JAGTE
RAHO (Stay awake!)
1956, Hindi, 139 minutes
Directed by Sombhu Mitra and Amit Maitra
Produced by Raj Kapoor
Based
on the Bengali play and film Aykdin Ratrey ("One night"),
produced by IPTA and directed by Sombhu Mitra; Story and screenplay: Sombhu
Mitra, Amit Maitra; Dialogues: K. A. Abbas; Music:
Salil Chaudhary; Lyrics: Shailendra, Prem Dawan; Cinematography: Radhu Karmakar

Had
Foucault, Ionesco, and Rossellini been genetically joined and incarnated in
India, they might have collectively imagined something like this mordantly absurdist
satire, which must rank among the masterpieces of 1950s popular cinema. But
since they werent, the full credit goes to R.K. Studios and its helmsman,
Raj Kapoor, here teaming up with Bengali theatre greats Shambhu Mitra and Salil
Chaudhary. Kapoor appears at the height of his powers as actor, storyteller,
and risk-taking producer. His Chaplinesque Raju character makes
his third appearance, wearing his trademark ratty jacket but now trading his
skimpy pantaloons for an equally skimpy dhoti, to portray a terrified
villager who has just arrived, in the dead of night, in the Big City (unidentified
and generic, though Calcutta street scenes appear during the opening credits),
and who is in search of the most basic of all amenities: a sip of water. He
quickly runs afoul of the watchmen who patrol the citys streets (periodically
crying Jagte raho! or Stay awake! to assure one
another, and the municipal committees that pay them, that they are on the job).
But he is befriended by a stray dog (in a scene that alludes to the similar
one in AWARA) who leads him to a leaking tap inside a massive and gated middle-class
apartment complex.
The chaos that results from the presence of this alleged thief is
virtually indescribable, but marvelous to behold. It is also, in its own way,
utterly plausible. Darting from flat to flat in his efforts to escape the mob,
Raju witnesses and exposes a range of vices that masquerade as bourgeois respectability
(and that, indeed, make it possible), and mercilessly reveals how, in the status
and security-obsessed world of the middle classes, only a thin line may separate
domestic civility from petty crime, tawdry scandal, idiotic vendetta, and indeed
mindless mob vigilantism. More trenchant, even prophetic, is the films
sensitivity to the range of middle-classness and its political ramifications:
in the panic that follows the rumor of a thief in their midst, the wealthier
residents rapidly organize (with financial incentives) the poorer ones into
quasi-military squadrons of armed (if ineffective) goons to hound out the offending
subaltern Other.
In a further Chaplinesque touch, Raju barely speaks throughout most of the film,
conveying his emotions through slapstick and pantomime, but abruptly offers
one fervent denunciatory speech (a la The Great Dictator) at its climax.
In this moment, as well as in the reverent (censor-pleasing?) montage of national
heroes that briefly follows, the plot seems to momentarily veer from its cynical
course. The coexistence of patriotic schmaltz with trenchant social critique
is of course characteristic of Kapoors films, as is the suggestion, in
the apotheosis-like finale, that the vision of a buxom goddess in a blouseless
sari (played by Nargis, naturally), accompanied by a soaring hymn to Krishna,
(Jaago Mohan pyaare, Wake, O beloved Enchanter) might suffice
to lift this dark Dystopia into a bright New Day. The awakened viewer gets to
choose between lingering skepticism, and surrender to enchantmentor go
away savoring both.
Other songs are sparingly yet brilliantly used to advance the plot. The opening
Kabir-like bhajan (Zindagi khwab hai, This life is a dream),
sung by a drunken bon vivant, establishes and celebrates the cinematic
sur-reality we are entering even as it prefigures the heavy ironies that it
will shortly reveal. The ludicrous Maine jo lee angdai (When
I stretched my limbs) is a sendup of raucous cinema lovesongs with nonsense
refrains, and is played as an HMV phonograph record by a debauched husband who
wants his own wife to mimic the erotic dancing of film actresses (Why not?,
one wonders. The directors seem of two minds about it too. While the real
bourgeois spouse hides in terrified respectability in the bedroom, Raju, clutching
a skirt, is hallucinated into her dancing double by the husbandand the
same actress, of course, appears in this role as well, looking perfectly fetching
in the sinful adornment of a tawaayaf or courtesan.)

The
vast yet claustrophobic set, designed by K. Damodar, is another of the films
triumphs, and likewise strikes a prophetic note; though only a few housing complexes
on this scale existed in 1956, they are ubiquitous now in the Indian metropolis.
The locked gates, receding hallways, scurrying residents, and three-digit flat
numbers that are mindlessly reeled off add to the inescapable message that this
comfortable upscale development the sort of housing to which many Indians
aspire is not only a warren of iniquities and sorrows concealed behind
every nameplated door, but also a vast, self-policing prison that traps its
denizens in their prejudices and fears.
[Despite its cautionary opening messageThe following film has been
restored from vintage source for the nostalgic appeal hence possibly compromising
in video and audio quality.the Yashraj Films DVD of JAGTE RAHO offers
an excellent quality print, superior to those marketed by the same company for
AWARA and SHRI 420. The subtitles are adequate and thankfully appear for songs
as well.]