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Sunday, May 31, 2015

PIKU: An Uncomplicated and “Constipated” Emotional Roller-coaster


Growing up as a Bengali, (or as Bhaskor Banerjee would put it, “Ha, Bangali”..) there are certain archetypal cultural expressions and feels that I can’t help but habitually get connected with. Despite our distinctive proclivities, we are just peas in a pod when it comes down to being overly sentimental about Aloo posto, being passive-aggressively involved in the timeless Mohunbagan-East Bengal debate or never questioning the seriousness of constipation as a major health issue. Piku is that film which touches upon some celebrated Bengali stereotypes like the ones aforesaid but triumphs in not overstating them.  While Bollywood keeps on thriving on its fetish for clichéd exotic orient of Bengal, Piku takes the-road-less-travelled-by and shows that there is more to Bengal than rosogolla, taanter sari, misti doi and Durga Puja. It is about the countless Pikus, Bhaskors and Chabi Mashis around us who fit in our imagination as naturally as Isab Gul, Ghee er sishi (a container of Ghee) and Telegraph fit in every Bengali household.

Once in a blue moon, there comes a film that completely restructures and magnifies the existing paradigms of commercial Bollywood and needless to say, director Soojit Sircar’s latest offering is exactly one such directorial. From sperm donation to constipation, Sircar has proved yet again how pathos and humor can go hand in hand in portraying a serious subject-matter on screen with absolute ease and that too, without the slightest hint of pretense and superficiality. Even though Piku cannot be catalogued as a typical road trip movie or a generic romcom but the subtlety with which it establishes the significance of the journey over the destination resulting to an emotional revelation for the characters took me back to recalling the myriad of emotions I reeled through while watching “Little Miss Sunshine”.  From a chuckle to moist eyes, you experience it all in that 120 minutes.

Irrespective of a peerless star cast, Piku’s USP lies in the sheer honesty of its narrative and its ability to become evidently impactful without being remotely preachy unlike most of Raju Hirani films (No offence meant). From the very onset, the simplicity, ingenuity and upfront hilarity of Piku makes you fall for it instantly. There is nothing unimaginably dramatic or pot-boiling about the screenplay (kudos to Juhi Chaturvedi for such triumphant writing). There is neither any forced catharsis nor any jaw-dropping revelation. The film sets in and ends as subtly as just another a day in any regular Indian household. It is an amalgamation of all the sublime moments that we generally don’t take a notice of and regret later.

The unremitting conviction of the story and the characters makes the film believably human and entertaining. It is an unmistakable emotional connect that you feel with each of the film’s character- from their distinctive charms to eccentricities, quirks to misgivings. Be it the stubborn, irritable and hypochondriac Bhaskor Banerjee of 70 (played, or rather to say immortalized by Amitabh Bachchan) who spends a good share of his day pondering over his arch nemesis-constipation or his single, hyperventilating, architect daughter Piku (Deepika Padukone)- every character is as normal and as dysfunctional as we see ourselves to be. For Bhaskor, the core of his life’s philosophy revolves around his bowel movement- its color, texture, and consistency thus making his daughter simply tired of his SHIT.. Like literally! What truly is commendable of the director is how he uses some casual, laugh out loud ‘potty’ humor without making it sound gross or redundant (True that to Motion se hi Emotion).



The pot-bellied, monkeycapped Bhaskor in his ill-fitted kurta is sure to remind you of your grandfather or that uncle who has an unapologetically cynical (or better to say “brutal and honest”) viewpoint about everything in life and yet possess a heart of gold. While Piku is that girl in all of us who desperately seeks for a few ‘Me times’ in between juggling her professional life and taking care of her ageing and ailing parent. She does not shy away to admit herself being more temperamental and weirder than her father. There is also the cab service owner Rana (played by Irrfan Khan) with whom Piku shares an unarticulated romantic connection and who is indifferent, disturbed but emotionally sorted in his own way or Moushumi Chaterjee as Chabi Mashi  who is visibly a prototype for every over -snooping Bong mashimas/ Kakimas/ pishimas (Bengali for aunt) whose favorite line to you is “beta, shaadi kyon nahi kar lete?” (Why don’t you get married?)

It is admirable how the film uses a constant frenzied interplay between the father-daughter duo to toss up some significant societal concerns like the indispensable duty of a child to become a ‘parent’ to his/her old parents and how much nerve does it take to do that . It however does not try to over-emphasize the subtext or appear as a melodramatic social commentary. Piku is a refined celebration of all the flaws and frustrations that makes us human and easily identifiable. (It is exactly as Anupam sings in the film: Ab galatiyan jo maan li toh theek hai”)… B-town has surely got it once again that if they try, it can actually move over the oh-so-perfect, morally-upright, demigod-like Chulbul Pandey and Rowdy Rathore to the flawed but one-off protagonists like Rani (Queen) and Piku.

Now coming down to the performances, I guess there can be no better commendation than just be shut up in absolute awe. The thundering trio of Deepika-Amitabh-Irrfan do not let you take your eyes off them. (Like we even expected any different!) Deepika in her deglamorized, unkempt look is absolutely spot- on and the impeccability with which she skins in the realism, insecurities, irks and charm of Piku worths all the accolades. Even with few lines and limited screen space, Irrfan re-attests why he is regarded as one of the greatest character actors of all time but it is the Shehanshah of Bollywood, the eternally vivacious Big-B who forms the crème dela crème of the film. Whether it is twisting his legs to “Jibone ki pabona”, humming “Ei poth Jodi na sesh hoe” or riding a bicycle through the streets and by lanes of the city of joy, the 72 year-old Amitabh is inseparable from the carping, hypochondriac, irritable yet endearing Bhaskor Banerjee whom you would love to hate and hate to love. To me Bhaskor is what Sheldon Cooper would have been provided he was 70, Bengali and… yups, constipated.

However, just as a few unfitting ingredients can mar a great broth, Piku too is not devoid of loopholes. The Bengali accents of both Deepika and Amitabh appear to be a little stressed and imprecise.  The second half fails to deliver as much punch as the first and the ending itself seemed a bit rushed and mainstream. But on the whole, the narrative, performances and music are so engrossing and appetizing that they outweigh every little miss and slip.

Piku is a family entertainer in every true sense of the term that you should and must watch with your parents, especially your Dad. (I feel lucky to have done that). It brings back all the throwback moments and memories you had with them. It makes you feel complete for being blessed with the world’s greatest possessions- Ma and Baba.  And by the time the end credits roll in and you have this overpowering urge to hug them, that is when you know how much you loved Piku and her Baba…




Thursday, January 22, 2015

Dear Heath…… An Eulogy


“I miss Heath”…. I remember exclaiming this to an acquaintance a few days back.. The reply was a stone-cold, sloppy one- “Umm.. The Joker guy right?” For a second I didn’t quite know how to react.  You know those moments when you are casually asked, “Are you happy?” It was a bit like that…Situations where you have an insistent urge of saying both “yes” and “no”...



Of course he was the joker guy..Or better to put it this way, he was the actor whom everyone doubted when he was signed to play the Joker in Nolan’s The Dark Knight and who went ahead to immortalize that very role. He was the actor who did what Marlon Brando did to Vito Corleone or Kevin Spacey did to Keyser Soze. He was the actor who became one of the most unforgettably admirable and detestable screen villains of all time.

Today morning, as I got up and switched on my phone, the date got me.. I knew its that day of the year again- the day when my faith on the functioning of the Universe feels more threatened than any other day of the year.
January 22, 2015..
Seven years?
That’s a little more than half a decade right?
So, Heath’s been gone for such a long time?
I didn’t know for how long I stood there staring at that date but slowly I felt as I was once again being taken back to the Oscar ceremony of 2009 when Heath’s family received his Oscar on his behalf. I remembered how much that moment made me and how much it broke me. I remembered how proud I felt for this man who wasn’t even there to receive the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his swansong performance…



We will never forget you Heath.. This figure will turn from 7 to 70 but the world will still be grieving your loss just the same. We will miss you the same.. We will watch The Dark Knight for another awful number of times and be shut up in inexplicable admiration just the same. Thank you for giving us an eternity within the numbered days. Thank you for being The Joker. Thank you for showing that true genius can never be overrated…

"I only do this because I'm having fun. The day I stop having fun, I'll just walk away........"                                                               - Heath Ledger (4 April 1979 – 22 January 2008)


Saturday, January 10, 2015

The Theory of (almost) Everything: A timeless epic of a man obsessed with ‘Time’


“There should be no boundaries to human endeavor. However bad life may seem, while there is life, there is hope…..”

                                                                   - Stephen Hawking, The Theory of Everything

That’s about it. ‘Hope’. Even the most devout cynic is nothing but a crestfallen dreamer. I remember coming across a line while reading Coelho, “In our pursuit of happiness, we all are same. None of us is happy”. I had a reflex mechanism where I instantly agreed with that line but since then it just made me wonder more that what is it then- what is it that drives us to do anything? Why do we want to live on when every practical circumstance is against my living? From where do we acquire the courage we didn’t even know was there in us before we find us in the face of the most difficult of crisis?

 What should I call it – The Science of human anatomy or just ‘some form of miracle’ that is beyond all earthly definition’? ’The Theory of Everything’ takes the bravest attempt to touch upon all these questions which bug us every single day- while on some days they are just silly delusional queries and on some they seem to be the most intelligent things we should be asking ourselves.

It would be demeaning to consider this film as just a biopic or a romantic drama cause it transcends both its generic description and thematic foundation in every single way. I am not a Science person. No matter how much the name “Stephen Hawking” has intrigued me over the years, the last thing I could have hoped for was to end up watching a science drama where all the crème de la crème of the movie jet travels right over my head and I would be left like, “Man, that was all so technical.. I’m sure it must be a great movie and all though”…. But you know its like I began with- “HOPE”.. I was hoping to see a great movie and it truly was too great to elucidate on in my limited vocabulary.

Based on the personal and professional life legendary Physicist Dr. Stephen Hawking, “The Theory of Everything” is a cinematic adaptation of Hawking’s ex-wife Jane Hawking’s memoir “Traveling to Infinity: My Life with Stephen”. The film is a stunning collage of the darkest and most glorifying memories in both of their lives. It is a string of revelations, realizations and a true experience of living someone’s else’s life for that 2 hour screen time.

 This James Marsh directorial is emblematic of how a true biographical film should be. There is no exaggerated and flamboyant glorification of the protagonist and there is no redundant dramatization of the simple developments. It’s just a heart-warming, soul-stirring and beautiful movie- the kind of beautiful that “A Beautiful Mind, “The King’s Speech” or “The Intouchables” was. It does not horde your mind with the most antique debate of this Universe, “Science or God?” ….” Who created us?” “What is our purpose on Earth?” “Is TIME synonymous to eternity or it had a definite beginning- a moment of creation like everyone of us?”  etcetera etcetera. Rather, it is the poignant portrayal of human relations and a man’s unrealistic ability to turn his gravest weakness into his greatest ally that forms the thematic core of this 2014 epic. Not for a single moment does it appear to invade our hopefulness. On, the contrary it kinda refills it….

The film is an instantaneous narrative of how as humans, we can always be greater that what we have ever dared to imagine ourselves to be. The plot handling is thoroughly subtle yet evidently impactful. While seeing the minute details of Hawking’s battle with his physical infirmity and his unyielding genius, you feel like may be we are too overqualified to live life the right way. We have everything- anything that it takes to be human- the ability to breathe, talk, eat, work and love and yet we conclude its not enough. We can’t even imagine what life must be like for those who cannot do all of that. And this is where we are taken wrong. There's this man who is slowly ebbing on all his voluntary actions and yet he is living and evolving and excelling more than what most of us would do in a couple of lifetimes. This is the story of Stephen- not so much of the scientist Dr. Hawking as it is of the lover, the father, the person Hawking. It’s the story of a man who started living his life when by all medical definitions he should start deciding on his funeral. It’s the story of a man who got obsessed with “Time” when he was convinced that he had none left with him. It’s a story of a man who started to share his unworldly genius with this world when he was told he would soon be incapable of making his thoughts known to anyone but his own self. “The Theory of Everything” is a invigorating tale of this man - ‘ a medial miracle’, a term that Science does not swear by often.


The narrative is brilliantly paced, timelined and executed. The cinematography too is cent percent compatible with the magnitude of the story flow. However none of this makes a sense if I fail to comment on the acting. Eddie Redmayne in the titular role is clearly one of the best castings of all time. His body language, his profile, his make up- all made him look more Stephen Hawking than Stephen Hawking himself and that is huge!!!! The greatest trick of any biopic is to get the look right and TTOPE scored a straight ‘A’ on this. I remember Heath Ledger locked himself down alone to prepare for the legendary role of the “Joker”. I am not sure how Eddie prepped before being Hawking, but ask me now, I don’t see any other actor who have been essayed the vulnerability and genius of this maestro with such admirable conviction. Felicity Jones as Jane Hawking was also impressive. It’s actually the cumulative effort of all the people involved that went ahead to make such a thought-provoking and special film and for that we owe them one. :)

Just give this gem of a film a sincere watch as there are few feelings as gratifying as watching an outstanding film. You’ll be something more after you complete watching it. More hopeful… more sorted.. more human….It’s the kind of film you wouldn’t want to talk about to anyone (as it would feel too special to share with people who you dread might not feel the same way as you did) and at the same time suppress the urge of screaming it to the world and recommended it to the every next person you meet….


^ That’s the only possibly ending I could think of right now. :”)