Release date:
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July 12, 2013
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Director:
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Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra
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Cast:
Language: |
Farhan Akhtar, Divya Dutta, Sonam Kapoor, Rebecca Breeds, Yograj
Singh, Pavan Malhotra, Prakash Raj, Art Malik, Meesha Shafi, Jabtej Singh
Hindi with some Punjabi
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Scriptwriter Prasoon Joshi’s most
significant decision for Bhaag Milkha
Bhaag is that he does not centre the story around Milkha Singh’s failure to
win a 400m medal at the 1960 Rome Olympics. Too much of the national discourse
on this legendary athlete is about that one miss, though he is a multiple gold
medallist on other global platforms. Director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra and
Prasoon celebrate all these achievements but choose to make the child Milkha’s
Partition wounds the fulcrum of their film.
This coupled with Farhan Akhtar’s stellar
performance makes Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (BMB) a moving and entertaining biopic. What
robs it of greatness though is its too-transparent ambition to be an epic,
leading to superfluous scenes of visual magnificence (such as a looong sequence
of Milkha training after the 1956 Melbourne Olympics surrounded by stunning scenery
beneath clear blue skies) and repeated slow mo shots of Milkha’s Partition memories
of a phantom horse rider which needlessly melodramatise genuinely heart-wrenching
experiences that were intrinsically dramatic anyway. Result: we are
intermittently distracted from the heart of the matter at hand.
BMB begins with the Rome 1960
disappointment followed by Milkha’s refusal to participate in the Indo-Pak Friendship
Games in Pakistan. Why does he refuse? The answer unfolds as we are taken through
his happy childhood in Multan, the tragedy of 1947, an early entry into a world
of crime, the impish teenager’s popularity in his village, the quest for
respectability when love strikes, the gravitation towards athletics while in
the Army, the gruelling training and international glory. It is not a linear
narrative though. Most of Milkha’s story is recounted by his first coach
Gurudev Singh to a bureaucrat as they travel by train from Delhi to Chandigarh to
meet the star. Unnecessary device? Yes. Especially because it feels kind of
silly to witness flying dupattas, stolen glances and songs when Milkha romances
his first love Biro, since this comes as part of the coach’s flashback!
Besides, within Gurudev’s flashback is Milkha’s own flashback to his childhood
which gets briefly confusing.
Yet there is much else to recommend in the
screenplay. There is no glossing over the brutality inflicted on innocents on
that side of the border, but Prasoon skillfully steers clear of rabble-rousing.
The other thing of beauty is the writer’s attitude towards women. BMB makes it a point NOT to trivialise a
woman simply because she’s white-skinned and sexually interested. Elsewhere, there
is a passing yet very compelling lament about the manner in which rural Indian girls
are forced into marriages with partners not of their choice. And when Milkha rejects
a woman’s open advances, he does so with delicacy. No speeches here, just
fleeting actions worth noticing.
From the film’s three romantic
interludes, the sweet-faced Australian actress Rebecca Breeds merits a mention
for her natural ease before the camera. To be fair though, hers is also the only
well-fleshed-out character of the three. Sonam Kapoor as the pretty Punjabi girl
Biro is required to look innocent and be playful, which she does effectively. Pakistani
actress Meesha Shafi as Milkha’s fellow athlete Perizaad, however, wears the
same facial expression throughout her screen time. Divya Dutta delivers a
lovely performance as Milkha’s elder sister. In her story we also get that rare
reference to marital rape from mainstream Bollywood.
The dominant force in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, however, is Farhan
Akhtar. This is not a performance confined to an actor’s dramatic physical
transformation, though that too is amazing, and Farhan has been blessed with
cinematographer Binod Pradhan who captures the landscape of his body with
obvious delight. But beyond that, it’s evident that the star has invested every
cell of his being, every bulging muscle, every pulsating vein in this one
character. This is an actor living a part.
Playing a soldier in BMB, National Award-winning Tamil actor Prakash
Raj finally gets to do something other than be a menacing villain in Bollywood.
It’s not a character with much breadth, but it’s still a pleasant change.
Yograj Singh as Milkha’s coach Ranveer Singh is particularly amusing when he suddenly
changes his accent and tone while in conversation with an Australian trainer in
Australia. The lovable young Jabtej Singh playing little Milkha is also a noteworthy
talent.
Shankar Ehsaan Loy have whipped up a
rollicking good score for this film. Barring one awkwardly-inserted song
featuring the soldiers celebrating Milkha’s success, the rest are well placed
too. That throbbing, haunting Zinda
number comes in at a point when you are least expecting it. And Slow motion angreza – with lyrics that
meld the foreign-sounding “Wulu-mulu wulu-mulu wonda” with the desi “ghul-mill, ghul-mill launda” – is an absolute riot of
energy and fun.
As sports films go, Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is not in the league
of the iconic Chariots of Fire or our
very own Chak De or that under-rated
gem Iqbal. Nor does it match Rakeysh’s
best, Rang De Basanti. With all its
flaws though, in the overall analysis it does have many important points to
make and the lasting impression is of a technically excellent and poignant, inspiring, enjoyable
film.
Rating (out of five): ***1/2
CBFC Rating (India):
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U
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Running time:
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187 minutes
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Good review Anna, been hearing good things about the film. Will go watch it :)
ReplyDeleteBy the way, great point, that - how Prasoon Joshi handled the female characters, esp. in a male centric movie. You never get that from "mainstream" critics, so thank you for pointing out such nuanced, yet quite significant aspects.
I specially love the editing of the movie. the transition from real 1950s games footage and footage shot for the movie is so effortless. it's kind of like Sean Penn starrer Milk.
ReplyDeleteFarhan Akhtar did awesome work and deserve for honor, Direction of Rakesh Omprakash Mehra was too good, I Love that scene at the time Milka was in airplane and saying "Ye Thok Dega"
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