An Idiot's Guide to a Bollywood Heroine
As a sequel to the Idiot's Guide to a Bollywood Hero, BollyCurry proudly presents to you the Idiot's Guide to a Bollywood Heroine!
Published: Tuesday,Oct 28, 2014 16:59 PM GMT-06:00
With every flip of their hair and the sway of their hips, Bollywood heroines have the audiences ogling at their mere presence on screen. While your quintessential Bollywood heroines may claim to be layered and have many facets to them, we at BollyCurry know for a fact that there is no big secret to a Bollywood heroine. Behind every successful man is a woman, and behind every successful Bollywood hero, there is a drop dead beautiful Bollywood heroine. As a sequel to the Idiot's Guide to a Bollywood Hero, BollyCurry proudly presents to you the Idiot's Guide to a Bollywood Heroine!
First
things first, a heroine has to be drop dead gorgeous at all times of
the day. Whether it's in the middle of a shower, just after they've
woken up or while they're screeching at someone, they've to look their
very best! Their lusciously long hair has to be set without a strand out
of place, while their unblemished skin glows under the light. It
doesn't even matter if the heroine in question is a high school teenager
like Shanaya (Alia Bhatt in Student of the Year, 2013), because no one in high school battles with petty issues like acne and an awkward figure, right?
Of
course, if we're talking about the heroine of the movie, she has to be
the most perfect girl in the world. She'll be the apple of everyone's
eye, befriend random children on the street and stand up for those
suffering from injustice. Remember Ayesha (Shraddha Kapoor) from Ek Villain (2014) and Kalpana (Asin Thottumkal) from Ghajini (2008)? Didn't they bring out all your feels? After
all, this is the woman every man wants to bring home to introduce to
his family, so she's got to be a modern day reincarnation of Savitri herself!
When
our heroine does meet the hero, for some reason best known to the
writers of practically every Bollywood movie ever made, she has to hate
his guts. It could be for reasons as petty as a mistaken identity like
that in Kunwara (2000), or as complex as a family rivalry spanning through generations as was seen in Goliyon Ki Rasleela Ram-leela (2013);
but their relationship has to start off with hate from the heroine's
side. A few scenes into the plot of the movie though, this detail will
turn inconsequential and the heroine will fall head over heels in love
with the hero. So for all our readers who are aspiring to become a
Bollywood heroine, do not let this point deter you! You will get to suck
the hero's face at some point in the movie!
Regardless of whether the heroine is shown to be traditional and reserved (remember Poonam in Vivaah (2005)?) or spunky and confident like Nisha (Madhuri Dixit Nene) from Hum Aapke Hain Kaun (1994), she has to
shy away from her hero when he tries to get physically intimate with
her. Despite being blatantly obvious that the heroine clearly wants to
get some action, she's still going to act shy and run around the room a
couple of times, take some deep breaths and finally give in to her
hero's advances after 30 minutes in the timeline of the movie. If it was
this obvious that the heroine and the hero had the same thing in mind,
one can't help but wonder the reason behind the seemingly futile chase
sequence that just wasted 5 minutes of the screen time and destroyed
some 200 brain cells of the average viewer.
In most of the Bollywood masala movies these days, which happens to be a large proportion of all Bollywood movies, the heroine is as useful to the plot as the gorgeous crystal chandelier in the living room of the hero's palatial mansion. In other words, she has no work except to look pretty and romance the hero whenever he's not beating someone up. Don't believe us? Just watch all the popular blockbuster movies which have made over a 100 crores at the Box Office. Be it Rajjo (Sonakshi Sinha) in Dabangg (2010) and Dabangg 2 (2012), Diva (Sonakshi Sinha) in Joker (2012), Anya (Katrina Kaif) in Tees Maar Khan (2010), Aaliya (Katrina Kaif) in Dhoom 3 (2013) or Chanda (Sonakshi Sinha) in R...Rajkumar (2013), the heroines have had as much significance to the plot as a flower pot.
Lastly,
a new trend that has been emerging in movies lately, is of the
heroine's item number in the movie. Interestingly enough, this item
number may not even be of any significance to the plot of the movie, and
the heroine's presence could be equally unnecessary. But who would want
to leave the chance of being associated with a popular item song and
being nicknamed a Laila or a Babli? What matters is a peppy song, a catchy phrase featuring a popular commercial product like Munni's infamous Zandu Balm or Bebo's Fevicol and some 100 odd dancers gyrating their hips behind the sultry heroine. Because at the end of the day, the jawaani could be halkat or it could belong to Sheila, heroines like Pinky just have to prove that they only belong to those who have a lot of money.
And
this, my dear readers, is a glimpse into the top secret Idiot's Guide
to a Bollywood Heroine. The book in entirety is off limits to the
general public, and only we know the trouble we've endured to bring this
out to you! Of course, our readers are going to have their own pointers
to add to this list, so what are you waiting for? Comment below, and
who knows, your idea may be added into the guide!
Author: Ritchelle C.
Editor/s: Pooja B. and Gunia K.
Graphics: Komal P.
Author: Ritchelle C.
Editor/s: Pooja B. and Gunia K.
Graphics: Komal P.
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