Directed by: Anurag Kashyap
Starring: Ranbir Kapoor, Anushka
Sharma, Karan Johar
Released: 2015
My rating: destroy
every copy ? horrible ? bad ? whatever ? flawed
but enjoyable - good ? great ?
amazing
It
was supposed to be larger than life movie, the new triumph for Ranbir
Kapoor. It was supposed to wow the masses and gather laurels from the
critics, and Anurag Kashyap was supposed to be basking in tsunami of
appreciation. It was not to be though and Bombay Velvet, boasting of
unheard-of amount of money poured into it, took leave of the cinemas
way too soon for any profit. What went wrong? How come all the
heralded opulence failed to attract the crowds? Perhaps the lengthy
story telling was partly to blame, but truth to be told, this is
another of those famous flops which I personally was intrigued to
watch.
Bombay
Velvet is sure interesting. Different. It takes the outline of some
of the popular tropes, but then strips them of their basics. And so
the main protagonist Johnny Balraj (Ranbir Kapoor) is one of those
ill-treated children from the streets, rising to opportunity through
the wrong means, but unlike so many heroes before him he does not
have an ailing Maa and nobody raped his behen, nor a dead Petaji to
avenge. Indeed, there is no excuse for his damnation-worthy lack of
values, which teach us that it is better to starve than to get
involved in any dishonest deal. Johnny could not care less. He wants
to be a ?Big Shot?. He is ruthless, but not completely without
conscience, and what he does best is really to look after himself.
Perhaps that is the source of conflict that has arisen in the
viewers? minds? The hero is actually no hero. His desires are common
and average, and Johnny actually does not act out of ordinary in any
way. I mean, sure, he sometimes kills a person or two, but given his
?job? and circumstances, isn?t this how most people would
behave. Johnny does not even have any super quality. He does not
outsmart the smart ones, he does not break tables by punching twenty
villains at the same time. To me Johnny Balraj was really just a
simple crook with dreams that were not even that big. Just give him
some dirty izzat, some money, the girl he loves and he?ll be just
fine.
Ranbir
Kapoor as Johnny is quite brilliant, as usual, changing in front of
the camera yet again, as easily as chameleon changes colours. There
is not a single moment when you wouldn?t think of him as the
character, his body language, his intonation, everything is on point.
Performances are strong overal ? for the first time I was truly
impressed by Anushka Sharma. Once I decided to ignore her infamous
lips, I was drawn to her silent force. Indeed, her eyes did all the
talking for most of the film. But she too is atypical heroine. Far
from virginal, far from lamenting her fate, she does not expect a
hero to rescue her from her plight, and once she actually finds a guy
who genuinely loves her, she throws any previous obligations out of
the window. And she has very few regrets. Sadly her re-introduction
as Rita is one of the most bewildering and puzzling decisions one
could think of, marring the logic of the movie.
The
surprise package of the movie has to be Karan Johar. Previously known
on the big screen as ?the nerdy friend from DDLJ? he cuts a very
decent villain, in spite of his feeble voice, there is nothing
cartoonish about his. He generates enough threatening feelings for
the film to run smoothly ahead. The one walking away with the short
stick is Raveena Tandon, who appears without reasons during two of
the songs, all covered in peacock feathers. Lots has been promised as
far as the sets, costumes and visuals go, and while everything seems
appropriate, fitting, I never had the larger than life feeling which
I get when watching anything Bhansali. In fact most of Anushka?s
outfits seemed in bad need of fixing, some looked simply cheap. I
actually had to wonder where all the money went...
When
Bombay Velvet promos first appeared, people kept blasting them,
saying Ranbir is merely hoping for his own Agneepath. Bombay Velvet
is nothing like Agneepath or any other film in that vein. There is no
redemption, no justification. For all the megalomanic claims it
remains a touching, interesting, but believable story about normal
people on the darker side of the society.
No comments:
Post a Comment