A lazy story best not told
With Gangs of Wasseypur, Anurag Kashyap cemented the genre of dark humour and crime stories set in small towns. Sattwik Mohanty’s Ranchi Diaries is the laziest attempt in the genre.
The film revolves around a young girl who wants to become a pop singer and her friends. How her friends land in trouble, thanks to a corrupt politician who is attracted to the girl, and how they escape forms the entire narrative.
Even the filmmakers appear to be lost regarding the direction and purpose of their work. The film lacks coherence and there is no method behind its madness.
You would expect seasoned actors like Jimmy Shergill and Anupam Kher, who have proved their acting abilities many times over, to get something as basic as their diction right. Alas, they don’t. Ranchi Diaries shows people speaking ‘Bihari Hindi’ in an English accent. Only two young actors speak convincingly. In terms of performances too, everyone seems to be sleepwalking film.
The film comes armed with enough clunky references – local goons roam around in an old van as a Hindi ode to Godfather plays in the background; there is also a Hindi poster of the classic. They want to take tips from a book called “Mahasagar Gyarah” as they prepare for a bank robbery.
From ‘Naxali gang’ to corrupt politicians, lazy cops to street-smart local goons and even ‘jihadi farishtey’, there are several moments when we wait, and hope, that the film will redeem itself. It does not even try.
This is a film which, when called to dive headlong into action, prefers to chew paan in a corner. Jimmy Shergill’s character perfectly embodies the listlessness that ails Ranchi Diaries. He plays a police officer who is supposed to catch robbers holed up inside a bank. Instead of doing something, anything, to catch them, he prefers to sit in a jeep all night outside the bank.