Friday, September 21, 2012

'Abosheshey': Scrapbook of memories


When Soumya nonchalantly arrives in Kolkata to settle legal ‘issues’ with his dead mother, he gets entangled in a mesh of memories and hitherto unknown relationships, and a city, in a manner he had never expected. Aditi Roy and Neel B Mitra place the clueless San Francisco boy at the heart of Kolkata his mother thought was not just a city but ‘a way of life’ and allow him to get lost in its interstices in such a way that by the time he connects with the heartbeat of the half-asleep metropolis, the audience has already rediscovered and fallen in love with Kolkata all over again. The ‘Interval’ moment is a little emotional climax that acts a warm prelude to a more intense second-half.  
                 
Abosheshey, at the end of it all, celebrates human bonding, but with a difference; while acknowledging the delight in being ‘Bound Together’, the film also takes a very libertarian stance in respecting individuality. Suchismita lets her husband migrate to the United States with their only son; she stays behind, for she is deeply rooted to her place and feels the necessity of being with an ailing father-in-law. Piyali, her childhood friend, reproaches her for such a strange decision; she feels women should not be so headstrong. In the absence of a real family, Suchismita, the quintessential sunshine girl, spreads happiness, and finds her own in singing, painting and preserving memories. She becomes foster-mother to Nandini, and finds in her an affectionate confidant. Her agony, her pain, and her depression melt into her lonely hours like the dripping colors in her painting that hangs on the wall of Nandini’s living room. As if living up to her name (Suchismita means a woman having a beautiful smile), she does not let her profound pain surface and lives life to the lees as a vendor of joy. However, as the story unfolds, that element of suspense introduced at the very beginning of the film, continues to nag: who does Suchismita search for in the Seven Hills?
                 
Soumya who is initially in a terrible hurry to return, extends his stay as he gets irrevocably caught in the life his mother had memorialized in her letters and diaries. He finds out people and places that had been close to his mother: Ranga Mama, Piyali Mashi, the old ancestral house, the painting on the terrace, the kitkit court…and yes, her connection with the Seven Hills. The film merging the past and the present in the same frame puts the technique to marvelous use to delineate the increasing closeness between the mother and the son. The virtual spatial distance between them shrink as the film heads towards the close, and ends with the mother-son duo standing side by side staring at the skyline of their favorite city. As the end credit rolls you feel a lump in your throat. And you are suddenly surprised: the story has traveled beyond the last frame. Soumya now knows his mother better, and surprises Ranga Mama and Nandini by asking them whether they know Atin! The man both Suchismita and Piyali had fallen in love with.

Although, the film is all about how Soumya retraces his way back to a lost past and connects with his mother, he never once calls her ‘Ma’. Perhaps she deserves the respect of being known only as Suchismita: a fiercely independent woman whose life cannot be contained in the image of the mother alone. This is exactly where Abosheshey too is fiercely modern and loveably so!

Ankur Khanna has been completely rediscovered by Roy and Mitra. His effortless metamorphosis from an indifferent and stern American kid to a melancholy yet jolly son deserves a resounding round of applause. Roopa Ganguly’s controlled and understated performance makes Suchismita both dignified and vulnerable. Raima Sen as Nandini is literally the next-door-girl. Sudipta Chakraborty in a guest role delivers believably. Ronjini as Rai brings a breeze of mint-freshness every time she appears. And, Manashi Sinha is perhaps the most real of the entire cast: her annoyance, her concern and her deep affection shine through the two or three frames she appears in.
 
From Bijano ghare to Durey kothao, the lilting music creates tuneful continuum of city spaces and the exotic hills. Roopa Ganguly's national award is certainly well-deserved. However, the horizon of the camera could have been a slightly wider, and the first-half could have been a little more compact. As a debut film these little flaws can be definitely forgiven, and Aditi Roy and Neel B Mitra, I presume, have arrived to stay.

Image Courtesy: washingtonbanglaradio.com

Monday, September 17, 2012

‘Barfi!’- It simply melts in your mouth!





Anurag Basu’s hero has a lot in his symbolic name, and his story has in it just the right measure of sweetness aka kaju barfi, neither too less nor too much, but without the downside of adding some extra calories to your system; in fact, it helps burn a few, as you often tend to roll on the seat with laughter. Mostly on the run, chased by an overweight Inspector Dutta (Sourabh Shukla), Barfi (Ranbir Kapoor) brings sunshine to the misty hills of Darjeeling. Shruti (Ilena D’Cruz), the Calcutta girl, betrothed to a certain Ranjit ( a very stern Jishu Sengupta) basks in the sunshine for a while but retires to the rains, not realizing that a radiant future cannot be had by blocking the sun. Jhilmil (Priyanka Chopra), glittering in her innate innocence, seizes the sunshine and preserves it in her heart, painting a rainbow of conflicting emotions, in a mesh of warm sunshine and heart-rending downpours.

Barfi’s inability to hear or speak, his intrinsic simplicity, his comic discomfitures, and his cat-and-mouse games with the police in which the latter is almost always outwitted give him a Chaplinesque joie de vivre which is hard to get over. The specially-abled Jhilmil is that complementary cherry that completes the barfi-sweet cake: her melancholia, nonchalance and silences dissolve into unalloyed joy on discovering a true friend in Barfi. Shruti speaks with her eyes, and personifies repentance, as she regrets her decision of putting material concerns over true love. When the love-triangle gathers an almost fairy-tale dimension, the film returns where it began, introducing an element of suspense. Although the film often moves back and forth in time, and between delightful dales of Darjeeling and drab gullies of Calcutta, it weaves the dislocated narrative in such a way that it isn’t difficult to follow.  

To the cynic, the film might appear too-good-to-be-true at times; but, a fictional world of happiness, which is, however, not without its share of misgivings and despair, compensates for the lack of lot of good things in the life that surrounds us. Barfi’s appeal lies somewhere else: it almost makes us retreat into a kind of pre-lapserian innocence which is lost forever, but the desire for a permanent return to the same is paramount. It innocently establishes, with complete faith in man’s essential goodness, a humane connect in a post-human world. If that appears too simplistic to many, the pristine world, am sure, is lost to them irrevocably. Whoever enters the theatre to watch Barfi!, already knows that its two lead characters are specially-abled. The cast and crew have endlessly talked about that. But this special ability is actually something else; that is what you are left to discover as you flow with the story: it’s Barfi and Jhilmil’s capacity to love.

Ranbir Kapoor is, indisputably, that greatest actors of our times; he is a fresh breath of air in the stale ambience of mannerisms Hindi cinema has been suffering from since ages. Near-perfect comic timing, economy of emotions, with a loveable naughtiness to top it all, Ranbir Kapoor’s Barfi is irresistibly palatable. Priyanka Chopra is generally brilliant; but I would ask you to note two scenes in particular: 

1.       Jhilmil intently observes Shruti walking gracefully to the cab, the drape of her sari partially revealing a curvy waistline. So far, Jhilmil was unaware of her femininity; left alone, she drapes a gamcha like a pallu, and raises her top to observe the curve of her waist in the mirror. Barfi barges in suddenly and she quickly abandons the little performance, terribly embarrassed. 
2.       In the penultimate scene, when they are united, Jhilmil comes forth and acts sentinel to her Barfi, looking askance at an amused and slightly envious Shruti who stares on. It’s one of the best moments of the film that expresses intense possessiveness without a single utterance, and most importantly, without malice.

Ilena D’Cruz could not have a better Bollywood debut. And Sourabh Shukla while throwing his weight around leaves behind a deep mark of affection.

And Pritam’s music does the tuneful rest.

Keep your eyes fixed on the left-side of the screen as the end credit rolls for some extra helpings of Barfi-Jhilmil moments! It would leave a beautiful aftertaste which you would relish in the months to come. 

Image Courtesy: koimoi.com

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Chitrangada: a crowning wish



Why Chitrangada?

Rituparno Ghosh’s latest borrows the title of Tagore’s poetic play (more popular in its condensed form as a dance-drama) and adds an appendix to it: ‘a crowning wish’. This play was adapted by Tagore from an episode in The Mahabharata, and in its preface, the poet shares his thoughts which went into its conception: while travelling from Shantinekatan to Kolkata in late spring, the poet was struck by the abundance of the season as he looked out of the train window. The fertility of the season would manifest itself in early summer, when the trees would modestly exhibit their fecundity in the loads of fruits that would hang from their branches. Simultaneously, a strange thought came to the poet:
…hothat amar mone holo sundori juboti Jodi onubhob kore je se taar jouboner maya diye premik er hridoy bhuliyechhe tahole se taar surup kei apon soubhagyer mukhyo ongshe bhaag boshabar obhijog e sotin boley dhikkar ditey pare. E je tar bairer jinish, e jeno rituraaj bosonter kachh theke pawa bor, khonik moho bistar er dwara joibo uddeshyo siddho korbar jonyo jodi tar ontorer modhye jothartho charitrpshakti thake, tobey sei mohomukto shaktir daani taar premik er pokkhe mohot laabh, jugol jibon er jayayatra r sahaye. (Rabindra Natya Sangraha, Prothom Khanda, 327)

To summarize: The poet’s intention of composing Chitrangada was to establish the beauty of the soul over the beauty of the body, the latter being temporal and therefore undesirable. When Chitrangada became a dance –drama, Tagore had it open with the following prologue:

Manipur Raj er bhakti te tushto hoye, Shib bor dilen je raajbongshe sudhumatro putroi janmabe. Totsatweo, jokhon rajkul e Chitrangada r janmo holo, Raja takey putro roop e palon korte thaklen…
(Pleased by the devotion of the King of Manipur, Lord Shiva granted him the boon that the royal family would only bear male children. Even then, when Chitrangada was born to the royal family, the King brought her up like a son…)

The two phrases “even then” and “like a son” are important:

  1. A woman who is born debunking divine decree is expected to be unique.
  2. A woman, who is conditioned to become a man, epitomizes the reality of the social construction of gender.
  3. The King of Manipur imposes his wish on his daughter and rears him like a son.

Ritupano Ghosh’s film takes off from these three possible inferences that could be drawn from the prologue of the dance-drama, although the profundity of the original seems wanting. Smitten by Arjun, Chitrangada approaches Madan, the God of Love, to bestow upon her feminine grace and beauty for a year, so that Arjun falls in love with her. Madan relents and grants her the boon; hence, the famed transformation from Kurupa to Surupa (please note these are not Tagore’s terms). However, Chitrangada, recognizing the superfluity of physical beauty, returns the boon before that promised one year is over. Perhaps, the most recognizable literal link between Tagore’s text and Ghosh’s film lies here: Rudra too calls off his cosmetic transformation into a woman, and chooses to remain what he was.


At the very outset, Rudra (Ghosh himself) interprets Chitrangada as the ‘story of a wish’: Chitrangada’s wish versus her father’s wish. But, it’s more about the performativity of gender; or in other words, the fact that gender performance is an illusion, best expressed in the song:

Narir lalita lobhon lilaye ekhoni keno e klanti/ekhoni ki sokha khela holo oboshan/je madhur rosey chhile bihvala, se ki madhumakha bhranti…seki swapner daan, seki satyer opomaan/…dur durashaye hriday gorichho kothin premer protima gorichho/…ki mone bhabia nari te korichho pourush sandhan, eo ki maya r daan?

 The repeated use of such words and phrases as lila (dalliance), khela (play), bihvala (stupefaction), madhumakha bhranti (charming error), swapner daan or mayar daan (an illusory gift) underscore the very illusory nature of gender performativity (seki satyer opomaan). Rituparno Ghosh’s Chitrangada begins with the promise of playing with this very notion, but loses track in the course of the development of the plot, returning to a plausible end, though. Given the access to modern technology which is adept to change the body, the possibility of playing with the ideas of body, gender and sexuality was enormous. The film displays awareness of the same, but doesn’t convincingly execute it.
The central conflict is not between Rudra and any other external force; rather, it is a confounded conflict within him. The apparent problem with the origin of the wish (here, the wish to become a woman) is that it has no credible history. It’s born one fine morning when Rudra discovers Partha’s (Jishu Sengupta) fondness for children. Consequently, he descends into sentimental musings about how Partha would never be happy with him, for he would never be able to bear him children. Two male parents cannot even adopt a child. In order to sustain the relationship, Rudra decides to undergo a gender reassignment surgery. And, in no time, the desire becomes so overwhelming that he actually consults a doctor, and goes in for breast implant. Please note, Partha never asks him to opt for this. In fact, the reality of Partha’s discomfort with the sex-change dawns on Rudra when the former tells him that he was in love with a man; if he had to, he would rather have a real woman, than a synthetic one, not a ‘half-thing’. Despite the political incorrectness of Partha’s invective, I would say this is the most ‘queer’ moment of the film. Although Rudra is shattered and censures Partha for his insensitivity, it is difficult not to sympathize with the latter’s view. It is much later, however, that Rudra admits to Shubho (Anjan Dutta) that he could not blame Partha.

Commendably, therefore, the film recognizes the multiplicity of desires, unwittingly or knowingly; but, the film does not ponder over the sudden change in Rudra’s decision on the day of the final surgery. Apart from that one mysterious text message (‘Why do you call a BUILDING a building even when it is complete?’), that recognizes the fact that the body is into a perennial process of change, there is no elucidation. Rudra abandons as abruptly as he had plunged into exercising his desire. Is it because of a realization that a desire to enter a compulsive heteronormative structure (by becoming a woman) is redundant for it ‘dis-empowers’ him by taking away from him the gender fluidity he has so far embodied?  If that is so, the use of Tagore’s Chitrangada as the reference text might be found just. But, we can only speculate.

Spaces, In-Between

The film demands of the audience painstaking attention; for the narrative not only moves back and forth in time, but also inhabits both real and surreal spaces simultaneously. The stage, the sea beach, the hospital cabin and the operation theatre become a spatial continuum, and the protagonist often exists in more than one space at the same time. This deliberate confusion of the real and the surreal is perhaps the most appealing aspect of the film, for it opens up the right kind of space to accommodate gender liminality. The sexual Other who debunks normativity often acquires monstrous dimensions in the cultural imagination. Therefore, it was important to situate Rudra in a fluid space where the real and the surreal coalesce. In any case, the film is also a celebration of a fancy (as in wish), for which the classical realistic mode would not have worked. The three text messages from some mysterious sender, and the enigmatic counselor Shubho who turns out to be Rudra’s double fit well into this surreal mode.

However, the three philosophical text messages, especially the last one, (‘If driving in a drunken state is not allowed, why do bars have parking lots?’, ‘Everybody wants to go to Heaven, but no one wants to die’ and ‘Why do call a BUILDING a building even after it is complete?’) could have had a greater impact, if it wasn’t explicated. The final explanation given by Shubho robs the message of its intensity. And, the nurse telling Rudra that he must have been hallucinating all these days is completely undesirable. The problem is Ghosh assumed his audience to be intelligent, but could not completely depend on their acumen. Had Shubho remained elusive till the end, the surreal mode would have been highly successful. (May be it's a compromise he had to make keeping in mind the box-office!)

The Journey

The questions, the confusions, the anxieties, and the agony that assail Rudra before he undergoes the final surgery do not seem unreal. It’s quite natural to go through these states of mind before changing one’s biological sex. Rudra is lucky enough to have such understanding parents (Dipankar De and Anashuya Majumdar) who stand by him through the process. It’s a tad painful that Rudra continuously sees his father as a tyrannical patriarch who has never approved of his son’s effeminacy; but, the father does not come across as tyrannical as he was meant to be. Or perhaps, it is Rudra’s imagination that fathers are always tyrannical that makes him look upon him thus. The parents accept their son’s decision with a reserve unexpected of middle class Bengali parents in general. Rudra’s parents are remarkably exceptional to that end. However, a major Freudian slip occurs on the part of the father when he says that they have bought new curtains to do up Rudra’s room. Perhaps, the father still wants to keep him under wraps, away from curious eyes. In his subconscious, he still thinks of his son as a social embarrassment, notwithstanding his compassion for him. The curtains remain uppermost in Rudra’s mind too; when he meets his erstwhile boyfriend in dreamy darkroom, he does not forget to mention them. Has Rudra too not been able to accept himself?
                
 Rudra does not undergo the final surgery, and decides to return to his original self. The abandonment of the quest is not affected by some sense of guilt, but he no longer feels the necessity of a cosmetic transmogrification. Now, this is what Rudra feels; this is his crowning wish. It would be incorrect to see the film as a cautionary against sex-change; or as a moralistic narrative that ends with the dictum that sex-change is undesirable. It’s important to understand Rudra’s story as the story of an individual. His ‘wish’ cannot be representative of the community, and he cannot be held responsible for not exacting the expectation of the community of transpersons. Taking Rudra’s final decision as a statement on sex-change might be dangerous.

How autobiographical is Chitrangada?

This is one question which is nagging everyone and many are flocking to the theater to see Rituparno Ghosh’s life-story. Towards the beginning of the film, Shubho listening to a script read out by Rudra, asks with concern: ‘Boddo beshi autobiographical hoye jachche na?’ (Isn’t it becoming much too autobiographical?) Rudra replies: ‘Seta tumi jano boley’ (You think so because you already know my story). The film self-reflexively introduces the autobiographical dimension. In fact, the repetitive use of mirrors in the film prompts the audience to see Rudra as an image of Rituparno Ghosh. But, to treat the film as a purely self-indulgent autobiography of the director would be rather reductive. It’s undeniable that Ghosh’s iconic status (as a filmmaker and also as a queer person) remarkably overpowers the character he essays, and it’s extremely difficult not to think of Rudra as a fictional counterpart of Ghosh. For instance, if Sachin Tendulkar plays anybody but himself in a film, it would be difficult for the audience to imagine him as just another actor attempting a fictitious character. Ditto for Rituparno Ghosh. I believe many were even expecting to read under ‘Cast’ on the title card ‘Rituparno Ghosh as himself’. But Rudra’s story, despite containing recognizable allusions to the director’s personal life, is completely fictional, as attested by the disclaimer at the beginning. And I’m sure Ghosh did not intend Chitrangada: a crowing wish to serve as a medium of confession. Even if he had intended, there’s no need to bother. For, we have long stopped taking authorial intention seriously. Thanks to Roland Barthes and Michel Foucault. 

Note: The film would be remembered for its use of spectacle, music (Debojyoti Mishra), and of course, the choreography (Sharmila Biswas). 

Image Courtesy: sliceoflife.com
Release date of the film: 31 August 2012
Producer: Shri Venkatesh Films, Kolkata