukesh S Bhatt - Raghu's elder brother
- Pankaj Jha – Rakesh
- Sanjay Kumar – Brijesh
- Rohitash Gaud – Pratab
- Rajesh Jais as Princess Pinkey
- Deepak Kumar Bandhu – Shailesh
- Amin Gazi – Sukha
- Chittaranjan Giri – Pappu
Development and production
Director Manish Jha's debut short film, A Very Very Silent Film (2001), had previously won the Jury Prize for the Best Short Film at the Cannes Film Festival in 2002.[8] He got the idea of Matrubhoomi upon reading, in a news magazine, about a village in Gujarat without women. Subsequently, while surfing the web, he read an article mentioning the fact that over the years, millions of girl children had fallen victims to gender discrimination in India. The film's French producer Patrick Sobelman asked Jha to produce a script outline on the subject, and he put out a two-page synopsis. Within a week he wrote a 200-page script, which he cut back to 70 pages. The project received a green light when its Indian producer Pankej Kharabanda came on board.[9]
Having grown up in Bihar, he said he was aware of the practice of female infanticide and wanted to write a script about a future village if the practice continued. As women became extinct, the film allowed him to bring to light issues like polyandry, bride buying and rape.[10]
Matrubhoomi's lead actress Tulip Joshi had refused the film after the first reading, but eventually decided to take it up. As she added, "But I'm glad I took it up finally, even though there was a point when I felt disgusted."[6]
The film was shot on a tight budget of Rs. 2 crore, in Renai, a remote village in Harda district of Madhya Pradesh in 29 days.[9][10] The cast included actors from Delhi theatre circuit, Sushant Singh, Aditya Shrivastav, Piyush Mishra and Deepak Bandhu.
Themes
As per director, Manish Jha, "I wanted to examine the emotional and psychological impact of a society without women," ... "It is a very extreme situation ... a whole nation without women."[7]
The central character Kalki being married to five brothers is analogous to Queen Draupadi being married to the Pandava brothers in Mahabharata. Kalki references to the forecast of Vishnu's tenth incarnation, Kalki, who would end the Kali Yuga.[6]
Release
After running through the festival circuit, including the 2003 Venice Film Festival, 2003 Toronto International Film Festival, Matrubhoomi was commercially released two years later on 8 July 2005, with 150 prints. It was dubbed into six languages, including Tamil, Telugu, Bhojpuri, Gujarati, Bengali, and French, on a budget of Rs. 3 crore, to reach a wider audience.[7][11][12]
Awards
- FIPRESCI Award in Parallel Section at the Venice Film Festival 2003[13]
- Audience Award for Best Film at the Kozlin Film Festival 2003, Poland
- Audience Award for Best Foreign Film at Thessaloniki Film Festival, 2003
- Nominated for Golden Alexander (Best Film) at Thessaloniki Film Festival, 2003
- Audience Award for Best Film at River to River. Florence Indian Film Festival, 2003
References
- Draupadis bloom in rural Punjab Times of India, 16 July 2005.
- Andrea LeVasseur (2008). "Matrubhoomi (2003)". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 21 August 2008.
- "More Than Chick Flicks". TIME. 22 September 2003. Archived from the original on 27 July 2008.
- "2003 Awards: Venice (Italy, August 27 – September 6, 2003)". FIPRESCI website. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011.
- Derek Malcolm (8 September 2003). "Ovation for Emma Thompson as low-budget art wins over hype in Venice". The Guardian.
- "Rape: The future of the Indian woman?". The Times of India. 3 March 2004.
- "Where women are extinct: Matrubhoomi". Indian Express. 23 July 2005. Archived from the original on 11 October 2012. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
- A Very Very Silent Film: Award IMDb.
- "Where have all the girls gone?". The Telegraph. 22 May 2005. Archived from the original on 6 May 2006.
- "Spectre of a world without women". The Hindu. 3 March 2004. Archived from the original on 20 September 2004.
- "A world without women?". The Hindu. 11 June 2005. Archived from the original on 5 January 2008.
- "Film exploring women's plight has Sridevi playing lucky mascot". Indian Express. 3 March 2004. Archived from the original on 1 September 2004.
- Matrubhoomi Awards IMDb.
External links
- Matrubhoomi at IMDb
- Matrubhoomi at AllMovie