Release date:
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May 22, 2015
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Director:
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Aanand L. Rai
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Cast:
Language:
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R. Madhavan, Kangna Ranaut, Swara
Bhaskar, Jimmy Sheirgill, Deepak Dobriyal, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Eijaz
Khan, Rajendra Gupta
Hindi
|
Tanu Weds Manu (TWM) Returns is, to use a colloquialism, a zabardasti ka sequel. Read: a follow-up that
does little to take forward the story or characters of the first film. It’s
funny a lot of the time – really really funny – but that’s no excuse for the
haphazard plotline.
Director Aanand L. Rai picks up where he left off in 2011’s sleeper hit Tanu Weds Manu, assembles some of Hindi cinema’s most talented actors for the project and then squanders them away with a barely conceived plot.
Writer Himanshu Sharma’s
screenplay for the film is steeped in earthy, desi humour which this gifted cast complements with their impeccable
timing and dialogue delivery skills. His story, however, wanders all over the
place, the characterisation of the leads is weak to say the least,
and the plot is riddled with loopholes the size of a continent.
For instance, at one
point over the course of a very crucial scene, a significant character kidnaps
the sister of another significant character – the film actually does not tell
us what happened to her after that! Did the writer and director forget? Or did
they not care enough to make the effort?
The woman re-appears
briefly during the end credits, but hello, what happened between the abduction
and then? Loose ends such as this one are too obvious to have gone unnoticed by
the team, which suggests they were left hanging due to indifference, not inefficiency.
Since TWM Returns is positioned as
sensible – not slapstick – comedy, this is a disappointment.
The story, for what it’s
worth, goes like this. Four years after they fell in love and married in Tanu Weds Manu, Tanuja Trivedi a.k.a.
Tanu (Kangna Ranaut) and Manoj Sharma a.k.a. Manu (R. Madhavan) are now an
unhappy couple in London. The opening scene where they consult a team of
doctors at St Benedict’s Mental Asylum, Twickenham, is hilarious. The two stars
play off each other brilliantly and Sharma’s dialogues are crackling at that
point.
The downslide begins right
away though with what happens to Manu at the end of that episode. Was Tanu intentionally
cruel to her husband or was she helpless when their open battle led to
unexpected consequences? If the latter, then why did she make no effort to save
him then and there? If the former, then this instance of evil is out of
character for this woman who, in the rest of the film, is portrayed as all
heart despite her rough edges.
Be that as it may, both
Tanu and Manu return to India. He ends up falling for a Tanu lookalike, a
Haryanvi athlete from Delhi University’s Ramjas College called Kusum Sangwan
a.k.a. Datto (also Ranaut). And Tanu charms the pants and hormones off her
parents’ paying-guest-who-does-not-make-payments, Arun Kumar Singh a.k.a. Chintu
(Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub) in her home town Kanpur. She later hooks up with her
old love Raja Awasthi (Jimmy Sheirgill). Also in the picture are the lead couple’s
three buddies from TWM: Pappi (Deepak
Dobriyal), Payal (Swara Bhaskar) and Jassi (Eijaz Khan).
Don’t be misled by the veneer
of comedy. At heart, TWM Returns is a
serious endorsement of marriage and traditional notions of romantic love. Nothing
wrong with that, especially if you share the film’s worldview. The problem lies
in the confusion over the heroine’s motivations.
Manu was a sweet yet
irritating duh in the romance department earlier too, so his behaviour in the second
film is not beyond belief although he continues to come across as a Big Moose
in love. It’s a measure of Madhavan’s nice-boy aura that it’s hard to dislike
Manu despite his stupidity and his marginally icky attraction for a near-child.
Tanu though, remains inexplicable, just as she was in this film’s precursor. The
question is not: What the heck does this woman want? There are mixed-up characters
in the real world too, so her seemingly muddled head does not defy
believability. No, the question is: why the heck does this woman want what she
wants?
An artiste who can rise
above a script’s limitations is rare. Ranaut has evolved so dramatically in the
past four years that she has become that artiste. She does the best she can with
the confused characterisation, delivering a slightly toned-down version of the
earlier Tanu, still fiery to the point of being belligerent yet also appearing
to search her soul more often. She also grabs the screenplay’s big strength –
the dialogues – with the hunger of a talented performer, chews them up and
spits them out with infectious verve.
Her turn as Tanu’s doppelganger
Datto (a better written character) is astonishingly good. There are moments when
she manages to make it seem like this could be a different actor bearing a
resemblance to Ranaut. Certainly the film’s styling, make-up and costume
departments deserve a huge share of the credit for their intelligent work on
her, without the use of obvious crutches such as thick glasses or comparative dowdiness favoured by Hindi films
of the past. But Ranaut takes it beyond that, giving Tanu and Datto completely
different personalities and beings.
It is also to her credit
that though Datto has a thick accent, she is not a caricature of a Haryanvi
woman. And I almost fell off my chair in wonderment at how much she reminded me
of athletes I’ve seen in training: that walk, that manner of running, all done
without a hint of exaggeration.
Kudos too to Ranaut for sorting
out the two things that have been her Achilles heel so far: diction and voice
modulation. She is remarkable every step of the way in TWM Returns.
Her presence does
not diminish this films flaws, however. Tanu’s mixed-up motivations are a glaring
gap in the writing. Manu is one-dimensional. And frankly, the tension between
Payal and her husband Jassi is far more credible than the stereotypical clash
between Tanu and Manu.
What’s truly worrisome about
this film though is its carefully masked attitude to women. TWM made light of a man kissing an
unknown woman lying passed out on her bed. Manu’s actions in that scene were
projected as being romantic. In a world where too many people do not grasp the
meaning of consent, this is not cute; it is unforgivable. Then came Raanjhanaa from the same team, a horribly
disturbing ode to stalking. This film is less overt.
An early scene in TWM Returns makes light of that kiss from
Film 1. And the abduction of a woman by a man who thinks she is in love with him
is also passed off as a joke here. Up to that point the fellow has been built
up as an endearing character, thus making it hard for the audience to despise
his behaviour towards the woman. More to the point, by quietly giving the girl
a line to deliver in which she points out to him how wealthy her fiance is, the
film plays to the gallery of roadside Romeos and sundry misogynists who believe
women are teases and that they are selfishly governed by concerns about
financial security in matters of the heart. This suggestion also cashes in on the
increasing antagonism one sees from such men towards independent, smart women, I
guess to balance out the presence of bright women like Tanu and Datto in the
film.
It’s hard not to wonder
then if this attitude has also pervaded the creation of the two leads. There
can be no other explanation for why the writing is designed to make us enjoy
Tanu’s fire, but sympathise with her hai-bechara
‘victim’ Manu.
This tone is sought to
be masked by such things as Datto’s brother giving a group of Haryanvis in
Jhajjar a lecture about women’s freedom. Feminism is the latest fashion going
around, and Team Rai-Sharma are the latest to fake it.
Despite its jumbled
story and this undercurrent of misogyny, it’s hard to write off the film. Because
when the going gets good the dialogues are killers and because of the
immaculate acting. Of the excellent supporting cast, the always highly
watchable Bhaskar and Ayyub merit a special mention, and Dobriyal is an
absolute scene-stealer. Also in the business of stealing scenes are the songs
(music: Krsna Solo, lyrics: Raj Shekhar), in particular I’m just an old school girl sung with histrionic flair by Anmoll Malik and, in its Haryanvi version, by Kalpana
Gandharv.
These enjoyable
positives led by Ranaut are what hold up an otherwise very flawed film.
Rating (out of five): **1/2
Footnote: What does it say about this male-dominated
industry that Madhavan’s name precedes Ranaut’s in the opening credits although
she was the USP of TWM, she is
clearly the bigger star in Bollywood, and she is the name on the strength of
which TWM Returns was marketed?
CBFC Rating (India):
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U/A
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Running time:
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121 minutes
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(2) Still – Raindrop Media
Waiting eagerly for your comments...😊
ReplyDeleteJust once ....just bloody once...can you write a movie review without bringing up agendas like women empowerement and subjugation of women which you are seen shouting out on prime time programs !!!Gosh !!!!
ReplyDeleteIf you wanna judge movies on the agendas they portraying try bringing down one of the Khan's movie !!
Haha good look with that - if you read her reviews most of them are like that - every film is viewed through that lense (marks for consistency I guess) which is why for me she's not really a critic - it's kind of like a dietician being a food critic, it doesn't work because you're looking at food from a biased perspective. That said, I read her stuff even though I don't care much for the content because the technicality of the writing is quite good (if that's such a thing) - and to be fair she's panned Khan movies for the same reasons (like I said, marks for consistency)
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