Release date:
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October 9, 2015
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Director:
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Sanjay Gupta
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Cast:
Language:
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Aishwarya
Rai Bachchan, Irrfan Khan, Shabana Azmi, Chandan Roy Sanyal, Atul Kulkarni,
Jackie Shroff
Hindi
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Fly-by-night feminists
are India’s latest social trend. They’re the ones who have no particular commitment
to women’s rights or may even be closeted misogynists, but mouth what they
consider politically correct lines anyway, because feminism is the fad of the
day.
How can you tell that
they are not committed? That’s easy. Because liars and fakes almost inevitably
inadvertently reveal their true colours through their own words.
It’s this fashionable
fake feminism that produced that silly, mixed-up Vogue Empower commercial featuring
pretty visuals of Deepika Padukone and other women flashing by with a
pretentious voiceover defending, among other things, a wife’s right to cheat on
her husband. Umm, would the commercial makers have publicly defended a man’s
right to cheat on his wife?
Jazbaa, a remake of
the South Korean film Seven Days, is born
of this trend. After 20 years of depicting women as nothing but sexy bodies and
glam objects in a world run by men, director Sanjay Gupta is now advocating
women’s rights. He fails to mask his true convictions though.
So, while Jazbaa’s central character is a strong
woman, he reassures his traditional audience that all’s well with their world
by ending on a tight close-up of a supporting male character as he explains why
he let the woman he loves walk away. “Arrey,
mohabbat hai isiliye toh jaane diya,” he says, “Zidd hoti toh abhi baahon mein hoti,” which roughly translates to,
“She’s my love, that’s why I let her go. If she was a mere obsession she would
have been in my arms now.” Her own agency be damned. Not surprisingly, the
predominantly male audience in the hall where I watched this film cheered at this
line, after having watched the previous two hours in silence.
Jazbaa makes all the right noises about
rape, with a victim’s mother telling a lawyer that what she did in open court
was no different from what the rapist did to her daughter in a closed room. At
the same time, the film needlessly keeps replaying the rape scene under the pretext
of adding a new piece to the puzzle each time, though in truth only one
revelation is made through all those retellings. If the depiction of that scene
had been more explicit, I suspect the mood in my local theatre may have been
more jubilant. As it happens, this is Sanjay playing at being a feminist, so he
does not go all the way on that front either. The result: it is neither all-out
sleazy nor sensitive.
Jazbaa also appears to make the right
noises about female foeticide, but a conversation about a son-obsessed husband asking his wife to abort
a female foetus sounds discomfittingly close to being anti-abortion as much as
it is anti-sex-selective-abortion. The film is also irritatingly conventional in
its deification of mothers and its dismissiveness towards paternal love. Wish
Team Jazbaa had given more thought to
its messaging on such crucial, complex issues.
The story is about an extremely successful lawyer called
Anuradha Verma (Aishwarya Rai Bachchan) who has no qualms about defending the
scum of the earth, as long as they pay her fee. Anuradha is a single mother. One day her little daughter Sanaya (Sara Arjun) is
kidnapped by a stranger who demands as ransom that she should fight to free a man
called Niyaaz (Chandan Roy Sanyal) who is on death row for raping and murdering
a young artist called Sia (Priya Banerjee).
Anuradha has just days
to cobble together a credible defence. She is assisted in this by her friend
and secret admirer Yohann (Irrfan Khan) who has been suspended from the Mumbai Police
on corruption charges. Other players in this script include Sia’s mother Garima
Choudhry (Shabana Azmi), her lawyer (Atul Kulkarni) and a politician called
Mahesh Makhlai (Jackie Shroff).
In this sea of usually
wonderful supporting actors, the only notable performance comes from Irrfan who
has the panache to pull off the dialoguebaazi his character is endowed with.
Besides, he is so charming that it’s tough to be angry even when he utters that
final bombastic line.
Aishwarya immerses
herself in the role, and for the most part is impressive as Anuradha. She also
looks stunning and appears comfortable throwing punches in a scene where she
confronts a villain. Too often though she confuses emoting with screaming out
loud. There is one moment when she briefly spots her abducted daughter, and
wails and wails and wails in a scene that is so elongated and then later
repeated that it is evident the director was impressed with it. In fact, it’s
her low point in the film, especially since Irrfan enters the picture at the
end of the replay and has his own emotional outburst – in one fell swoop, he overshadows
her as a performer. Still, hats off to her for having risked appearing in the
same frame as one of the country’s most gifted actors. Besides, Ash does
feisty nicely and I enjoyed her eloquence in Jazbaa’s
courtroom.
It’s confused philosophy
notwithstanding, Jazbaa is well-paced
and often
engaging till the last 15 minutes when too many twists pile up. Yes, one pivotal revelation comes as a surprise, but if you think about it, the
plot makes no sense and is riddled with loopholes. For instance, if you are a
famous person who does not want your connection to a crime to become public, why would you sit
in the audience in court during the trial? If not to manipulate us, why would a
major character’s face suggest that a person is dead, when he could not have
thought so?
And then there are questions
that reveal the big zero that is the film’s plot: If a lawyer is unscrupulous
enough to take up any paying case, why bother with a convoluted scheme to get
her to take up yours? Even if you don’t want her to know that you are paying
for Niyaaz’s defence, could you not have sent someone to front you and hire her
services directly?
All the megawatt casting, stylish
camerawork and blue-gray tints in the world cannot alter the fact that when it
comes down to brass tacks and a scrutiny of the climax, Jazbaa is a hollow film.
Rating
(out of five): **
Footnote: I didn’t notice whether they got
their opening credits right, but Aishwarya’s name is misspelt – as Aishwariya –
in the closing credits. Perhaps viewers will forgive this lack of finesse, I
don’t know, but I’ve been a sub-editor and such carelessness just kills me.
CBFC Rating (India):
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U/A
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Running time:
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122 minutes
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Talking about mistakes? In one of the court-scenes, Mrs Rai Bachchan mouths a grammatical error in a Hindi sentence. 'Court ko DIKHAATA tha' instead of 'court ko DIKHAANA tha'...Bachchan saab ko pata chala, toh class lagegi pucca :P
ReplyDeleteWOW! I love your review. You are so on point. But Kareena Kapoor Khan is my favourite, anytime, anyday.
ReplyDelete