Seen on a DVD shelf in Planet M this morning, a box-set titled "Black and White gems from Hindi cinema". Three films - Ardhangini, Kath Putli, Ram aur Shyam.
And on the cover of the DVD, a large, urgent sticker that reads: "The film Ram aur Shyam in this package is in full colour."
lol
ReplyDelete'Black and White Gems' is such an odd way to title the box set.
ReplyDeleteIt's almost as though they are apologetic about the films being in B&W, with the sticker being added as an afterthought to woo customers who can't tolerate monochrome images.
The almost visceral hatred some people have for B&W is hard to fathom. B&W movies are taboo on Indian movie channels. I've even met "film-buffs" who argue that Gone with the Wind is "technically superior" to Citizen Kane because it happens to be in color!!
Ram aur Shyam was later released in a colour version, I guess. Reason is when I saw it back in the seventies it was in colour. Those days films used to coloured manually, so I heard.
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J
John: Ram aur Shyam was made in colour, as far as I know - it wasn't colourised later (like two other Dilip Kumar films, Naya Daur and Mughal-e-Azam, were).
ReplyDeleteI've even met "film-buffs" who argue that Gone with the Wind is "technically superior" to Citizen Kane because it happens to be in color!!
Shrikanth: amusing - I would think people who were so dismissive of black and white wouldn't even bother getting into cinematic discussions of that sort (would they even have seen Kane anyway?).
Great Movies whether in color or black & white
ReplyDeletethanks.. for providing nice post.you have explained about color or black & white movies. its really good.
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