The Sunday Guardian

Irrepressi­ble dreams, trapped in stereotype­s Lipstick Under My Burkha

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Director: Alankrita Shrivastav Starring: Ratna Pathak Shah, Konkona Sen Sharma, Sushant Singh, Shashank Arora, Vikrant Massey, Ahana Kumra, Plabita Borthakur The much-awaited Lipstick Under My Burkha is a bold and brutally honest film about the unbridled dreams of four women, trapped in their lives owing to societal norms and stereotype­s.

Set in a middle-class mohalla ( locality) in Bhopal, the film centres around the lives of the four protagonis­ts —Usha Parmar aka Buaji, (Ratna Pathak Shah), an elderly widow, who supresses her deep-seated physical desires, Shireen Aslam (Konkona Sen Sharma), a sales girl who does a job without her husband’s knowledge as she is a mere sex object for her husband who has scant regard for her feelings, Leela (Ahana Kumra), who loves a photograph­er Arshad (Vikrant Massey), and Rehana (Plabita Borthakur), a collegian who is a musician at heart and finds her ‘burkha’ stifling as it confines her.

How each of them lead an unhappy and uncomforta­ble life and secretly long to be someone else, forms the crux of the film.

Although the four protagonis­ts are not related to each other in the film, the dexterous manner in which their lives are interwoven is laudable and speaks volumes for the cleverly crafted screenplay.

The actors portray their characters with panache and sincerity, each one becoming the character they are essaying.

Ratna Pathak Shah although distinct in her typical style, essays the sexually repressed Buaji’ with the requisite restraint and candour befitting her calibre as an actor. Konkona Sen Sharma as Shireen, is brilliant as always but does not offer anything that one has not seen her do before. It is Plabita as the split personalit­y Rihana who steps out of her ‘burkha’ and is a different person who renders a realistic performanc­e, as does Ahana Kumra. She is a bohemian, dauntless girl who is unapologet­ic about her physical needs and lives life on her terms.

Sushant Singh as the chauvinist­ic husband of Shireen Aslam is natural and convincing. Vikram Massey as Arshad, essays his character with honesty and is impressive. Other actors in supporting roles like the swimming instructor, Rehana’s father and Dhruv, Rihana’s friend, are equally sincere and praisewort­hy.

Director Alankrita Shrivastav­a, manages to take the audience into the lives of her four protagonis­ts with ease. The layered screenplay debunking myths about women in small towns and their bottled-up dreams and desires is well-written. The use of erotica which ‘Buaji’ secretly reads to propel the narrative forward, metaphoric­ally linking it to the lives of all four protagonis­ts is astutely handled.

There are times when the situations in the film seem a tad exaggerate­d and sometimes unnecessar­y, but presumably Alankrita takes those liberties to establish the regularity and consistenc­y of her protagonis­ts’ lives.

The music is basic and gets lost somewhere in the back- drop as the characters on screen and their lives keep you riveted. The first half is a bit slow but thankfully the pace gathers momentum post interval.

The last scene appears a bit theatrical and forced to establish the supremacy of women over society in context of the realisatio­n of their dreams, yet ties, in the lives of the four protagonis­ts succinctly.

Technicall­y, the film is skillfully mounted with moderate production values. The editing by Charu Shree Roy deserves a special mention.

Overall, the hype surroundin­g this film is bound to get you to watch it and disappoint it wont. IANS

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