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When Kiss Becomes Culture: Enrique Iglesias, Udit Narayan And India’s Uneven Lens On Celebrity Intimacy
Bollywood

When Kiss Becomes Culture: Enrique Iglesias, Udit Narayan And India’s Uneven Lens On Celebrity Intimacy

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Spanish pop sensation Enrique Iglesias may have kicked off his India tour with a roar in Mumbai, but it was not the vocals that drew attention — it was a kiss. A viral clip from the opening night shows the singer sharing a rather prolonged lip kiss with an excited fangirl on stage, an act that has since triggered a quiet murmur of reflection rather than outrage. It was, by all accounts, a moment charged with adoration, thrill, and the signature flamboyance Enrique brings to his performances. Yet, the absence of collective moral policing over the act — especially in a country known for its swift outrage — is what stands out most.

The same India that once balked when veteran playback singer Udit Narayan kissed an award show host on stage seems, this time, to have shrugged off the moment with global acceptance. The contrast reveals something telling about the evolving — and perhaps uneven — moral compass of celebrity culture in India. When Narayan’s brief peck made headlines years ago, it was treated almost as a breach of cultural decorum. The conversation was not about intent or context, but propriety. Fast forward to Enrique’s concert, and the conversation isn’t about right or wrong at all — it’s about spectacle.

Enrique, who has long carried a stage persona built on romance and intimacy, has performed similar gestures with fans worldwide — kisses, hugs, and the occasional dance-floor swirl. For Indian audiences, this was perhaps a long-awaited glimpse into the raw theatre of Western pop culture, brought to life right before their eyes. But beneath the cheers lies an unspoken acceptance: that when intimacy comes wrapped in an accent and global stardom, it feels less transgressive, even charming.

Enrique Iglesias Instagram Post

Western Pop Culture V/S Indian Pop Culture 

This double standard is not new. Indian pop culture has often separated what’s “acceptable” from the West and what’s “inappropriate” at home. The same audience that squirmed at Udit Narayan’s harmless kiss or trolled other Indian celebrities for public displays of affection seemed to interpret Enrique’s act as a sign of charisma and connection. It wasn’t scandal — it was seduction as performance.

What makes this difference starker is how both moments unfolded under the same cultural sky. Udit Narayan’s gesture — a moment of warmth, even clumsy affection — was dissected for crossing a line. Enrique’s, meanwhile, was celebrated as a hallmark of fan engagement. The singer, dressed in his casual black tee and cap, barely hesitated before the fan leaned in, their kiss lasting long enough to blur the line between surprise and intent. Cameras flashed, the crowd roared, and the moment was sealed into social media eternity — without much moral commentary.

This isn’t to say India has suddenly abandoned its conservative streak. Rather, it has learned to selectively suspend it. The incident underscores how global exposure and celebrity hierarchies can reshape moral interpretations. The foreign performer becomes a vessel of cultural aspiration, a kind of acceptable exception. What feels too bold for Indian stars becomes perfectly palatable when delivered through a Western lens — a reminder that admiration often rewrites boundaries faster than reason does.

Also Read:Emraan Hashmi Slams Toxic Masculinity: ‘Men Thinking ‘We’ll Do Whatever We Can’ Costs Women Their Dignity’

There’s also the matter of power dynamics on stage. In both cases — Narayan and Enrique — the act wasn’t coerced. But one was seen as overreach, the other as a dream come true. The distinction isn’t about gender or consent; it’s about the narratives audiences construct around who holds the right to intimacy in public. An Indian singer doing it appears indulgent; a global icon doing it looks romantic.

For India’s entertainment landscape, this moment is more than tabloid fodder. It’s an opportunity to examine how globalisation is quietly reshaping the nation’s moral lens. Western pop stars are often granted immunity under the pretext of performance art — their actions seen as extensions of their artistic identity. But Indian artists are still expected to embody restraint, their reputations tied to social respectability.

Enrique’s Mumbai kiss, therefore, is less about scandal and more about symbolism. It represents how India continues to negotiate modernity through borrowed gestures — accepting the global stage’s freedoms selectively while demanding restraint from its own. The camera captured more than a kiss; it revealed a country still learning how to separate admiration from inhibition, and art from morality.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Kantara Chapter 1 review: Folk goes mass as Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth excel in uneven but visually splendid prequel
Bollywood

Kantara Chapter 1 review: Folk goes mass as Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth excel in uneven but visually splendid prequel

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Kantara Chapter 1 review

Cast: Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth, Jayaram, Gulshan Devaiah

Director: Rishab Shetty

Rating: ★★★

Halfway into Kantara: Chapter 1, I could not help but feel that the film, like the original Kantara, was an elaborate setup for a visually splendid payoff. The film tests your patience, exhausts you, and frustrates you before eventually rewarding you with what is one of the most visually stunning climaxes in recent times. Yet, while the original Kantara held it all together, Chapter 1 seems to be nudging the viewer to just wait for that payoff and ignore the bumpy ride along the way. Does it take the sheen away a bit? Certainly. Is Kantara Chapter 1 still a watchable film? Immensely so! Despite the unevenness and drab moments, Rishab Shetty yet again scripts a theatrical spectacle that can only be experienced, not explained.

Kantara Chapter 1 review: Rishab Shetty takes on the daunting task of following up to Kantara.

What is it about

Kantara: Chapter 1 is an origin story that explains the backstory of the daivas and the guliga we saw in Kantara. Rishab plays Berme, a warrior from Kantara, a hamlet that is at odds with the neighbouring Kadamba kingdom. The ruler Vijayendra (Jayaram) has enforced an uneasy truce with Kantara, but his ambitious and wayward son, Kulasekhara (Gulshan Devaiah), wants to annex Kantara and capture the resources in the forest. Even as the princess Kanakvathi (Rukmini Vasanth) tries to find a middle ground, blood spills, and Kulasekhara and Berme come face to face.

What works and what doesn’t

While the 2022 film Kantara was a rooted film about traditions and folk tales of coastal Karnataka, Kantara: Chapter 1 is an ambitious, large-scale story of greed, war, and destiny. It is magnified several-fold as compared to the first part. The prequel is more mass than folk, giving both the heroes and the villains enough time to saunter on the screen and indulge in some elevation. If Kantara had some nuance, Chapter 1 has the subtlety of a sledgehammer. It is loud, bold, and in-your-face, perhaps a little too much at times.

What makes Kantara Chapter 1 a little intolerable at times is how uneven and scattered the narrative gets, particularly in the first half. It moves at a leisurely pace, flitting between the two settings and often indulging a bit too much in the characters’ frivolities. The humour seems forced, and the romance a little rushed. Yet, the moment the action kicks in, the film gets back on track.

Movie Review

Kantara: Chapter 1

Kantara: Chapter 1

Rating Star 3/5

Tracing the origins of the daivas and guliga in Kantara, the Rishab Shetty film focusses on the standoff between the village and a neighbouring kingdom centuries ago.

Cast

Rishab Shetty, Rukmini Vasanth, Jayaram, Gulshan Devaiah

Verdict

Kantara Chapter 1 relies upon its visuals, cinematography, and splendid scale to patch over the roughness in the narrative. Rishab Shetty and Rukmini Vasanth’s performances help too.

Rishab Shetty balances the folk traditions that have inspired the film with modern sensibilities better this time around. Chapter 1 gives its women more agency than the first film ever did. But even this one can’t resist the knight-in-shining-armour trope. However strong the woman is, a man must rescue her in the end. Rishab Shetty’s writing seems to allow women to have power and independence only when they rebel or antagonise. Otherwise, it is reduced to tokenism. However, still props to the writer-director for giving a female character more prominence this time around, and even giving her some of the most powerful moments in the film.

But the real clincher for the film is the visuals. The VFX work is quite splendid for a film of this budget. The CGI tiger and monkeys, in particular, have been rendered beautifully. But it’s the film’s play with fire and the depiction of the guliga and daivas that steal the show. The powerful climax is elevated by Rishab Shetty’s performance, but the VFX plays an important role there. What is also noteworthy is the cinematography. Much of the film is shot at night, but Kantara: Chapter 1 thankfully discards the newfound penchant for too much darkness on screen.

The performances

I expected Rishab to shine again on screen, and he does. In scenes where he transforms into the guliga, he is a man possessed and delivers a breathtaking, captivating performance yet again. But for me, the other star was Rukmini Vasanth. The second half of the film allows her to take on a central role in the narrative, showing shades that films in this genre seldom allow female stars to. And the actor excels. Gulshan Devaiah has been wasted in the first half, but he briefly gets to show his true mettle after the interval.

Rukmini Vasanth in a still from Kantara: Chapter 1.
Rukmini Vasanth in a still from Kantara: Chapter 1.

Chapter 1 a critique of consumerism as it is a commentary on greed and maintaining the ecological balance, all themes that were present in the first Kantara too. Here, they have been presented with a medieval lens, though. And Rishab Shetty does well as these are the only moments in the film that have some nuance and subtlety. But the visuals and performances, coupled with the splendid presentation of folkore, is enough to patch the holes left by the roughness in the narrative. This makes Kantara: Chapter 1 one of the most visually stunning and watchable Indian films in recent times.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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