Release date:
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January 10, 2014
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Director:
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Abhishek Chaubey
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Cast:
Language:
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Madhuri
Dixit-Nene, Naseeruddin Shah, Arshad Warsi, Huma Qureshi, Vijay Raaz, Manoj
Pahwa
Hindi/Urdu
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Dedh Ishqiya is like the Urdu language: pleasing to the ear and apparently polite to a fault
irrespective of the views and emotions being expressed. In precisely the same
vein, this film is soaked in seeming indolence, its visual exquisiteness
undisturbed at all times despite the lava bubbling below the surface in the
lives of its female leads.
DI is set in Mahmudabad in Uttar Pradesh where Babban
(Arshad Warsi) and Khaalujaan (Naseeruddin Shah) converge to fall in love once
again, in this sequel to the 2010 Vidya Balan-Naseer-Arshad-starrer Ishqiya. That one was about deception in
love, a duplicitous woman and two gullible men. In a sense, the theme continues
as Khaalu is smitten by Begum Para (Madhuri Dixit-Nene), the widow of the late
Nawab of Mahmudabad, and Babban is besotted by her companion Muniya (Huma
Qureshi). Para’s husband wanted her to remarry so she’s holding a swayamvar in the guise of a mushaira where the wily Khaalu lands up
as a poet. The question though is this: who is the deceiver here? Are the men
being taken for a ride by the women, or by one woman as they were by the
seductress Krishna (Vidya) in Ishqiya?
Or are they wiser from that experience?
Nothing in this film is what it seems. Not even the genre.
It’s a thriller, yet it stubbornly refuses to be frenetic, revealing its cards one
step at a time, at its very own pace, as if teasing the viewer or cajoling us to
forget that there might be another twist coming up.
The cast is an assembly
of formidable talents. Arshad is his usual brilliant self here, playing the
naïve scamp like a second skin. Naseer-saab has done too many films in the past
decade that are an embarrassment to his CV but here he proves yet again that
when he invests his heart and soul in a role, there are few to match him.
Besides, his chemistry with Arshad is to die for.
And what does one say
of Madhuri? In her first film after seven years, Ms Megawatt Smile challenges
her remarkable acting skills the way she rarely did in the first leg of her
career. That she has a luminous face is without question. Age has added a charming
chubbiness to those cheeks. It has also given her immense dignity and
elegance. She is a picture of grace in her dancing scenes. Over and above this
though is the effortlessness with which she gives Begum Para an almost tangible
fragility and frailty, the sort of air that would make any man – or woman –
want to protect her. Huma Qureshi is a bit of a disappointment though. She
doesn’t fully inhabit her role as she has in her earlier films and is somewhat
put in the shade by the veterans here. To be fair, hers is the least-fleshed-out,
most poorly written part of the four.
The most scintillating
performance of the lot comes from the amazing Vijay Raaz as Para’s ardent
suitor Jaan Mohammad. It’s a joy here to watch his body language, conveying by
turns the swagger of a rich man and the vulnerability of a fellow who believes
that all the wealth in the world can’t give him “the DNA of a Nawab”, as one
character puts it. I’ve never imagined myself saying this about him, but he looks
almost dishy in this film.
Jaan Mohammad exemplifies
the nuances in the screenplay by Abhishek Chaubey (who has directed both Ishqiyas) and Vishal Bhardwaj. Despite
the humour and thrills, the writing is replete with understated comments on
class differences, feudalism, loneliness in marriage, second chances in life, male
bonding and, in ways alien to mainstream Hindi cinema, female bonding. In a
brief aside, we even have a new policeman in town, SP John Vijay, who speaks with
a pronounced accent but is that rare southern Indian character in a Hindi film
who has not been included to emphasise his “Madrasi”-ness but simply because (though
most of Bollywood seems not to realise this) south Indians too exist in India.
The film’s art design
and costumes are ravishing, epitomised by that scene in which Begum Para first
breaks into a dance in solitude. DoP Setu’s camera gives us a thoroughly
atmospheric film, playing with light, shade, shadow and darkness with such
skill as to make even a dusty, dilapidated, decaying haveli look picturesque. His
favourite canvases though, seem to be the faces of Naseer and Madhuri, both of whose
loveliness is highlighted by repeated extreme close-ups. Also a must-mention is
A. Sreekar Prasad’s editing which merges night with day and day with night,
with each scene seeming to flow into the next.
Where Dedh compares
unfavourably to Ishqiya is in the
music department. Clinton Cerejo’s background score complements Setu’s
cinematography. Vishal’s songs, though melodic and introspective to match the
film’s overall tone, don’t offer us anything as throbbingly memorable as the
earlier film’s Dil to bachcha hai ji
and Ibn Battuta.
Ishqiya was all fire and ice and “chutiyam sulphate”-style dialoguebaazi teamed with that blazing
passion between Krishna and the men. It was a fun and unusual film but in the
ultimate analysis, the elements didn’t all come together to form a wholesome
whole. Dedh Ishqiya demands a
different frame of mind. It is poetic and lilting and leisurely, not just in terms
of the mood it creates but also in the dulcet verses by Bashir Badr scattered
throughout and its heavily Urdu dialogues (written by Vishal) with which characters
sound like they’re making love even when they’re stabbing each other in the
back. Except for one incongruous chap called Noor Mohammed Itaalvi (played by Manoj
Pahwa) and the far-from-enthralling climactic gun battle, the film rarely
strikes a false note. This perhaps is why its two-and-a-half hours running time
doesn’t feel like that much time at all.
The title Dedh
Ishqiya sounds so much cleverer than Ishqiya
2. No deep meaning there, as is evident from the team’s jestful comments in
the media. As it turns out, the choice of title is appropriate too since this
film is a standalone achievement, superior in quality to Ishqiya, thus going way beyond so many Hollywood and Bollywood
sequels that come across as lazy efforts to cash in on an already-successful
brand name. Underlining how different the film is from so much of what
Bollywood creates these days, Dedh
Ishqiya ends with its best song, Hamari
atariya, accompanying the credits picturised on Madhuri’s classical dance
moves. So un-Mauja-Mauja-like, one
can’t help thinking. I didn’t move from my seat till the very last shot. Abhishek
Chaubey has arrived, people! And Madhuri is back!
Rating (out of five): ***1/2
CBFC Rating (India):
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U/A
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Running time:
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152 minutes
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Loved your review! The film as well. :)
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