Thursday, February 28, 2013

'Kai Po Che': And the kite flies high



Image Courtesy: www.indianexpress.com

Rarely does a film merge the political and the personal so effortlessly that history becomes an animated drama of lived experiences. The scars left by either natural calamities or communal riots bleed profusely, emotionally engaging even those for whom these were little more than televised images of violence and loss suffered by unknown people in unknown places. Abhishek Kapoor’s Kai Po Che revisits the deep wounds left by a devastating earthquake, soon to be followed by one of the deadliest communal riots that tore Gujarat into shreds in 2002. The film seamlessly interweaves human lives with larger issues of industrialization of cricket, economic liberalization and the meteoric rise of Hindu fundamentalism. Interestingly, it doesn’t romanticize about a pristine past where the religious communities lived in absolute harmony; rather, it constantly addresses the tension innate in the everyday life of the people, which finally erupts with the volcanic violence of a bloody communal pogrom.


The film opens with what I would call an iconography of Hinduism: a towering temple, a predominance of saffron, the huge temple bell, the little Swastika symbol on the fan’s regulator or the little Om drawn on top of the blackboard.  Initially, what appears to be a harmless assortment of signs and symbols acquires a devastating dimension, after the Savarmati Express carrying Hindu karsevaks is set on fire. The communal riot, clearly engineered by the State, breaks out, in which Muslims are brutally butchered. The mastermind remains invisible all through, but the orders percolate down to the lower ranks of party leaders who execute those orders with a certain degree of aggrandizement it seems. Another man who is neither named nor shown, but who is difficult to miss is Mahatma Gandhi who looms large in every frame of the film, for the cricket coaching centre (that doubles up as sports merchandise shop) is ironically named Savarmati. 


Before the film plunges into the reality of the riot and its attendant losses, it is a happy kite-flying experience on a large open field of friendship, dreams and romance. Ishaan (Sushant Singh Rajput), Govind (Raj Kumar Yadav) and Omi’s (Amit Sadh) invincible trio imbues every scene with the unharnessed energy of youth, innocence and unalloyed affection. A happy-go-lucky and slightly clueless trio of friends planning a future might remind of several coming-of-age stories we have seen in recent times; though Kai Po Che unrolls the flying line in a manner familiar to us, the kite soon takes an untrodden locus before plunging deep into bottomless pits of unspeakable tragedy. 


Ishaan’s untiring effort of making a promising cricketer of little Ali, his never-say-die attitude, his unconditional dedication to his friends, and his dadagiri with a little sister (Amrita Puri) endear him from the very first frame. He often frustrates the more the disciplined Govind who is no less endearing in his own little efforts to rub shoulders with his uninhibitedly mad friends, despite his innate fear of unpredictability. Omi’s graduation from an innocent brat to a brainwashed political worker is achieved through terrible heartbreaks and losses which show in his eyes and the movement of each of his facial muscles. Yet it’s Ishaan, the stereotype 'do-gooder', the brat with a golden heart, who wins over the other two, and this is in tune with our expectation from the narrative and the closure it anticipates. 


Sushant Singh Rajput has arrived on the big screen to kai po che his way to stardom. Amit Sadh would definitely invite industry attention in no small way. Raj Kumar Yadav too has lived up to his role with remarkable credibility, although the other two would take away the audience’s sympathy. Amrita Puri impersonates Vidya’s vivacity with a breezy charm, which is, however, reminiscent of her naivety in Aisha

Rooted in recent history and a gruesome political reality in which we move and have our being, Kai Po Che is sure to cut several kites at the box-office this season. I am sure Abhishek Kapoor and his audience would consider it a blessing that Bollywood’s leading stars refused to be a part of this film! Otherwise, three new stars would not have been born! Right? 

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Life of Pi: Soulless Visual Delight



Ang Lee had the expectation barometer rising since the day he announced Life of Pi which had had a major impact in the literary world. Stories on the film’s Indian connection have been filling tabloids for the past few months. The dominant image the publicity and promotional stills and movies widely circulated is that of a Royal Bengal Tiger perched on a boat in the middle of the ocean with Pi as company. The tiger had already become the unique selling point of the film; and when in the end he selfishly walks away into the forest and gets lost in his elements, you would know that it is not without reason that the tiger had stolen the limelight in the promos. Apart from the tiger, it is the wonders of the natural world exaggerated through spectacular visuals and enhanced by the 3-D effects is what keeps the film going. However, a film also needs to have a narrative, or else tuning into National Geographic or Animal Planet could have served the purpose. 

            Perhaps, Lee wanted to merge National Geographic- or Animal Planet-style documentary with a narrative of survival against apparently insurmountable odds. The film gets reduced into a boring discourse on self-motivation which might serve as an inspirational visual text, for, say, overworked corporate slaves. The film should and certainly would find place in Masters in Business Administration syllabus. The natural odds Pi fights against might acquire allegorical meaning in an MBA course, where the students are programmed to put up with the merciless demands of late capitalist economy. But the major problem of the film is that the director has spent so much brain and bucks on the form that he has given the content little or no importance. Although Pi’s interaction with Richard Parker or Orange Juice and his thrill at the beauty of oceanic life under the star-spangled firmament send ripples down your spine and touch your heart, the will to live on which is the driving force of the book fails to inspire. What is fatalistic is that it is difficult to establish an emotional connect with Pi. The book which runs two parallel narratives simultaneously and leaves it to the reader to pick his own is more interesting for truth and fiction jostle against each other, where it is difficult to tell one from the other. The narrative puzzle and the suspicion about storytelling which the book so effortlessly generates gets completely lost in the film. 

            Life of Pi connects the elements, but lacks in the emotional quotient. Man’s relation with nature is explored to the utmost, but, the problem is every time nature puts man through a wild test or when man wins over nature, the audience does not feel for Pi’s triumph. What could have become a metonymic text of the history of human civilization, remains more of an individual's story. At the same time, Pi's unwavering tenacity to stay 'human' reiterates the nineteenth century romantic confidence in human rationality, celebrated by several European novelists, from Defoe to Stevenson. Life of Pi does not delve into the dark recesses of the human mind like Apocalypse Now or Lord of the Flies. I cannot tell whether all stories of exile and shipwreck should attempt similar psychoanalytic exploration of the human soul, but I found Life of Pi far too simplistic. Above all,    the technical brilliance unfortunately devours what should have been the soul of the film. 

            The film’s music, cinematography and above all, the visual effects would fetch it several nominations at the Academy Awards this year. Apart from that the film is a mere average work of art. And yes, as I said at the very outset, the tiger deserves special mention for an awesome performance. 

Image Courtesy: 
spinoff.comicbookresources.com

Sunday, October 28, 2012

As Yash Chopra Lives On!


Image Courtesy: merinews.com

Life has its own dramatic ironies, and who could have better exemplified that than Yash Chopra who breathed his last with the promise of peddling dreams, as he had done all his life, with the self-assertive Jab Tak Hai Jaan! The titanic dream merchant almost tiptoed away into the twilight zone, as if he were on a clandestine date with death. It seems he had struck a deal with life: he would make films, sell dreams, and celebrate love jab taak hain jaan. And as a true artiste and honest entrepreneur, he stuck to the deal till the very last day of his life. 

                What we identify today as the Yash Raj brand of cinema, which incidentally has become metonymic of Bollywood romances, was born only two decades ago. In 1989, after a few box-office debacles (Maashal, 1984; Faasle, 1985; and Vijay, 1988), Yash Chopra returned with a bang with the immensely stylish Chandni which rescued Sridevi from getting wasted in raunchy, seedy, over-the-top Bollywood potboilers and reinstated her as a diva which even the high-nosed elitist took note of. The lilting melody of Tere mere hoton pe meethe meethe geet mitwa which reverberated in the delightful dales of Switzerland brought to Bollywood romance an ethereal beauty which reconfigured the concept of love forever. That falling in love was not just falling in love with a person, but is also an iconography of beautiful things and locales was first established by Chandni. Chopra celebrated true love, sacrifice and devotion, but also transformed love into a commodity. Lamhe (1991), Darr (1993), Dil to Pagal Hai (1997), and Veer-Zaara (2004) have faithfully rolled on the tradition, when falling-in-love is unwittingly imagined by many as an assortment of chiffon sarees, designer jewellery, unruly aanchal waving in the breeze, expensive cars, sprawling houses, picturesque getaways, perfect bodies and guaranteed happiness in the end. But, Chopra’s journey had begun much earlier with Dhool ka Phool in 1959, when he was a different filmmaker altogether. 

Yash Chopra’s films, when seen chronologically, reveal a linear narrative of history fraught with complexities. Chopra, in association with Saleem Khan and Javed Akhtar, had given birth to the quintessential Angry Young Man and made of Amitabh Bachchan the megastar as he is. A product of the Emergency, the Angry Young Man who rocked the nation with Deewar (1975) became a personification of the deprivations, the desires and most importantly the anger which was simmering in the hearts of the youth.  The demolition of the Babri Masjid, and the bloody communal riots that sent deadly ripples across the country, especially turning the most cosmopolitan of the Indian cities into a necropolis, gave birth to another angry young man, who was no longer interested in social reform, but was a psychopath, inhabiting a state of mind with which the youth again identified. The invisible singer of Jadoo teri Nazar who remained in the dark and romanced from a distance, but got brutal when his beloved was taken away from him, became the new hero of the early nineties. It took an Emergency and a communal riot for two great stars to be born: Amitabh Bachchan and Shah Rukh Khan. The mastermind behind their stardom was Yash Chopra, and their stardom, was, therefore, not accidental. 

However, the economic liberalization changed it all, and the new Yuppie hero was born. It was the Silver Jubilee Year of Yash Raj Films. Yash Chopra launched son Aditya with the revolutionary Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jaayenge (1995), where the rich Indian diaspora returned home to take back their matrbhoomi with them! The East/West binary which ruled Bollywood so far, completely dissolved and the transnation was born as a dimpled NRI Shah Rukh Khan held out his hand to a disheveled Kajol who ran alongside the departing train, with the staunch patriarch fading away in the distance but giving up a ‘thumbs-up’ to their union! Chopra had him return with Dil to Pagal Hai, where he reveled in an iconography of abundance and romanced a sublimely beautiful Madhuri Dixit who dreamily strolled and danced across undulating and sprawling meadows looking for her Prince Charming. And it was with Kajol and later with Madhuri that the Chopra brand of Indian womanhood was born.

Chopra was the originator of not only this genre of candy-floss romance, but also of the immensely popular ‘lost-and-found’ genre with Waqt (1965). He tried his hands at serious cinema with Ittefak (1969), with moderate success though. He ventured into controversial arenas of Hindu fundamentalism quite early in his career with Dharamputra (1961) which ruffled the feathers of the saffron-clad crowd. Although he is known for giving love the most stylish makeover, he is also the one who has questioned monogamy, marriage and socially-approved sexual relationships. While Daag (1973) delved deep into the problematics of polyamory, Kabhi Kabhie (1976) uncovered uncomfortable zones of failed marriages and pre-marital sex. Trishul (1978) turned the focus on the illegitimate son, while Silsila (1981) made adultery almost desirable. 


His demise marks the end of a history which has made Bollywood what it is today. Thankfully, a Yash Raj brand of cinema has already arrived, and would stay on! The man who has remarkably changed with changing times, Yash Chopra might just be waiting out there to re-enter the limelight, with lights, camera, and action. Yes, Jab Taak Hai Jaan is waiting in the wings. The dream merchant can never really die.
 
Image courtesy: merinews.com

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Student of the Year: Karan Johar’s ‘questioning’ return to a comparatively ‘innocent’ past



In Student of the Year, Johar nostalgically returns to the cool campus where he had launched his career some fifteen years back, and revisits the tropes, some of which he had himself made current in Hindi Cinema, but, with an objective distance of a wiser filmmaker. The campus camaraderie which he had romanticized on in his debut film is under suspect at the very outset, when competition becomes the buzz-word defining relationships and social positions. The brands (notably, DKNY, Nike, etc) he had unquestioningly paraded, all most with a sense of pride, have now become more expensive (Gucci, Louis Vitton, Versace, Fusion, etc), but, the treatment they receive, albeit a celebratory one, is also sarcastic. Non-normative sexuality is no longer something to laugh at, although a certain degree of stereotyping is still there. 

More interestingly, marginalities and deprivations are mapped out in terms not only of class positions, but also, the body and sexuality. When the overweight Sodo (Kayoza Irani), in a drunken state, comes down really hard on the gay dean Yoginder Vasisht (Rishi Kapoor), saying Apko pata hai na aap aur mere jaise logo ko kabhi partners nahi mil saakte, you would know how the film has so far created a register of normativity only to debunk it in the end. Beautiful bodies are posited vis-à-vis obese, unfit bodies; heterosexual conjugal life is posited vis-à-vis the sexual ‘Other’. And, yes, man versus woman: she is patronized for her shallowness and naivety; but, she is made fun of and is discriminated against when she becomes a threatening competitor and enters the ‘male’ domain with confidence. 


And amid all that, the veneer of homosociality is constantly pulled into shreds, as the two boys (Siddharth Malhotra as Abhimanyu Singh and Varun Dhawan as Rohan Nanda) romance each other, more intensely than they feel for the girl. Johar recuperates Bollywood’s famous trope of male-bonding, where the heterosexual love interest mostly finds herself an unwanted intruder in their emotional world of bromance. Abhimanyu’s mock concern, every time Rohan, emotionally, hugs him --- Ab tu mujhe kiss to nahi karega? ---- has no malice in it. And, Shanaya (Alia Bhatt) discovers before long that the boys are all too ready to sacrifice her for each other’s sake. She asks the same questions as a certain Vyajayanti Mala had asked in Sangam (where Raj Kapoor and Rajendra Kumar were more in love with each other than with her) or a certain Madhuri Dixit in Saajan (where Sanjay Dutt and Salman Khan fiercely competed against each other in the sacrifice game); and, she must have felt as left out as a certain Sumita Sanyal who sheds tears from a distance, as a grieving Amitabh Bachchan melodramatically breaks down over a lifeless Rajesh Khanna in Anand. And, in the last frame, she is completely shoved into oblivion, as the two friends, looking suggestively at each other, run towards the camera, in a gesture of go-ahead, when the scene fades-out to bring on the end credits. 


And in tune with the theme, Johar deploys the male-body-as-spectacle: a perfectly chiseled Siddharth Malhotra emerges from the sea in a skimpy swimwear with the dripping waters lustily accentuating his anatomy, soon to be followed by an equally uninhibited Varun Dhawan. The sweaty boy-camaraderie of the football field, of the gymnasium, of the swimming pool and running tracks raise the barometer-reading in almost every frame of the film. Alia Bhatt intervenes sometimes in designer-wear and once in a flimsy yellow two-piece to do service to the male (or queer female) gaze. But the boys win hands down in the bare-dare game! Perhaps, this is where The Student of the Year bears the mark of being a Karan Johar film, apart from the visuals of plenitude and aesthetic material objects which have become integral to all his productions.  


However, the desire for a life of abundance the films of Karan Johar has so far marketed, is seriously undercut by Rohan’s abandonment of his father Ashok Nanda’s (Ram Kapoor) property, and his coming of age as a successful musician. Abhimanyu’s ambition to mimic Ashok Nanda which almost makes of him a fierce competitor is also seriously thwarted by his discovery of the entrepreneur’s essential brutality. Although Abhimanyu does attain success, the film inserts a moral lesson too! The aggressive pursuit of ‘good life’, which many of Johar’s films have so far celebrated as inevitable, is called into question. The Student of the Year trophy which degenerates into a symbol of cut-throat competition and death of humaneness remains untouched in the end. The dying dean confesses his mistake of trying to make robots of his students.


Of the actors, Rishi Kapoor, as the dean of the school, is a revelation; the dufliwala still rocks. The newcomers impress more by their looks than their acting skills. Yet, Siddharth Malhotra with his hot angular face, Greek god torso, and deep baritone is here to stay; Varun Dhawan is cute, but demands some more grooming in acting classes; he needs to work hard on his voice. Alia Bhatt is petite and pretty, with an extraordinary panache for carrying sexy dresses and scarlet lips, but, unfortunately, not an actor to be reckoned with. There is certain dumbness about her which suited Shanaya, but, would definitely prove a handicap in other films, unless, however, she is typecast.

One definite plus point of the film are the witty (read bitchy) dialogues which Karan Johar can only pen; and, of course, the music: Vishal-Shekhar would make you rock with Radha and Disco Deewane, become aggressive with Ratta Maar, and go liltingly romantic with Ishqwala Love. The campus carnivals would have been seriously incomplete without them.

All in all, a gaily entertaining watch, Student of the Year is a familiar Karan Johar film, but definitely not a typical one; I believe, the fun of watching the film, lies in reading it (or even looking upon it as a meta-text) against the entire oeuvre of Karan Johar productions. If not for anything else, watch it for its sheer gloss and glam and those beautiful bodies…Siddharth Malhotra, Varun Dhawan and well, Alia Bhatt too!


Image Courtesy: muskurahat.pk, movies.sulekha.com, entertainment.in.msn.com,
fridayrelease.com