
AN
EVENING IN PARIS
1967, Hindi, 150 minutes.
Directed by Shakti Samantha
Music by Shankar Jaikishan; lyrics by Shailendra and Harat Jaipuri; story and
screenplay by Sachin Bhowmick; written by Ramesh Pant; cinematography by V.
Gopi Krishna; playback singers: Mohammad Rafi and Asha Bhosle.
(film
notes by Corey Creekmur)

Dehko! Dehko! Dehko! (Look! Look! Look!) Shammi Kapoor demands of his audience (and the baffled European extras surrounding him) while performing the title song to this mid-sixties hit amidst the unfolding credit sequence. And while theres indeed plenty to look at in this travelogue masquerading as a narrative, theres not much else to engage the viewer who might be seeking such middle-class accoutrements as plot, suspense, or character development. Clearly filmed in actual locations leaping (even within scenes) from Paris to Beirut to Switzerland before an action packed climax above and below Niagara Falls, this film seems most interested in displaying the tourist sites most Indian spectators could only dream of viewing in the flesh, and so AN EVENING IN PARIS provides faux Frenchman Sam (Shammi Kapoor) as their worldly relay to the wonders of not only gay Paree but, in effect, the whole world. This fantasy, of unlimited access to the worlds scenic wonders and material pleasures, is one of the things that even the silliest popular films can help illuminate, and the regular suggestion that some Indians can only live the high life through international crime is a perceptive underside to the good Indians in such films who travel the world oblivious to budgets. (Among other things, the film is a tribute to travels modes of transportation; the film starts inside an Air India jet, and across the film, Shammi will ride cars, scooters, helicopters, and speedboats, but when he needs to travel long distances, the invocation of a new location usually takes him there with an instant cut: theres of course no reference to the cost of any of this whirlwind travel.) Like many popular films, whether Hindi or Hollywood, this one relies on the persistent display of enviable fashions, fancy apartments, and decadent pleasures cigarettes, alcohol, and those notorious Parisian night spots to engage spectators in dreams of a luxurious, modern world which is also condemned as superficial when matters of the heart arise. And many of these visions are indeed eye-popping, especially in a few bizarre (even by Bollywood masala standards) production numbers that define postmodern pastiche. But the film seems overwhelmed by its desire to demonstrate that the production company really did travel to all its locations to place its performers in front of actual monuments and natural wonders, all backed by gawking spectators who seem unimpressed with the admirable lip-synching the actors are performing on streets, buses, ski lifts, and raging rivers. (The audiences for the wild nightclub numbers, though described as lustful, seem especially comatose.) In this way, the film paves the way for more recent films that focus on the cultural identity of NRI (non-resident Indian) characters and feature enticing side-trips to foreign lands, at least for song sequences. AN EVENING IN PARIS is unusual, however, in never returning its characters to Mother India, though part of the films fantasy includes its characters finding Hindi speakers (or at least people who seem to understand Hindi) everywhere on the globe.

In addition to blatantly indulging in the montage effect Eisenstein termed creative
geography, AN EVENING IN PARIS is also, of course, a star vehicle featuring
the often manic Shammi Kapoor in a performance that in this case begins with
unusual restraint, but soon escalates to the arm-flinging, sudden-head-dropping
physical abandon that so entranced audiences used to a previous generation of
anguished and repressed male heroes. Gladly taking on outrageous costumes and
impersonations (in one case as a Bengali stereotype) Shammi continues to mug
and roll about with the glee that defined his screen persona following 1961s
breakthrough hit JUNGLEE. As the periods embodiment of international youth
culture for Indian audiences, he can look a little old and pudgy by Western
standards Shammi was at once the young and old Elvis -- but the difference
he brought to Hindi cinema cant be easily dismissed, and Nasreen Munni
Kabir is on the money when she notes that Shammi Kapoor, rather than Amibabh
Bachchan, who would rule the Indian boxoffice in the 70s, is the real precursor
to contemporary uninhibited stars such as Shah Rukh Khan and Govinda.

In AN EVENING, Shammis frequent leading lady Sharmila Tagore plays a maddeningly incoherent character, whose motives and affections change without warning, but as a star shes the consistent embodiment of a notion of 60s cosmopolitan glamour, sporting the high hair and elaborate eye makeup common to Hindi heroines (and European models) of the period. Eventually taking on a dual role, she also gets to vamp and do really bad things like dance, drink, and smoke, the latter habit so shocking that it exposes her characters deception when shes pretending to be a proper Indian girl. (Drinking Coca-cola, however, seems OK.) Taking the film far more seriously that it wishes, she suggests the double standard, and even the internal tension, common to all popular depictions of (dull) good girls and (interesting) bad girls in film.
There is, in fact, a plot here, but it doesnt make much sense (not a major
problem for certain Hindi films) or engage the viewer emotionally (a far more
damning defect). Wealthy Deepa (Sharmila Tagore) arrives in Paris hating men,
especially because they are only interested in her money. Pretending, with little
effort, to be a poor Indian girl, while running around the Eiffel Tower barefoot,
she meets an excitable French photographer who speaks a bit of Hindi, picked
up from his friend Sam. When Sam encounters Deepa, the hapless Frenchman, now
dressed as Air Indias maharajah mascot and seeking (as the French will)
an impetuous marriage, is set aside and the remainder of the film will involve
Sam trying to woo Deepa by chasing and annoying her, a common seduction technique
for Hindi film heroes, especially Shammi. Besides the clash of egos and sexes
already hampering the main couple, other complications include an evil, gold-haired
and decadent Indian named Shekar (Pran) out to nab Deepa while he dodges gangsters
(the also blond Jack and the bald Jaggu) to whom he owes money. Late in the
story, the revelation that Deepa had a twin sister Rupa (now a cabaret performer
known as Suzy) allows for a series of masquerades that seem less significant
as plot devices than for the way in which this allows Sharmila Tagore to, again,
play both a virgin and a whore, coded of course by their contrasted Indian and
Western manners. (A quick flashback to the kidnapping of little Rupa provides
the kind of traumatic event that would begin many other Hindi films: in this
case the troubling night has been more or less forgotten by everyone involved,
though its recollection seems to encourage bad girl Suzy to eventually embrace
a version of sisterhood: the audience is treated to the image of Sharmila hugging
herself.) Indeed, the question of what kind of behavior defines a good
Indian girl so far from home is one of the only cultural points the film
really explores, and in this regard it looks forward to later investigations
of the topic such as 1995s megahit DILWALE DULHANIYA LE JAYENGE. A few
last-minute fights and a rescue wrap things up, but leave other points hanging,
though no audience is likely to care to much about whats left unresolved.
Weve had a lot to look at, after all, and thats really all Shammi
and the filmmakers promised.
[The DEI DVD of An Evening in Paris provides a quite good copy of the film,
with vibrant colors; the film is fully subtitled, including songs, and the inclusion
of the films trailer reveals that the films locations were indeed
its main selling point.]