Sunday, August 31, 2008

Why Rajnikanth won’t enter politics



M R VENKATESH

At the outset I owe a frontal confession — I am an unabashed fan of Rajnikanth.

I literally grew up with Rajni, his mannerisms, quirky actions, peculiar delivery style, not to mention his punch dialogues. I recall that he was the popular hero during our college days. My colleagues in college competed with each other to mimic him — from copying his hairstyle to the manner in which he walked, talked and danced.

That was when he was a popular hero. Slowly yet surely in the next few years by the dint of his hard work, Rajni went on to acquire a larger than life image. I have watched him grow from that position into a star and from a star into a successful star and then into super star.

No wonder fans, media and more crucially his opponents interpreted his every move. I distinctly recall how even an innocuous dialogue in one of his films in the mid-nineties was interpreted to be politically loaded against the then chief minister of the day, J Jayalalithaa. The story of the film incidentally was all about taming of the shrew, which added more fuel to the political fire in the state.

The climax of his first brush with politics followed almost instantly. Claiming that if Jayalalithaa were to get re-elected, Rajni thundered, “Even God cannot rescue Tamil Nadu.”

Leveraging the anti-Jaya wave that prevailed in the state at that point in time, the state Congress actually split under the leadership of the late G K Moopanar. It was not all. The Congress in its new avatar as the Tamil Manila Congress, which till then held the Dravida Munnetra Kazagham as responsible for the assassination of its leader Rajiv Gandhi, suddenly began courting the party. Such was the power of Rajni who could make and break political alliances.


Rajni has kept his fans guessing

Following his clarion call, the DMK and TMC rode on his popularity to rout the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazagham and Jaya.

And when the DMK came to power in 1996, political analysts often remarked that it was Rajni who defeated Jaya. The DMK and the TMC were mere instrumentalities in that particular election. It was Rajni’s time. Yet he chose not to take the plunge then.

Since then Rajni has kept his fans guessing (according to die-hards, it is actually ‘waiting’). Even duets with his leading ladies were strangely penned only for Rajni keeping in mind his probable entry into politics. ‘Will he or won’t he,’ has been one of the questions that has kept his fans, media and politicians in the state engrossed in a animated debate for over a decade and a half.

While much water has flown through the Cauveri — the big question remains unanswered even to this date.

Nevertheless, with each passing film his dialogues became more politically loaded than the previous one, leaving lesser number in the audience in doubt on his entry into politics. One realises, in hindsight that all these were aimed more at satiating the appetite of his fans rather than implying anything serious.

Readers may note that Rajni was the Tamil counterpart of the Big B (Amitabh Bachchan) who has been labelled by the media as the angry young man of Hindi cinema, but with a crucial difference. Rajni went a step further — he not only protested against the system as Big B did, but also promised to cleanse the system, even change it for the better.


Source - Rediff

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