Last Friday (26th
April 2013), I was watching The Front Row with Anupama Chopra. It was the 1st anniversary edition
and the one that previewed Bombay Talkies with its four directors. During the show, Anurag Kashyap and Dibakar
Banerjee were waxing eloquent about Karan Johar.
Yes, you heard
me right. Two of the finest directors
that Indian cinema has ever seen were raving about probably the most commercial
director this country has ever seen.
One, whose movies can be classified as a cheap Rom Com at best. One, whose movies are seen by most people
because their wives drag them along.
Karan Johar
grabs you in the first minute with, “Chhakka nahin hoon. Homosexual hoon. Na Chhakka hona galat hai. Na homosexual hona. Lekin yeh tujh jaisa haraami nahin samajh
payega” (I am not a eunuch. I am a
homosexual. It isn’t wrong to be a
eunuch or a homosexual. But a bastard
like you will never understand that).
Now I don’t want
this review to be another one where people rave about KJo. But I would be unfair if I were to say that
KJo wasn’t the biggest surprise. Superb
piece about a young gay man - Avinash.
First, his struggle with his father.
His friendship with the boss – Gayatri (Rani Mukerji) and his attraction
to her husband (Randeep Hooda) .
Dibakar Banerjee
then takes over with a slow start to his segment that allows you to kind of
catch your breath. The story of a lower
middle class man (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) and his love for the arc lights. His wife, daughter and pet emu called
Anjali. Most importantly, his mentor on
stage – Bapu (Sadashiv Amrapurkar).
Then Zoya Akhtar
who tells us the story of a young boy, Vicky who would rather dress up like a
girl and dance to Sheela Ki Jawaani. The
finale is by Anurag Kashyap. A story about a young man trying to fulfill his
sick father’s wish of meeting Amitabh Bachchan and get the Big B to eat
home-made Murabba (Pickle – for lack of any other word).
The thing that
strikes you most about Bombay Talkies is the freedom with which everyone has
performed. The direction is the best I
have seen in quite a while. A few things
could have been changed but the overall picture is so good that you may not
even notice it.
The performances
are stunning. Rani Mukerji has given it
more than what she normally gives.
Randeep Hooda is outstanding. And
so is Saqib Salim. Nawazuddin Siddiqui
lives upto his reputation of being the finest find from Bollywood in this
millennium. And don’t miss out on
Sadashiv Amrapurkar’s 5 minute role in Dibakar’s part and Ranveer Shorey in Zoya Akhtars part. Superb!!!
If ever there
could have been a tribute to 100 years of Indian cinema, it had to be Bombay
Talkies. My simple mind could never have
come up with this idea. So, I doff my
hat to whoever thought about it. And
needless to say, to 4 directors who have given us a movie that is definitely
the best movie released this year in Bollywood.
8 on 10. Don’t miss it.
Watch the trailer
on http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njzTBH8mZLU
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