LIVING THE ROLE: HOW INDIAN CINEMA SHAPES AND REFLECTS THE STAR–HERO PERSONA

Authors: Siddharth Anil Menon

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17413449

Published: October 2024

Abstract

<p><em>The enduring allure of popular cinema in India lies in its ability to fuse two seemingly divergent archetypes, the charismatic “star” and the morally weighted “hero,” into a single figure that entertains while embodying collective ideals. This paper traces how that fusion emerged, explaining how screen personas migrate beyond narrative frames to become devotional icons, folklore avatars, and everyday companions for millions. Moving from early mythological adaptations and mythologicals to the sculpted physiques and sentimental romances of the contemporary multiplex era, it identifies recurrent narrative devices, visual strategies, and fan practices that transform marketable celebrity into moral authority. The study shows that the star-hero dynamic is not merely a by-product of publicity campaigns; it is a cultural engine that negotiates India’s rapid social change, enabling audiences to reconcile tradition with modern aspiration. Crucially, this cinematic authority extends into the political realm, where film stars leverage their heroic personas to create alternative forms of democratic participation that challenge conventional political structures. By following the moment when the star crosses into heroic symbolism, the paper reveals why viewers continue to invest these figures with emotional labour that outlasts box-office cycles. Readers will encounter the ways devotional gazes, folklore riffs, and shifting masculinities silently collaborate to keep Indian popular cinema imaginatively sovereign long after the closing credits roll. </em></p>

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DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17413449

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