There
were plenty of factors riding against Badlapur.
Director Sriram Raghavan was coming from the failure of Agent Vinod. Varun Dhavan, the star of over the top romantic
comedies was headlining a dark thriller. Ek
Villain, another film with a similar premise of vengeance had just recently
come, made money and gone. That budget was super tight, only movies that cost a
lot of money make a lot of money here.
Much
like the protagonist of this film, Badlapur
renders a brutal wallop to everything going against it, and emerges as the
first truly great movie of the year.
Dhawan
stars as Raghu, a successful ad agency professional in Pune whose life descends
into the pits when his wife (Yami Gautam) and child are killed during a car
hijack. One of the culprits, Liak (Nawaz) is caught and put behind bars, but he
refuses to divulge the identity of the other guy. Raghu cannot accept this -
his mind fractures, and what follows is a crazy revenge trip that is set, aptly
in the town of Badlapur.
Fortunately,
we don’t get a rehash of Ek Villain. What
we do get is the Sriram Raghavan of Ek
Hasina Thi. It is surprising that unlike the trailers this isn’t the bloody
vengeful journey that you expect it to be – it’s a black comedy and character
drama with a small dose of violence. The film zips by from one plot point to
another, as we follow Raghu’s weird path of salvation. Raghavan extracts humor
from apathy, like from Koko (Radhika Apte) a hapless wife willing to offer sex
to a murderer without a moment’s consideration. He also extracts humor from
desperation, like Liak’s bungled attempts at escape from prison. There’s also a
lovely dynamic between Liak and his mother (Pratima Kazmi) that ends in a
subtly heartbreaking way. To have such a nuanced and offbeat film as a
mainstream release is quite a nice change.
At
most times Badlapur feels like
Raghavan set out to take badla and mess with the clichés of the formula and
genre. Meandering romantic sub plots? To hell with that - Raghu just uses and
throws. A thirst for revenge? Too easy, let’s make the hero and the villain
wait for fifteen goddamn years until they actually do anything. No one even
smokes in the film, yet there is persuasive mention of Ganja. The familiar
element of a suitcase full of cash is present, and the plotline is quietly
subverted by the end. What’s more, there’s shades of James Hadley Chase and
Vijay Anand in the mix as well, complete with sex based shock value.
What
works best is that Badlapur is stripped down, crystalline filmmaking. There’s
no room for unnecessary BS nor are there any frills that pander to
commercialization. While Johnny Gaddar
had a dash of pulp in every frame the shots here are simple and beautiful. There’s
no fancy camerawork here – Raghavan composes his scenes at the most basic level
and lets the terrific acting and narrative do the heavy lifting. The visual
resplendence is seen right from the opening scene, a long and meticulously
composed Haneke style take where a woman simply crosses the road, while two
shady folks in the frame do their own thing, until something horrible happens.
It’s the reason why the tagline of the posters is ‘Don’t miss the beginning’.
This
is also violence done right. Raghavan seems to know that if there’s too much gratuitous
brutality from the get go the audience becomes numb to it and the scene that
matters won’t be effective. So the little bit of brutality there is arrives at
a point when you least expect it, and whatever happens in that short burst will
make the hair on your neck stand.
Raghavan
managed to make even Neil Nitin Mukesh seem like a decent actor, and his knack
for getting unheard of performances is on full display here. Varun looks like a
beast, and his presence is felt. Much like Shahid Kapoor in Haider his transformation is memorably messed
up. This is the film that is going to win everyone over and make him a
household name. A bit more work on his delivery would have been perfect though.
Nawaz
is once again effortlessly in top form as the sleazy, film obsessed baddie, and
his chemistry with Huma Qureshi remains intact. Kumud Mishra as a cop is fun,
and really brings the house down in a shouty meltdown scene with Nawaz. Yami
Gautam is fine but she’s played the same role previously in Action Jackson, so hopefully she won’t
be stereotyped as the murdered wife. The cherry on top are the wonderful cameos
from Raghavan regulars Ashwini Kalsekar, Vinay Pathak, Zakir Hussain and Gopal
Singh, the suitcase guy from EHT.
The
question of comparison to Ek Haseena Thi
and Johnny Gaddar is irrelevant. Badlapur is the kind of film we need
more of, and also the kind of film that you need to see more of. It’s in
theaters now, so if you want to see a change in the quality of Bollywood
products, I suggest you get a ticket or two.
(First published in Firstpost)
No comments:
Post a Comment