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................................................................................Bollywood
Props
Rent-a-gun
- Rs 250 only
1.00
a.m. in the morning. A Naka Bandhi (police vigil) is in operation
on Film City Road. The police have had a tip-off that a truck full
of arms is on its way. A truck appears covered with waterproof tarpaulin.
The police stop the vehicle and conduct a search. Hundreds of AK-47s,
bazookas, rifles, pistols, bombs, a transmitter and hand grenades
are found. The driver and other accomplices are arrested and taken
to the Goregaon police station. Tension mounts. . . until the guns
turn out to be fake!
Rajendra
Tyagi, a resident of Goregaon West, manufactures and supplies
fake guns, rifles and other weapons to Bollywood for use in top-banner
films. The guns, mostly of German and Italian make, are imported
from USA and London. Some of them are made locally in a small workshop
in Oshiwara. They cost anywhere between Rs 25,000 to Rs 40,000 each.
Initiated by his brother, Mahendra Tyagi in 1984, the gun business
has come a long way from key winding mechanisms to latest electronic
gizmos, he says. "We were the first to supply fake guns to the film
industry 15-16 years ago. Before that, during the days of the movie
Sholay, real guns and rifles were used for shooting. Film-makers
used to track down people with gun licenses and use the original
firearms during a shoot."An excellent horse rider and struggling
artist, Mahendra Tyagi was well known for his roles as a daku
(dacoit) in the Hindi film industry. He wanted to start a business
on the side since he knew that his meagre film roles could not sustain
his family. His gun trade started with one real licensed rifle,
which he obtained from his hometown. This gave impetus to the idea
of supplying duplicate guns to the film industry.
In the 1960s and '70s, Bollywood had only one machine gun, which
was circulated among all artists for use. The joke doing industry
rounds in those days was: that if Dharmendra had a scheduled
shooting date, so did the machine gun! This gun had a small box
attached below, with a clock-like key winding mechanism. On slow
release, the contraption would fire. The artist's expression and
the firing had to coincide for the most dramatic results. The Tyagi
brothers then came up with the idea of electronic guns for the film
industry. They imported most of the guns until the hijack of the
Indian Airlines flight in December 1999, when vigilance was stepped
up. After that, they were only able to get the dummy guns while
returning from shoots abroad. Some of these setbacks they solved
by manufacturing fake guns and copying designs from foreign manuals
themselves. But Tyagi admits that he is unable to produce the perfect
finish of a foreign counterpart.
The
Tyagis' first gun was used by Sunny Deol in a movie pictured
in Ladakh. The Tipu Sultan serial sported some of their ancient,
beautifully crafted weapons. Most of the Trimuthi Productions
like Tridev and Vishwathma have used their arms. Lately, they have
gunned their way into Vinod Chopra's film 'Mission Kashmir' starring
Hrithik Roshan, Jackie Shroff and Preity Zinta.
The Kargil Rally conducted by Raj Purohit showcased two of
his canons placed atop jeeps driven round the city. Speaking on
the making of the guns, Tyagi says, "The bigger guns and canons
fire with the help of gunpowder and smaller use pellets instead
of bullets. Most guns are attached to a fuse and battery and have
their own firing device. Previously, machine guns were attached
to a wiring device, which made the artist immobile. So, during a
firing scene, the artist would have to remain static. If he moved
even an inch, the wiring would be exposed or get detached." Tyagi's
assistants are always present on the sets during a shoot, loading
and unloading the arms and setting up the devices. "All the actor
has to do is aim and shoot," he claims. To counter misuse and police
annoyance, all the fake guns are serially numbered and registered
with the Police Commissioner's Office and the Movie Action Dummy
Association Union.
Today, this arms dealer has the best Bollywood banners attached
to his rifles. Next time you see Hrithik or Sunil shooting their
way out of trouble, remember that they're using Tyagi's master blasters
to do so.
Anupama Vinayak
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