Showing posts with label Alencier Ley Lopez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alencier Ley Lopez. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

REVIEW 761: PRATHI POOVANKOZHI


Release date:
Kerala: December 20, 2019
Delhi: January 3, 2020
Director:
Rosshan Andrrews
Cast:

Language:
Manju Warrier, Rosshan Andrrews, Anusree, Alencier Ley Lopez, Saiju Kurup
Malayalam


As a woman, it is hard to watch this film and not have a flashback to the humiliating sexual assaults you have endured. In private and public spaces, millions of men continue to grab, grope, stalk, flash their genitals at women, masturbate on them or in their presence, sneer, leer, pass lewd comments, verbally abuse, prod and crush breasts, pinch bottoms, fondle midriffs and in numerous other ways molest, harass and dehumanise the other half of the human species. 

So yes, I understand Madhuri’s rage in Prathi Poovankozhi and I share it. 

It is precisely because the female experience of such male behaviour is so routine though that I also don’t understand Prathi Poovankozhi. In the film, Manju Warrier plays Madhuri, a salesperson in a Kottayam sari shop who is so enraged when a man squeezes her bottom on a bus one day, that she makes it her mission to slap him at least once. She gets a range of reactions to her intent, the sort we have all witnessed and/or personally faced in reality – supportive women, women recounting their own repulsive encounters with perverts, a woman fuming at that man, another fuming at Madhuri for not moving on, yet another blaming her for the perv’s actions. One comment by an ally bothered me though. This friend explains kindly that assaults are not unusual and if Madhuri is unable to get over this one it is because such a thing is happening to her for the first time. 

Hold on. 

Wait. 

Did I hear that right? This woman who has inhabited the earth for what I assume must be about three decades, who stays alone with her elderly mother, who works in a crowded space, who takes public transport and walks down teeming streets to her workplace each day, who attends social gatherings, this woman has...never...been...molested...before? Ever? Not by a relative, a colleague, an acquaintance, a neighbour, or even a stranger? 

Never? 

It is at this point I wished that writer Unni R. had hired women consultants for this screenplay. Because it takes a man to not know the frequency with which women get molested. It takes a man to not know that most women suffer harassment and molestation on multiple occasions in their lives. This is why, when as a woman you highlight an episode or two on a public platform, men friends think they are helping by badgering you to alert the authorities. Women allies, on the other hand, tend to just lend a listening ear, because they know that if a woman were to go to the police every single time she is harassed, she would have time for nothing else. That is how often it happens. 

It takes a well-meaning but partially informed man to write a heroine who is molested for the first time in her life when she is in her 20s/30s/thereabouts.

Most women who file official complaints do so when a particular attack drives them over the edge either because of its severity or for some other specific reason. Madhuri has no tipping point because she has never before been similarly targeted. 

It is a measure of Warrier’s arresting screen presence and acting, and the genuine concern Unni and director Rosshan Andrrews evidently have for women, that with all its flaws, Prathi Poovankozhi remains an engaging film. 

The title literally translates to “The Accused Rooster”, a play on words and the gender of most harassers since “kozhi” is Malayalam slang for a womaniser, a man of questionable morality and so on. 

Prathi Poovankozhi has been adapted for the big screen by Unni from his own short story Sankadam. It reunites Andrrews and Warrier after the former directed the superstar in 2014’s How Old Are You?, her comeback film following her post-marriage hiatus. 

This new film is both relatable and unrelatable, heartening and exasperating at the same time. It does not have the intellectual depth of director Sanal Kumar Sashidharan’s Ozhivudivasathe Kali (An Off-Day Game), which was based on another of Unni’s stories. That one showed an astonishing grasp of caste and gender politics. It also did not feature a single excessive moment, word, shot or scene. 

Prathi Poovankozhi is weighed down by a string of superfluities. The background score, for instance, shoots through the rooftop every time the villainous Antappan comes on screen, as if to beat into our skulls the point that he is the bad guy here. Madhuri has a mother with whom she is inexplicably perennially impatient. Alencier Ley Lopez plays a close family friend with whom she shares an entire playful song right at the start, which seems to indicate that he will later play a crucial role, but he contributes not a milli-inch of a difference to the plot. 

Grace Antony from Kumbalangi Nights plays a sweeper who looks important and says ominous-sounding things, which suggest that at some point we will get to know more about her or her association with Antappan. Ultimately, she too adds up to nought. 

More troubling is the satellite character played by Anusree – Madhuri’s best friend and colleague at the sari store, whose flirtations and relationships with several men seem, on the surface, to have been written into the script merely for their comedy value. A later conversation in which her deception involves a child-like innocent man seems to indicate though that she has been placed there to also assert that while the accused in this film may be a poovankozhi, the piddakozhi (hen) in our society ain’t no saint either.

This seems like Messrs Unni and Andrrews pre-empting the wrath of men who claim victimhood and float the hashtag #NotAllMen each time women speak up about discrimination. C’mon!

The only satellite character whose presence makes a legitimate point is the policeman played by Saiju Kurup. Through him we are reminded that sexual predators are everywhere, which of course contradicts the point earlier made when portraying the assault on the bus as unprecedented for Madhuri. 

That said, the usually dependable Kurup’s acting here is semi-comical and confusing. Competent artistes like Anusree and Antony are wasted in this film. In Anusree’s case this is a pity because she does manage to be funny while enacting her character’s shenanigans. 

Warrier, however, is well utilised and delivers an immersive performance as Madhuri. Watching her, you can almost see her rage physically and mentally consuming her. 

Andrrews has done well to step into the part of the creepy Antappan. Just seeing his expression when he mauls Madhuri sent a chill down my spine. He should, however, be held to account for roping Lopez into this project. When a man with grievous allegations of sexual wrongdoing against him is cast as a considerate friend of a woman battling sexual violence in a film, it is ironic, distracting and self-defeating. 

Cinematically and ideologically then, Prathi Poovankozhi is wracked with problems. Yet, whatever the criticisms of the film may be, it is also true that it is convincing and moving in part because Madhuri’s anger does not come from the same “avenging angel” cliché that birthed 22 Female Kottayam and Puthiya Niyamam in which unreal women survivors hatch elaborate schemes for vengeance. Madhuri’s actions in the final scene are realistic because they stem from a spontaneous anger that causes her to explode momentarily as a woman might, as women have been known to on occasion, in real life. 

The see-saw of emotions she runs through in the closing minutes of Prathi Poovankozhi – a sudden confusion in a darkened, decrepit house followed by a calm before an internal churn and finally, an eruption – are handled perfectly, barring the loud music. Madhuri’s brilliantly beautiful, credible rage lifts Prathi Poovankozhi above its own failings.

Rating (out of 5 stars): 2.5

CBFC Rating (India):
U 
Running time:
102 minutes

This review has also been published on Firstpost:




Friday, August 2, 2019

REVIEW 716: SATHYAM PARANJA VISHWASIKKUVO?

Release date:
Kerala: July 12, 2019
Delhi: July 26, 2019
Director:
G. Prajith
Cast:





Language:
Biju Menon, Samvrutha Sunil, Alencier Ley Lopez, Saiju Kurup, Dinesh Prabhakar, Sudhi Koppa, Srikanth Murali, Sumangal Singha Roy, Sruthy Jayan, Musthafa, Bhagath Manuel
Malayalam


Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? (Will you believe me if I tell you the truth?) places a cover-up at the centre of a slice-of-life saga steeped in alcohol and amorality. The setting is small-town Kerala where Suni (Biju Menon) and his gang of buddies work as masons and swill alcohol in every spare moment. Suni is married to Geetha (Samvrutha Sunil) with whom he has a daughter. As he depletes his savings and his limited social standing with his perennial drunkenness, his lack of responsibility begins to erode their relationship.

Like scores of heroes before him in Malayalam cinema, like Siby Sebastian in Venu’s Carbon and P.R. Akash in Sathyan Anthikad’s Njan Prakashan just last year, it seems not to occur to Suni that a straight path is one of life's options. He also just does not see that he is responsible for his dire circumstances, and salvation will come with his own choices.

A dramatic turn of events offers Suni and his friends that lifeboat they have been hoping would “save them” even as they have chosen to drown themselves in a river of booze. Up to that point and thereafter, what makes Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? different from many other Malayalam films with similar male protagonists is that it does not romanticise these men and their self-destructive ways. They may themselves view their alcohol obsession as normal, but the film does not, as is evident from the hell they put themselves through and the hero's decisions in the denouement. The messaging comes couched in hilarious, believable scenes woven together so finely, imbued so deeply with cultural insights and narrated so realistically that they feel like a close friend's video on a real-life Suni rather than a fiction feature.

None of this should be a surprise considering that Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? is directed by G. Prajith who earlier made Oru Vadakkan Selfie (2015) and is written by Sajeev Pazhoor who wrote the smashing Thondimuthalum Driksakshiyum (2017). There are some thematic and plot borrowings from both – a laggard’s get-rich-quick fantasy, an elopement defying parental opposition, a theft – but this film is unlike either of those two. For one, Suni and Geetha’s financial condition is truly pathetic. For another, in terms of visual scale, Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? is a smaller film. And that is not all.

The film’s sense of humour, realism and observant socio-political eye are its primary selling points. Its cast is another. Making a comeback to acting after a post-marriage hiatus, Samvrutha Sunil delivers a wistful performance that explains fan nostalgia for her. She gets less screen time than the men but leaves her imprint on every scene featuring her Geetha.


Biju Menon was born to play men like Suni. By now he probably knows the happy-go-lucky chappie with crackpot plans like the back of his hands, but he lends a degree of pathos to Suni that sets this man apart from the other characters he has played in recent years. 

The supporting cast is top notch. A word here for Sudhi Koppa who spends most of Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? lying about and being sloshed, yet owns the film with that one amusing scene in which his long-term friends first discover his official name. Sruthy Jayan as the tellingly nicknamed Highway Jessy and the forever-dependable Saiju Kurup as a creep pretending to be a nice guy are both impactful.

For the most part then, Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? is entertaining, engrossing and intelligent. The satellite track about two sets of rival local politicians is neither intelligible nor absorbing, but it is not long enough to mar the rest of the proceedings.

The one cliché in this film comes when it romanticises the unswervingly loyal wife of an ass who has squandered away their comforts, and sort of villainises her brothers who offer her an escape from this marriage. Suni is likeable almost entirely because he is played by the charming Biju Menon, and nothing in the writing of this character explains why he has earned the stable, level-headed Geetha’s attention, attraction or affection, an affection so deep that she was not swayed by the massive class divide between them and turned her back on the father she loved to be with him. This guy is a liar, a thief and a wastrel. He does nothing to deserve her devotion. The onset of their married life and moments of quiet domesticity play out over a song. We are given barely any insight into the depth of their relationship. No scintillating conversations. No glimpses of a shared worldview. We are simply expected to accept that she fell in love with him and continues to love him because Sajeev Pazhoor says so.

Where Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? does get adventurous is with the inclusion of the character played by Assamese actor Sumangal Singha Roy in Suni’s group at one point. Migrant workers from eastern and north eastern India are usually airily clubbed together as “Bangali” and treated as an aside in Malayalam cinema (as they are in Kerala society), rarely given the respect that was accorded to them in Njan Prakashan. Here though, Roy is shown as part of a local Malayali family. He also speaks only in Malayalam. This makes him a dual surprise. First, because the othering and/or marginal presence of the so-called “Bangali” is the Mollywood norm, whereas this film is inclusive. Second, because non-Malayali, non-southerners are rarely if ever shown speaking Malayalam in Malayalam films – they are usually shown speaking Hindi. While this by and large mirrors the twin realities that Hindi bhaashiswho are a politically dominant group in India – tend to expect those outside their region too to know Hindi and additionally that Hindi has spread outside the Hindi belt due to this among other reasons, it is also a reflection of what seems to be the average Malayali’s (possibly sub-conscious) inferiority complex about Malayalam that leads to a self-defeating assumption that no non-Malayali would know or care enough to speak Malayalam – some people do, let us represent them too in stories. Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? does, and what a breath of fresh air it is.

Particularly because it does something so different in this matter, the throwaway line about Hindi in the closing scene is inexplicable. Coming as it does in a film that otherwise knows how to be comical without being casual, this fleeting mindlessness is irritating.

One of the most precious moments in terms of a larger social comment in Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? comes in a mob scenario during which humans swarm like insects and vultures over an accident site. It is a scene designed to evoke revulsion for those creatures as they shrug off every shred of their dignity and let greed take over their beings. What really works here is that they are not merely brushed aside as unidentifiable masses. Cinematographer Shehnad Jalal’s camera, which had pulled back to give us a long shot of the crowd, then closes in on one of them, a self-righteous member of the community who turns out to be no better than the rest. (This is one of the few scenes in which Jalal does anything close to being grand in Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? – for the most part his work in the film remains compact and unassuming.)

Sathyam Paranja Vishwasikkuvo? has a lot to say. It is also a real hoot.  

Rating (out of five stars): ***

CBFC Rating (India):
UA
Running time:
130 minutes 

This review has also been published on Firstpost:


Poster courtesy: