Banaras, A Mystic Love Story

Banaras is not a destination its a journey of our lives. If you go to watch this movie for a ready-made solution or only to "kill" two hours, you may get disappointed. Banaras is aimed to create a thirst for something one is generally uncomfortable to explore.

Saturday, July 01, 2006

Mahamaya, the villain



Or an expose of our own prejudices.

In the movie Banaras a mystic love story, Mahamaya played a “villain”. But was he really a villain?

Mahamaya, with his obvious limited intellectual faculty, is trying to run a home and maintain his social stature. He was not shown to be a bundle of all virtues but then who is?
All that he could be charged was that he loved his sister, Shwetambari. Yet, somehow, we expected him to be the murderer. Was it his black attire or long “tilak” on the forehead?

We make our judgments at a subconscious level based on the conditioning of our mind, which is a result of our previous “knowledge” through TV, cinema or direct experience.

Just like Mahamaya, we have people around ourselves. They could be nice people yet we have our opinions. They may have never harmed anyone, they may never have ill feelings towards us but because they are loud, they resemble someone who had hurt us in childhood, someone whose behavior doesn’t conform to our knowledge of him being a good man, makes us look at them suspiciously.

Conversely, just as in the movie, you see good looking “decently dressed” people and you conclude them to be nice people. You could never conceive that someone who looked so normal could be so convoluted in the mind. Someone so graceful and well dressed could murder someone.

This how we assign label to people. He is a good man. She is a bad girl. That neighbor of mine is a smuggler. The man in the beard is a terrorist.

Mahamaya was not created as a villain. The character was created to trick your mind and expose its own weakness to you.

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mahamaya is very representative of many people who stunt their own growth. Many people destroy their own potential to be good citizens through their biases and prejudices. The boundary walls that these warped thought processes create prevent people like him from ever exploring positive ways to lead a good and succesful life. They are invariably eaten inetrnally by all their fears and self doubts and look for scapegoats to blame. Many radical and extremist movements are founded on such "blind faith" and the societal strucures built to perpetuate prejudice as a protection mechanism. Mahamaya is thus to be pitied as a failure of human social development who is caught in a web that holds billions of people behind all overthe world. He actually represents the failure of education and good thought.

Monday, July 10, 2006 10:55:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Nice idea with this site its better than most of the rubbish I come across.
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Thursday, July 20, 2006 11:10:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

i agree with mr dasturs comments....so many wasted opportunities

Tuesday, July 25, 2006 7:42:00 PM  

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