When Saji does succeed in broaching the topic, Shammy’s razor is poised on Bobby’s neck. The barber offers to talk after the shave, in the course of which he carefully inspects his hopeful client and prepares to cut him to size. He tells the two how he is responsible for the safety of the “hapless women” in his home and how the brothers’ poor circumstances would be unsuitable for Baby. As a final insult he demands Rs 60 for his services. For such an assertion and appraisal of masculinity, the shop makes a great setting.
Being centres of public assembly, more often in rural contexts, haircutting saloons have always featured in quintessential montages that depict the spreading of news. You know, the ones in which men with beards covered in foam will react to things they hear on the radio or TV. Another Malayalam film, the 2007 hit Katha Parayumpol which was remade as Billu Barber in Hindi and Kuselan in Tamil, famously illustrates this. It is the story of a barber, Balan, whose upright principles are running his business to the ground. The shop, whose old-school wooden seat grows more and more ramshackle in the absence of use, is still the place in the village where men land up to gossip.
For the filmmaker, as for the photographer, barbershops with their many moments of interest — wall-to-wall mirrors, shiny accoutrements, beaded curtains — provide ample scope for mis-en-scène. It helps that these are at once venues for an ordained ritual, for self-care, and for social adhesion. This is the case with the more private “beauty parlours”, too, where women go to conceal outward realities and also to confess inner truths. Monologues that have no audience in the home might have a listener in the parlour. Something about these spaces, in which sharp instruments are handled gently, render them safe for vulnerability.
In Andrey Zvyagintsev's Loveless (2017), the protagonist Zhenya runs a salon in which she herself spends nonchalant hours getting painful treatments while offering up secrets about her child and her lover. The four main characters of Lipstick Under my Burkha (2016) by Alankrita Shrivastava are loosely connected by way of the neighbourhood salon too. For a fun superficial portrayal of ongoings in the parlour, there is Shoojit Sircar’s Vicky Donor (2012), in which Vicky unaffectedly jumps in to help with “waxing” and “threading” his beautician mother’s clients.
Few filmmakers have gone beyond depicting the parlour in a glib sequence about a makeover, though. Easily the best film that showcases these venues with nuance is the tremendously re-watchable Sukkar Banat (Caramel), Lebanese director Nadine Labaki’s 2007 debut. Through frames dipped in pink and gold, she shows the uneven camaraderie between beauticians and customers ranging from shy walk-ins to brash regulars. Occasionally, insecurities are stirred up and at other times people are made to feel beautiful. In the parlour where the protagonist Layale works, women can feel relief equally by meeting society’s chosen standards of beauty or by getting that liberating haircut. There is no one right way.
To read the full story, Subscribe Now at just Rs 249 a month
Already a subscriber? Log in
Subscribe To BS Premium
₹249
Renews automatically
₹1699₹1999
Opt for auto renewal and save Rs. 300 Renews automatically
₹1999
What you get on BS Premium?
- Unlock 30+ premium stories daily hand-picked by our editors, across devices on browser and app.
- Pick your 5 favourite companies, get a daily email with all news updates on them.
- Full access to our intuitive epaper - clip, save, share articles from any device; newspaper archives from 2006.
- Preferential invites to Business Standard events.
- Curated newsletters on markets, personal finance, policy & politics, start-ups, technology, and more.
Need More Information - write to us at assist@bsmail.in