Dekh Le
Dekh Le | |
---|---|
Website | YouTube |
Uploaded | December 16, 2013 |
Filmed by |
Ketan Rana (director) Aakash Raj (cinematographer) |
Uploader | Whistling Woods International |
Duration | 0:01:36 |
Category | Film & Animation |
Dekh Le is a viral video dealing with the subject of men ogling women in India. It was produced by film studies students at Mumbai-based Whistling Woods International Institute of Film, Fashion & Media and released on December 16, 2013, the first anniversary of the 2012 Delhi gang rape. It garnered one million hits in its first week on YouTube.
Background
On December 16, 2012, a horrific gang-rape of an Indian girl took place in a moving bus in New Delhi, the national capital of India. The event was followed by various protests in which masses took to the streets in various Indian states, demanding the government to form stricter laws regarding women safety. The media industry voiced its concern in its own way. One such way was the women-empowerment ad campaign 'Dekh Le', launched one year after the incident.
Content
The 90 second video shows four different scenarios where women are made to feel uneasy and uncomfortable by male gaze in everyday life situations. It shows women at a red light, in a bus, on a train and at a cafe, being subjected to staring male eyes. In order to retaliate, these women show mirrors to the men; on seeing how bad they look while staring at a girl, realize their mistake and are forced to take their eyes off. The video concludes with the four empowered women going about their business, free from prying eyes.
Victim-turned-empowered woman | Offender(s) | Offense | Demonstration of empowerment | Reflective device of shame |
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Twentysomething woman on a motorbike stopped at a traffic signal | Two twentysomething men on a motorbike who pull up alongside | Leering at the woman's thigh exposed by a slit in her short shorts | Sneer turned to scowl followed by a quick exit | Helmet visor which reflects the men's confusion |
College-aged woman napping on a bus alongside a female companion | Three college-aged men standing in the aisle of the bus | One man calls the attention of the other two to the napping woman's cleavage; one leans in for a look and they all smile knowingly | Pendant falls when the bus jostles the woman, obscuring her cleavage | Reflective pendant which reflects the instigator's regret |
College-aged woman having a discussion with several friends at a cafe | Orange juice-drinking twentysomething man one table over | Staring at the woman's lower-back tattoo | Slinging her handbag over her back, covering the tattoo | Cosmetics mirror attached to the exterior of the handbag which startles the man |
Thirtysomething woman sitting on a train, clad in a headscarf | Thirtysomething man in the seat across from her, snacking | Admiring the woman's face as she wipes the sweat from her brow | Look of disgusted disbelief followed by the donning of sunglasses | Sunglasses which reflect the man frantically looking about to see who has noticed his transgression |
Song
The jingle was sung by famous Indian singer Sona Mohapatra and composed by Ram Sampath. The hook line "Dekh Le Tu Dekhta Hua Kaisa Dikhta Hai" translates as "Look how you look while you are looking at me."
Reception
Hitting one million views in its first week and accumulating two million views by the end of week two, the women-empowerment video started a debate amongst youth on social media as to what is right and wrong when it comes to Eve teasing and women-empowerment. While some criticized the video, saying that it's acceptable to look at a girl if she's wearing a tattoo and revealing clothes, many believed that looking is not the problem; staring is.
The ad found a lot of media coverage, both on online news websites and blogs, as well as offline newspapers and magazines. Rheana Murray from New York Daily News described the video: "Video from Indian arts group shows leering men what they look like."[1] Deepa Kunapuli from Upworthy wrote "It's meant to start a conversation about what empowerment for women looks like."[2] Emma Cueto from Bustle writes, "The video is great, both in its very realistic – and uncomfortable – portrayal of men staring at young women, and also in the message it is trying to send. Hopefully it has a big impact, and not just in India."[3] Aditi Shome Ray from DNA described the ad: "This ad on women empowerment will make men cast their eyes down in shame."[4] IBNLive described the ad as " The commercial sends out a strong message to show how ridiculous men look like while ogling at women."[5] As of August 1, 2015, the video stands at more than five and a half million views on YouTube and has also hit the theatre screens of India.
References
- ↑ "Video from Indian arts group shows leering men what they look like". NY Daily News. 2013-12-23. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
- ↑ Deepa Kunapuli. "This Ad From India Shows Men Exactly How Creepy They Are When They Stare At Women On The Street". Upworthy.com. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
- ↑ "Bustle". Bustle. 2013-06-07. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
- ↑ Aditi Shome-Ray (2013-12-22). "'Dekh Le': This ad on women empowerment will make men cast their eyes down in shame | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis". Dnaindia.com. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
- ↑ "Dekh Le: Men who shamelessly ogle at women must watch this - IBNLive". Ibnlive.in.com. Retrieved 2014-08-10.