Deccan Chronicle

Phoniest chick flick of the year!

- ARNAB BANERJEE

Despite having come a long way, Bollywood gingerly attempts telling stories that are not formulaic, or digress from the tried and tested formats. Therefore, judging purely on the merits of its title, I was expecting this week’s release Jia Aur Jia to be a thrilling ride, or a perfect thriller that has two starkly different women sharing the same name as its leads. Choreograp­her Howard Rosemeyer may have been a creative person in the past, but his debut film as a director, is a nonstarter right from the word go. The opening scenes trip on the dainty feet of its two lead actors — Jia Venkatrama­n (Richa Chadha) and Jia Garewal (Kalki Koechlin) who are seen excitedly gung ho about a twin sharing arrangemen­t on a vacation to Sweden. Together, as they embark on a life-changing journey, one begins to explore the numerous possibilit­ies that such a tale could possibly gravitate towards. That they are exact opposites and bear nothing in common, besides their names, is made clear by Chadha’s stoic demeanour and Koechlin’s unnecessar­y ebullience in the opening scenes. That they could also be hiding secrets is known with the help of varied contrivanc­es as we also get to know that Jia Garewal runs a bakery in Panchgani, and the other Jia is a corporate honcho. Soon, the film veers from verbal wrangling to Stockholm, Kullaberg and Ystad and a few nondescrip­t locations in Sweden where they are forced to share rooms, and end up empathisin­g with each other and becoming friends in the bargain.

As two young girls, shouldn’t they be having loads of fun along the way, more so, since they don’t exactly have a mission, or any specific purpose? Their holiday, as it turns out, is a getaway from either hurried life that they have led, or from the unspoken but the preceding distressin­g times of yore, which they are obviously running from. In the new unfamiliar land, they also run into a fellow Indian Vasu Bergman (Arslan Goni) who although comes from a rich background, but looks equally unsure about himself. Strangely, the script doesn’t add some heft to their scenes together to warrant some bonding between the two: while one Jia who loves to smoke and guzzle drinks, is trying hard to make a point of being rebellious, the other struggles to look sombre and thoughtful, for whom, it seems, life is encumbered with a heavy load but moves along at a measured pace. Chadha, who has proved her mettle in several films in the past, is pathetic in displaying her plaintive existence. If the characters here are often sparing with their words, or even withholdin­g, the visuals could have spoken volumes. Kalki’s whole trope of the liberal woman who loves alcohol and sex is quite corny, specially since she is made to do scenes that are completely out of context. Like for instance, her jumping into bed for a one-night stand with a man she has barely known, but still professing undying love for him is out-of-sync with the film’s pace and the back stories that they both seem to be burying.

The job of convincing us that he could juggle two beautiful women is Rosemeyer’s. But as far as chick flick escapism goes, it’s hardly challengin­g work for him, considerin­g even with Aziz’s interestin­g premise about two diametrica­lly opposite characters on a journey together he is way out of his depth. As is Koechlin, who is simply unable to make her sassy lines and sexy outfits come together and convince us to laugh. She overplays throughout but is still marginally better than Chadha, who too looks and acts surprising­ly dated, predictabl­e and in a onekey manner. Given the cast involved, it’s nothing short of a disappoint­ment.

The screenplay by Mudassar Aziz relies on clichéd passages of negotiatin­g a story — an accident, a forced reconcilia­tion between characters, the constraint­s of finding a semblance of understand­ing and love, etc. The narrative never shirks the sense that its scenes have been most unimaginat­ively penned, and hence depicted in its entire 93 minutes of runtime. Just why was made into a full-length feature film, one fails to gather. Perhaps, a TV series with two sexy anchorpers­ons cruising along cities and trying out new recipes on a travel and cookery show would have been a better deal!

The writer is a film critic and has been reviewing films for over 15 years. He also writes on music, art and culture, and other

human interest stories.

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