Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

What Is It That Makes Male Stars Coy About Nudity?

Subhash K. Jha IANS, 26 Mar, 2018 01:32 PM
  • What Is It That Makes Male Stars Coy About Nudity?
Globally, major strides have been taken in cinema as far as gender equality is concerned. But when it comes to nudity, men still prefer to keep themselves clothed even while playing sexually-emboldened characters.
 
 
Take, for example, last year's game-changing same-sex love story "Call Me By Your Name" which features the incredibly charismatic Armie Hammer as a visiting American student who has a passionate affair with the son of his hosts in Italy.
 
 
Armand Douglas Hammer, a straight man in real life, who has unabashedly played gay roles in at least three recent films, revealed that his co-star Timothy Chalamet and he remained naked on the sets while shooting their love scenes. However, they had both stipulated in their contracts that there would be no bared private parts on screen.
 
 
In an interview, the film's writer, the renowned James Ivory, said: "Certainly, in my screenplay there was all sorts of nudity. But according to (director) Luca, both actors had it in their contracts that there would be no frontal nudity, and there isn't, which I think is kind of a pity. Again, it's just this American attitude. Nobody seems to care that much, or be shocked, about a totally naked woman. It's the men. This is something that must be so deeply cultural that one should ask: 'Why?'"
 
 
Indeed, why?
 
 
Explaining his reluctance to go starkers on camera, Armie explained how he didn't want a picture of his penis to surface on the internet to embarrass his daughter.
 
 
Fair enough. We must respect the self-censorship that an individual imposes on artistic liberty. And Armie is partially right. Nudity can get mortifying in the family. I remember the pain and suffering that the fiercely committed Seema Biswas went through after her full frontal nudity in Shekhar Kapur's Bandit Queen hit the theatres.
 
 
For all her reservations, she did it nonetheless. Somehow women have always had an easier time exteriorising their character's candour through nude scenes. Top contemporary actresses in the West like Jennifer Lawrence and Sally Hawkins have appeared without their clothes in award-winning films last year.
 
 
Male actors, though, have always been shy. This lopsided reading of physical objectification goes back to the cinema of Yash Chopra where the romantic songs shot in snowcapped Switzerland featured heroines in skimpy chiffon sarees while the heroes were padded up in woollens.
 
 
Even the much-vilified item songs are almost invariably meant for the male gaze. So many girls. Where are the item boys?
 
 
Women, it is pretentiously presumed, are too shy to gaze at anything except the cooking range. And then, after dinner, the lights go out. Women are, of course, presumed to be loath to objectify men. But some Bollywood's resident beefcakes don't mind being item boys.
 
 
Randeep Hooda, who played a dangerous sex machine in his latest release "Saheb, Biwi Aur Gangster", used his sexuality with the power of a gun. After seeing his libidinous act, Shobhaa De wrote on a micro-blogging site, "Finally figured out what Sush(mita) saw in Randeep Hooda. He's hotter than all the Khans."
 
 
During the release of the film, Randeep had told me: "Of course, I love the thought of being an object of desire in a slow romantic item song for women. Wouldn't you love it too? Every man wants to be desired by the opposite sex. And why just ladies? I don't mind being admired by men too."
 
 
In Rohit Dhawan's "Desi Boyz", Akshay Kumar and John Abraham performed a striptease pole dance, as the ladies drooled to their heart's content. The trend of item boys in Bollywood started with Abhishek Bachchan who surrounded himself with a bevy of beauties and sang "One love" for Mahesh Manjrekar's film "Rakht" in 2004.
 
 
In Soham Shah's "Kaal", Shah Rukh Khan took off his shirt and joined Malaika Arora for a water-drenched raunchy romp.
 
 
But these remain isolated instances.
 
 
It's the women who get objectified in the item songs. So when Armie Hammer gets nervous about being exposed to his daughter's friends, we should also spare a thought for all the female actors who are regularly dunked in water, soaked in the rain and made to wear as much as decency requires.
 
 
Women have families too.

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

#PadManChallenge Just A ‘Stupid' Trend Or Breaking Taboos?

#PadManChallenge Just A ‘Stupid' Trend Or Breaking Taboos?
It's Valentine's Day week, but more than the Rose Day, Chocolate Day and the likes, it's the #PadManChallenge that has taken social media by storm. The challenge comes close on the heels of the release of "Pad Man", which will hit the screens on Friday.

#PadManChallenge Just A ‘Stupid' Trend Or Breaking Taboos?

Inside Yash And Roohi Johar’s First Birthday Party: Taimur, Adira, Abram And Alia Bhatt In Attenda

Inside Yash And Roohi Johar’s First Birthday Party: Taimur, Adira, Abram And Alia Bhatt In Attenda
As Karan Johar's twins -- son Yash and daughter Roohi -- turned one on Wednesday, their birthday party was attended by all their little friends along with their celebrity parents.

Inside Yash And Roohi Johar’s First Birthday Party: Taimur, Adira, Abram And Alia Bhatt In Attenda

Indian Society Becoming Regressive, Freedom Of Expression Shrinking: Javed Akhtar

Akhtar, who has in the past faced the wrath of fundamentalists and trolls for his opinions on the social media, regretted that Indian society was becoming "more regressive".

Indian Society Becoming Regressive, Freedom Of Expression Shrinking: Javed Akhtar

Flexibility Helps Indian Actors Break Into Hollywood: Nimrat Kaur

It is the quality of flexibility and ability to adapt to an out-of-comfort zone that helps Indian actors make a mark in a foreign land, says Nimrat Kaur, who has worked in American shows like "Wayward Pines" and "Homeland".

Flexibility Helps Indian Actors Break Into Hollywood: Nimrat Kaur

Trolls Should Be Ignored, Say Bollywood Celebs

Trolling has become an issue for many celebrities on social media whenever they express their opinion on any topic, but some Bollywood figures maintain that not paying attention is the best way to deal with trolls and maintain one's sanity.

Trolls Should Be Ignored, Say Bollywood Celebs

Quite Chuffed Hackers Found Me Interesting Enough: Abhishek Bachchan

Actor Abhishek Bachchan says he was quite pleased that the pro-Pakistani Turkish cyber army Ayyildiz Tim, who hacked his Twitter account, found him interesting enough.

Quite Chuffed Hackers Found Me Interesting Enough: Abhishek Bachchan