Release date:
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Kerala: March 3, 2017. All India: March 10.
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Director:
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Lijo Jose
Pellissery
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Cast:
Language:
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Antony Varghese, Reshma Rajan, Tito Wilson,
Sarath Kumar, Kichu Tellus, Vineeth Vishwam, Binny Rinky Benjamin, Sruthy
Jayan, Amrutha Anna Reji
Malayalam
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Black comedy and slice-of-life cinema meet in director Lijo Jose
Pellissery’s Angamaly Diaries, a delightful, unexpectedly hilarious take
on the squalid underbelly of Kerala’s Angamaly town.
If ever there was an example of the committed cinephile’s dictum “it is
not the story but the treatment that makes a film”, you have it here. Because
if you think about it, Angamaly Diaries – funny and insightful in equal
measure – does not have a story in the conventional sense, yet that, among so
many other reasons, is what makes it brilliant.
In the film’s opening sequence, we witness a fight between two local
gangs. We are soon introduced to the protagonist Pepe, who turns out to
be the quintessential boy who never grew up. We learn that as a schoolkid, Pepe
was captivated by a particular gang of ruffians – or “team” as he calls it –
drawn from an Angamaly football team. His childhood goal was to have a “team”
of his own.
Despite the distractions that accompany such an ambition, Pepe manages
to pass school, make it through most of a B.A. (History) course and notch up
some long-term relationships with women along the way. Aggression is a constant
in his life, yet he treats nothing with a sense of urgency. At one point,
events take what you and I might consider a dramatic turn, causing his plans
for his future to go awry. He treats that episode too as just another
occurrence – albeit a challenging one – rather than an earth-shattering,
potentially ruinous affair.
When I was not keeling over with laughter at the accent, vocabulary,
style of speaking and eccentricities of the characters in Angamaly Diaries,
I was busy pushing my eyes back into their sockets since they kept popping out
in reaction to the nonchalance with which these volcanic people draw blood,
literally. The casualness of violence and the unending cycle that every
action unleashes is the underlying theme of the film, despite its comedic
overtone.
Pellissery has a
reputation as an avant-garde filmmaker so it should come as no surprise that he
has extracted so many acute observations from Angamaly’s everyday affairs.
However, the notable new voice emerging from this film is actor Chemban Vinod
Jose who makes a smashing debut as a writer with Angamaly Diaries.
It is a huge
achievement for a film revolving around amorality, to not normalise or deify
anyone’s attitudes or actions. Angamaly
Diaries manages that. It remains largely inoffensive although it is filled
with offensive characters constantly indulging in objectionable behaviour.
There are just two
passages where I found myself feeling uncomfortable, when it seemed like the
writer and director’s blasé tone might possibly be emerging from their own
casualness towards Pepe and gang’s disturbing conduct: once, when the voiceover
mentions that as children these chaps would peep into bathrooms to ogle bathing
women; second, when a man they are roughing up gets a fit and collapses with a
foaming mouth. Obviously this is just a hunch, but I am mentioning it because I
felt no such confusion in the rest of the film.
Pellissery’s
you’re-watching-life-as-it-happens narrative is greatly helped by some clever
editing at the hands of Shameer Mohammed and Girish
Gangadharan’s seamless cinematography,
especially in the execution of that gasp-inducing long-drawn-out finale in the
middle of a noisy church festival. The director has also used Prashant Pillai’s
music very effectively, never once allowing it to overshadow the people at the
heart of his unusual film.
Angamaly Diaries’ exceptional cast
reportedly features 86 debutants. This might explain why they all come across
as ordinary folk who happened to stroll on to a film set rather than
performers. They are all as easy before the camera as veterans might be. Their
highly convincing performances are among the film’s many USPs.
Antony Varghese
playing Pepe combines his natural talent with remarkable good looks that
shine through despite the protagonist’s scruffy appearance. There is a potential
matinee idol in Varghese, waiting to be tapped by Mollywood.
The other notable
presences in the film are the pretty and charismatic Reshma Rajan
playing Pepe’s friend Lily
Chechi a.k.a. Lichi, and Tito Wilson as rival gang member U-Clamp Rajan.
Humour combined
with realism are the immediate attractions of this engaging, uncommon film.
Foodies please note that there is also much pleasure to be derived from the
many cooking shots and conversations about culinary experiments in Angamaly Diaries. You are not human if
your mouth does not water at the description of Pepe’s mother’s signature
recipe, or sundry pork and beef dishes, kappa (tapioca) with potato (how
deliciously unhealthy that sounds!) and tapioca with
egg.
Okay… that’s it… I
can’t take this any more. Sorry for my abruptness, but I must wind up this
review immediately. First, I must pick myself off the floor where I fell
laughing after watching Angamaly Diaries.
Then I must wipe the drool off my mouth, the embarrassing after-effect of
writing that last paragraph. Most important though, I am now overcome by the urge
to consume kappa in various sinful combinations, so excuse me for taking off in
this fashion.
Angamaly Diaries is my favourite
Malayalam film of the year so far. It is, to use a somewhat untranslatable
Malayali expression, kumbleet adipoli.
Rating
(out of five): ****
CBFC Rating (India):
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UA
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Running time:
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132 minutes
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This
review has also been published on Firstpost:
Anna, thank you for posting reviews of Malayalam films alongside the usual Hindi ones. For some of us non-Malayalam speakers, its an window into a different world (much the same as Baradwaj Rangan's reviews of Tamil films) - for me personally, reading these reviews are also touched with a twinge of nostalgia given that I was exposed to some of the Mohanlal/Mammoothy 'classics' (in law school, thanks to several Malayali friends who painstakingly translated dialogues/themes for CDs without English sub-titles) :-) pls keep it up. Also, has 'Angamaly Diaries' released with English subtitles in Delhi? More importantly, would the humour be understandable even with English subtitles?
ReplyDeleteHi Sudipto, I've been asking myself the same question (Would the humour in Angamaly Diaries be comprehensible to non-Malayalam speakers?) since I watched the film. I cannot be 100% sure, but it did occur to me that - to use a cliche - films speak a universal language, so of course there will be nuances that could be lost to a non-Malayalam speaker just as there may be nuances lost to someone like me who is not based in Kerala just as there may be nuances lost to even Keralites living outside Angamaly, but if non-Kannada audiences across India and across the world could enjoy Thithi's wry humour last year, then Angamaly Diaries is worth a shot.
DeleteI hope that helps.
Do let me know what you think of the film if you do end up watching it. Meanwhile, I've asked one of my favourite critics, who is not a Malayali and does not know Malayalam, to watch it and tell me if it works for her. I would love to hear from you too :)
The protagonist's name is Vincent Pepe. Not Pepe Joseph.
ReplyDeleteHi. Thanks for pointing that out. I think age is making me absent-minded. I can think of no other reason why I wrote "Pepe Joseph" just because the voiceover reminds us that Pepe means Joseph when the hero is introduced to us! Regards, Anna
DeleteAnna, thank you for posting reviews of Malayalam films
ReplyDelete