The levels of violence may be down, but beautiful Kashmir Valley is
far from regaining its old glory as the dream destination of movie producers.
Not only were some of the famous Bollywood blockbusters of 1970s and
1980s like "Junglee", "Kashmir Ki Kali" and "Andaz"
filmed on locations in the valley but Hollywood director David Lean
also shot scenes for the cinematic adaptation of E.M. Forster's "A
Passage to India" in the old city of summer capital Srinagar.
And Kashmiris cannot stop talking about those good old times.
"I remember that in 1983 appeals were made by David Lean through
the local media to the people of old Srinagar to bring down their rooftop
television antennae.
"We had those long aluminium TV antennae for terrestrial reception
those days. And people gladly obliged David because he was filming the
old city as it existed in the 1920s," said Mohiuddin Mir, 52, a
resident.
Mohiuddin vividly recalled the mass enthusiasm when David Lean's film
was shot.
"I was overawed to see the director. He had directed classic Hollywood
movies like 'Lawrence of Arabia' and 'Dr. Zhivago'. My friends and I
moved with the film unit through the lanes and bylanes of the old city
for days. Man, that was fun!" Mir said, walking down memory lane.
Most movie lovers in Kashmir feel nostalgic about the film shooting
days.
"We used to queue for tickets on the first day of a good movie.
To see a movie first day, first show was a craze among college students
those days," said Muhammad Shafi, 48, a businessman.
Added Shabir Ahmad Bhat, 43, a schoolteacher: "I spent 10 days
at the Sonamarg hill resort simply to watch Raj Kapoor direct his film
'Ram Teri Ganga Maili'. Raj Sahib was not in the best of his health
those days.
"At the high altitude of Sonamarg he would often feel short of
breath, but the fire within the showman was still alive."
All the cinema halls in the valley were closed with the outbreak of
separatist violence in 1990. Guerrillas banned theatres, video shops,
beauty parlours, wine shops and clubs as part of their campaign to establish
an Islamic society.
The Jammu and Kashmir government has tried to subsidize the reopening
of cinema halls in Srinagar to project it as a sign of return of normalcy.
Except for one cinema hall in Srinagar city, which screens Bollywood
movies amid tight security provided by paramilitary forces, all others
remain closed.
Some have been converted into charitable hospitals.
And though people have access to both Bollywood and Hollywood movies
through dish and cable television in Kashmir, the small box simply can't
match the magic of the 70mm screen.
In the process, many Kashmiris satisfy their hunger for the big screen
when they visit cities like Chandigarh and New Delhi.
"The thrill of watching a movie inside a cinema hall is unparalleled.
We used to eagerly wait the release of some of the best movies of our
days like 'Naya Daur' and 'Mughal-e-Azam'," moaned Ghulam Nabi
Sheikh, 64, a retired headmaster here.
He added ruefully: "Now it's all over!"