Release date:
|
March 8, 2013
|
Director:
|
Tigmanshu Dhulia
|
Cast:
Language:
|
Jimmy Sheirgill, Mahie
Gill, Irrfan, Soha Ali Khan, Rajeev Gupta, Raj Babbar, Deepraj Rana, Pravesh
Rana
Hindi
|
At one point in Saheb
Biwi aur Gangster Returns, a
slimy politician tries desperately to switch off his laptop on which a porn
film is loudly playing. Gasps and moans emanate from the screen as he struggles
to turn off the film even as a journalist enters his office. Don’t look, the neta tells the bemused visitor... If
ever there was a single scene that could encapsulate a writer-director’s skill,
it is this. Rajeev Gupta as the politico is brilliant, so is Irrfan as the
visitor. Nothing about this scene is over-stated which is what makes it even
funnier than it might have been in exaggerated form. And in the deftness with
which he delivers this understated hilarity, Tigmanshu Dhulia – SBAG Returns’ director and co-writer –
proves yet again why he is one of the best talents of contemporary Bollywood.
And so Dhulia is back with Saheb (Jimmy Sheirgill), Biwi
(Mahie Gill) and a new Gangster (Irrfan as Indrajeet Singh) in this delightful
sequel to the engaging Saheb Biwi aur Gangster of 2011. SBAG Returns begins where the first film left
off: Aditya Pratap Singh a.k.a. Saheb is the violence-prone, arrogant though cash-strapped
scion of an erstwhile royal family in small-town India, turning to electoral politics
in an effort to hold on to the power his ancestors once wielded. Following the
developments of the first film, he is now confined to a wheelchair, struggling
to cope with his disability and the awareness that his wife Madhavi Devi is not
the pliable partner-in-crime or doormat he would have liked her to be. Madhavi
is still an alcoholic, still emotionally unstable and still bitter about her
husband’s wandering eye. That eye wanders in this film towards a rival raja’s daughter Ranjana (Soha Ali Khan)
who happens to be the one true love of Indrajeet. Ranjana becomes a pawn in a power game
between these rajas of yore whose political and personal battles get
inextricably intertwined through the film.
Dhulia and editor Rahul Shrivastava sustain an absorbing pace
almost throughout SBAG Returns, making this a highly
entertaining watch. If Randeep Hooda was the pick of an excellent cast in Part
1, then here the honours go to Irrfan who makes evil attractive and manages to lend
charm even to his awkward love making. About that love making though, it must
be said that Soha seems to have considerable reservations about exposure and
sexual explicitness, which becomes painfully evident in the bedroom encounter
between Ranjana and Indrajeet. One of the pluses of SBAG1 was the gay abandon with which Mahie and Randeep threw
themselves into their very wild sexcapades; neither the actors nor the camera were
pussyfooting around the matter, thus giving us some of the most extensive and
most tastefully torrid sex scenes ever seen in a Bollywood film. In SBAG Returns though, it’s Soha’s
hesitation, not her character’s sexual reticence that we seem to see on screen
in a very brief scene.
Jimmy and Rajeev Gupta deliver wonderful performances that
make you yearn for more meaty roles for both actors in more films. Mahie too
ably carries forward the chameleon-like transformations of Madhavi Devi from SBAG. If there is a weak link in this
chain it’s the characterisation of Ranjana by the writers (story: Dhulia and
Kamal Pandey; screenplay and dialogues: Dhulia) and Soha’s inadequate performance
of this character. When she changes her goals so dramatically mid-stream, her
motivations for doing so needed to go beyond the hell-hath-no-fury-like-a-woman-scorned
cliché to be convincing. (It was a challenge writing that sentence without
spoilers; if it sounds obtuse now, do re-read it after you see the film.) Elsewhere
there is some detailing that should have been taken care of. The very Anglicised
Ranjana’s casualwear may have been acceptable to her father (Raj Babbar) but
seems out of place in the home of her outrageously conservative, patriarchal
beau. And in a song featuring Anjana Sukhani, in a scene featuring a miserable
Ranjana, the editor throws in a long shot of a brightly smiling Ranjana dancing
with her co-stars between shots of her morose face in the same group. Since
Ranjana is crucial to the proceedings, none of this can be ignored ... so it’s
a good thing that the film’s gripping momentum and crisp dialogues are designed
to lull us into a forgiving mood.
Rakesh Ranjan’s sound design in SBAG Returns deserves a
special mention. If you enter the hall knowing well that there’s a possibility
of guns going off all around, yet find yourself (like I was) getting startled
at every single bullet fired, you know the audiographer is doing everything
right. Equally worth mentioning is the effective use of Sandeep Chowta’s
background score to build up the tension in the film ; the songs, on the other hand, are not up to the
mark.
The decaying havelis, the remnants of grandeur in the
formal costumes, the choice of locations all
contribute to building up the ominous atmosphere of desperation in the lives of these
former rajas. The many allusions to our current political scenario are just as
enjoyable: like the state that’s on the verge of being split, not in the
interests of the people but of the politicos who want that division; like the
politician who wants his wife to be a mere front for him; like the
Machiavellian moves before a crucial vote in a state assembly; the presence of
a Raja Bhaiyya in the story; and of course, the porn-watching politician.
It’s such a joy to be able to say this in a Bollywood that
rarely makes good sequels … Saheb Biwi
aur Gangster was a fun political thriller; SBAG Returns is even better.
Rating
(out of five): ***1/2
CBFC Rating (India):
|
A
|
Running time:
|
145 minutes
|
Photograph
courtesy:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I,_Me_Aur_Main
am just from the movie. nice movie!..entertaining and good humour indeed. worth to spend time on it. a light hearted movie. the movie seems small budget and objectives achieved by the producers.
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