Yash Chopra in the decades of the 90’s and 2000’s
majestically flew Bollywood to the ski slopes of the Alps ; introducing us the
viewer to snow, the tulip’s, daffodils of Switzerland and
then smoothly merging them with the mustard fields of Punjab. So much so that
he was honoured with the Swiss Ambassadors award of promoting that country through his films. Then the software boom happened and Indians were stomping all around
the world, going everywhere and seeing it all. Losing that novelty today the Yash Raj Films (YRF)
banner has turned its attention to the Indian hinterland with a vengeance. The director Maneesh
Sharma has been appointed their official tour guide to this mythical, mysterious place
with its different language and evolving aspirations.
So here we find ourselves in Jaipur and straight away jump into the
lives of three young souls that randomly collide with each other making the
substance of the screenplay. There is also a fourth character, an elderly Rishi
Kapoor ( competent as always ) representing the pragmatic voice of the experienced generation; an older India coming to terms with the newer one, doling
out homilies in a quirky manner that only he can. Raghuram Sitaram or Raghu is
a registered tour guide ( Sushant Singh Rajput, absolutely watchable) who also plays a
part-time baraati in the wedding business of Rishi Kapoor.
On his way to
getting married to Tara ( debutante, Vani Kapoor , very dishy and poised ) he
meets a beautiful, saucy smoking Gayatri ( Parineeti Chopra, very comely and sparkling ) and
falls in love ( tezzwala attraction ) and runs away from his own marriage. After this the movie is only
a collection of scenarios, long introspections and abject confusion. The
characterizations of Raghu, Gayatri and Tara are so exasperating, simplistic
and silly that after a point the crammed up charm starts to grate. Now whether he gets
the girl or not and if he does then which girl ? The viewer has reached a point where he would scream whatever the f**k happens, who gives a
shit...
Maneesh Sharma has achieved the absolute impossible, he has made a film out of a brilliantly weaved screenplay that has no coherent story or characterization to back it up.
It is a visual film. The camera loves its three young
protagonists and the colourful locales of Rajasthan without a doubt. The camera sensuously
caresses the young curves of Gayatri & Vani and captures the confused, immature
charming Raghu and his commitment-phobia wonderfully well. But the character is
wimpy and despite his good looks he doesn't elicit empathy. Hence the extremely
verbose players manage to just skim a surface without diving any deeper. Music in Hindi
cinema is an important ingredient for its success and the songs are
hummable, energetic, yet they look better in the promos than in the movie. Sachin &
Jigar have done their job well but the integration was the director’s cut, he
quite doesn't get it like he did in his first outing with Band Bajaa Baraat. We
get a sense of flitting in and out of that first film BBB what with the
marriage arrangers, the catering and the entire ensemble around it.
A good director and a solid production house can trip up despite having good ingredients in actors and technicians. Maneesh the only thing to do now is
jump up quickly, shake off the dust and start a new project. This time do focus on a story idea first and believe me everything else will fall correctly into place. My promise to you, I shall come
and watch your next effort too with some hope and expectations that you have learned something from the faux’pas from this time around.
So finally what are we left with? Only raging hormones? Well, yes.
“Armaan khuley hai, Ziddi bulbuley hai”
a phrase in a song purely ( Shuddh ) encapsulates the essence of this Desi Romance.
“Armaan khuley hai, Ziddi bulbuley hai”
a phrase in a song purely ( Shuddh ) encapsulates the essence of this Desi Romance.
2 comments:
Not so "finally chali hai" film, from point of view of a story. The narrative of the film is stuck in the sexual attraction and commitment phobia. Thereby losing the opportunity of making a statement on the double standards and sham of the society!
Loved reading your review as usual. :)
Totally in agreement on the missed opportunity of making the statement...clearly, and thus making it count.
Thank You :-)
Post a Comment