Every year the Indian film industry produces more than a 1,000 feature films; every day 14 million Indians go to a movie; and a billion more people a year buy tickets for Indian movies than for their Hollywood-produced counterparts. Bombay’s studios have taken the cinematic techniques of Hollywood and used them to produce features that have enthralled audiences throughout eastern Europe, the Middle East, and beyond. The result is the Bollywood movie, a film genre characterized by multiple song and dance routines, intense melodrama, and plots containing everything from farce to tragedy. This is the fantastic, diverse, and rich story of the social and cultural phenomenon of Bollywood and an up-close look at the men, women, and ideas that have fueled its incredible growth.
About Mihir Bose Award-winning journalist and author Mihir Bose writes and broadcasts on social and historical issues and sport for outlets including the BBC, the Guardian, Financial Times, Evening Standard and Irish Times. He has written more than fifty books on sport, including football and cricket, and history, such as Bollywood, India and the extraordinary WW2 quintuple agent Silver. The subjects of his many biographies include Michael Grade, Moeen Ali and the Indian nationalist Subhas Bose (no relation). Mihir was the BBC’s first sports editor and first non-white editor. He was chief sports news correspondent at the Daily Telegraph and worked for the Sunday Times for 20 years. His honorary doctorate from Loughborough University was awarded for his outstanding contribution to journalism and the promotion of equality. Mihir is a member of the English Heritage Blue Plaques Panel and former chairman of the Reform Club. He and his wife Caroline live in London. He has a daughter, Indira.
An interesting but somewhat uneven history of Bollywood.
The view is clearly personal as it starts with a lengthy prologue about the author accompanying Pamela Bordes to produce a photo feature on Bollywood (for a British magazine) and ends with excerpts from interviews of directors and actors. The book starts right from the beginning of Bollywood - the silent films, the visionary directors, the legends - and continues down the decades till 1970s in great detail and then jumps through the next two decades in one chapter and an afterword. Also, it focuses a lot on the 1970s, devoting a full chapter to the making of Sholay. This, in itself, shouldn't have been a problem - except the chapter is merely a summary of Anupama Chopra's excellent book on the film.
Also, the detail kind of digresses depending on the material available to the author. For example, in the chapter on India's parallel cinema, we get a lengthy description of Shyam Benegal's Bose but many worthies of the movement are either left out or mentioned cursorily.
I quite enjoyed the story till the 1960s as the writing is engaging and follows the Indian tradition of sub-stories emerging out of the main story. The writing holds you till the very end but several factual errors started popping up from the 1970s. (This made me wonder if errors were there in the earlier chapters also and I noticed them only in the period I know a bit about.)
Overall, not a bad attempt but clearly written for the 'foreigner curious about India' market. That would have been fine but the author tries to make his characters identifiable reference points, providing some unintended hilarity. (E.g. Subhash Ghai is called Bollywood's Oliver Stone, Madhuri Dixit is our Meryl Streep and Dimple a cross between Barabara Streisand and Bette Midler! Oh, also Mother India is India's Citizen Kane.)
Though it had some good attributes, this book was very disappointing. The author is clearly biased towards and against certain Bollywood actors and actresses, and it comes through in his writing. Honestly, this book isn't worth reading if one is truly interested in the story of Bollywood without having to look through the tinted glasses of the Non-Resident Indian.
This could have been a very good book , if it was a bit more planned and edited well. The book would start off very well giving enough of a gist of Indian Cinema's evolution , but it goes down of It's previous pace as it advances . Somewhere down the middle of the book , you feel the author has left the main idea of the book and is talking about some other idea . But , having said all this , talking up a subject matter like 'History of Bollywood' and bundling it up in a book was a challenge. A pretty hard challenge as of that . I do feel , Mihir Bose does a good job on the whole , if not great .
This one not so great. I adore old Indian movies, so I was really excited about "Bollywood: A History"; however, it seemed sort of slapped together at the last minute, with many chapters starting off with one topic and then veering off wildly halfway through and a veritable carnival of typos. Interesting subject matter, though, if you can manage a bit of editorial chaos.
A fascinating journey across the bollywood. Great research fantastic narration. I did see an error Prem Adib, despite a rather Muslim name was a Hindu, and a brother-in-law of Delhi's Chief Minister Sheila Kaul. The book otherwise reads itself like a bollywood film.
Remarkable & well written! A must read for folks interested in the evolution of Indian Cinema down the ages from the advent- via Lahore-Kolkata-Chennai-Karachi studios to post partition Mumbai!