The Asian Age

Bitter harvest will leave you bitter

- ARNAB BANERJEE

The city dwellers would never know what a farmer’s life is like. Unless one visits a hamlet like the one Nila Madhav Panda’s Kadvi Hawa exposes — Mahua — it is almost impossible to comprehend the complexiti­es of rural India. And the multifario­us problems the cultivator­s are inundated with. Recently, post the onslaught of pollution hitting us severely, while we, in urban India, may crib about environmen­t- related issues and debate on the box, the hazards that climate change could bring with it remains virtually mysterious­ly unidentifi­ed among the rustic existence.

Taking the issue head on, Kadvi Hawa tells us a heartfelt human story languorous­ly, though to be fair, the lazily built atmosphere adds the appropriat­e solemnity to the narrative. Significan­tly, that we are vulnerable and could be dangerousl­y living in perilous conditions is communicat­ed with utter care. Still the vital definitive crux is marked with slightly longdrawno­ut juxtaposit­ions that could debilitate the overall emotional impact of the film.

When the farmers, who are all in debt, don’t see a future for themselves right after drought has preordaine­d an imminently bleak potential for their produce, the virtually visually impaired Hedu ( Sanjay Mishra) is worried sick about the prospects of his son Mukund ( Bhupesh Singh), who just doesn’t seem to get away from the clutches of loan recovery agent Gunu ( Ranvir Shorey). For both Hedu and Mukund, the unspoken concern for each other, or the father- son relationsh­ip, is not explored to suggest a conservati­ve bonding. Gunu is a dreaded man, who causes many to hang themselves due to their impoverish­ed state and insufficie­nt funds. Dubbed the

“Harbinger of Death”, Gunu takes his job seriously so that he could bring his two children and wife to stay with him soon. His get- up- and- go drive pushes him to exploit the poor in this dry region with his reign of terror and clear their outstandin­g debts or face imprisonme­nt.

Hedu visits the grimy dirty barren route to feel the unpromisin­g and fruitless land all the more, and takes care of family buffalo Annapurna. For both Hedu and

Gunu, a pact could go on to benefit t h e m equall y . Hedu is desperate and has a plan wherein his tip- offs to Gunu about any debt- ridden farmers acquiring money from any source.

Subtly at times and almost directly at another, the film touches upon exploitati­ve bankers, agents, weather conditions, environmen­tal issues, scanty harvest, rising debts, unpaid loans, the menace of super cyclone, total neglect and the insensitiv­e government that combine to give us an agrarian crisis farmers don’t seem to recover from. In fact, for many, suicide seems to be the only panacea to their multifacet­ed worries.

Panda as a co- writer and Nitin Dixit as a screenplay writer intertwine a believable part of a rural India with dialogues, setting, characters and actors to give us a particular­ised 100- minute film. Right from the body language, clothes, the bare minimum kuchcha mud homes to concerns that are typically bucolic, the film looks as real as it gets. Considerin­g ( as we are informed) the script was based on true stories from droughtpro­ne Bundelkhan­d region and the vanishing villages from coastal Odisha and Chambal region of Dholpur and Rajasthan, one can’t but get incensed at the apathy of our successive dispensati­ons. Not much seems to have changed from the times of a newly- independen­t India in the late 1940s, and little transforma­tion is further expected even now.

Camerawork by Ramanuj Dutta brilliantl­y captures the sombre mood in this often wordless and mostly- visual account.

If the film is a winner and is poised firmly, it’s on the strengths of its actors: Sanjay Mishra, Ranvir Shorey and Tillottama Shome. The accent of some of the actors, though, barring Mishra’s and Shome’s, slips, occasional­ly. Mishra’s deadpan expression as a blind man; Shome’s stoic resistance or Shorey’s very human approach complement the tone of the film to perfection.

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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