Directed by: Luv Ranjan
Starring: Kartik Tiwari,
Nushrat Bharucha
Released: 2013
Verdict: destroy every
copy ? horrible ? bad ? whatever ? flawed but enjoyable -
good ? great ? amazing
We may have seen students
in love a countless times before, but very rarely does the
relationship seem as effortless and genuine as the one between Akaash
and Vani. There is no big I-Hate-You drama, neither does anyone stalk
the other. Two people take liking to each other and that?s it. It
just felt very natural, believable. Just as the rest of relationships
we encounter throughout the movie. It is actually all more Vani than
Akaash, as hers is the character growth and variety of situations
compared to Akaash.
Going through a truly
agonizing choice between duty to parents and promise to a boy she
loves, Vani actually brings even more agonizing moments on herself.
Some may argue that the guy she is promptly married off to is a
caricature, an evil puppet of a man painted in the darkest colours
for the sake of the film, but unfortunately such men do exist and
they are actually not as scarce as we would like to think. Vani is
less of a wife and more of a robot - and as crude as it sounds - a
masturbation tool. She is being humiliated, looked down upon and
raped. And yet when she tells her parents - they take her husband?s
side. That too was just way too realistic not to strike a chord.
Nushrat Bharucha does a great job as Vani. She is loveable and sweet
at first, but bit by bit the fire is going out until she is pretty
much a walking corpse.
Kartik Tiwari as Akaash is
decent, but I did not think he was the best choice for the role. He
looks too fragile and girly, which may be forgivable in first half,
but once he reappears again one would expect him to be less of a
child and more of a man. His dialogue delivery was bad. Also - even
though I found the couple cute, Kartik and Nushrat do not really
share a chemistry. Sunny Nijar as Vani?s husband is good and he
makes it easy for you to hate him. His character is an insecure,
sexist hypocrite treating his wife like shit and at the same time
still feeling like the most gracious God she should worship with her
every breath. This mentality is not reserved for Indians. I know such
men and have seen such relationships where I live too. I was
wondering if Vani was at least partly to be blamed for all the misery
? after all she did not even try to love the guy, but all in all,
after being raped for the first time, and then again and again, and
never given a thought as a human being... no, I don?t think it was
her fault at all.
Songs are good but some
lyrics are awful (Baby I, your crazy, Lover, You smiling me climbing
tower), and the greatest flaw is the uneven space given to different
stages of the story. Vani?s marital life and her suffering are
seemingly going on forever and after a certain moment it just becomes
way too tiring to watch. It really balances on the point between
gaining sympathy and feeling for Vani and melodramatic emotional
blackmail. Similarly her "happy day" with Akaash after
years was tad too long, not to mention the most "bollywood-ish"
bit of the film - too good to be true.
The climax and ending,
that should potentially be the most intense, is a letdown. It happens
too quickly and doesn?t give any satisfaction to the viewer, who had
been waiting for some serious confrontation with abusive husband and
old-fashioned parents. But if the husband or the parents realize what
really went wrong, we are never shown. Our Akaash Vani have their
filmi ending without much fanfare.
Akaash Vani would have
been better if it had some other hero and really sorted out its
priorities. You can?t give me so much pain and have me shedding so
many tears (I was positively bawling) only to solve it all with a
slap. As if the filmmaker decided he had already shown what he wanted
in the form of marital abuse, and the rest of the story was not
really worth that much attention.
You tell them girl. |
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