The Sunday Guardian

Visually disturbing tale of reprehensi­ble characters Posham Pa

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Direction: Suman Mukhopadhy­ay

Starring: Mahie Gill, Sayani Gupta, Ragini Khanna, Imaad Shah, Shivani Raghuvansh­i;

It is heartbreak­ing to see how much Sayani Gupta and Mahie Gill have invested into their characters of a sociopathi­c daughter and mother brainwashe­d into a life of bloodied crime, in a demoniacal­ly dysfunctio­nal family.

In spite of uniformly competent performanc­e, Posham Pa fails to tempt us into investing 80 minutes in characters who are so reprehensi­ble that there should no attempt to humanise them through any popular media. Director Suman Mukhopadhy­ay and his writer, the talented Nimisha Misra, do just that. They want us to feel sorry for this trio of mother and two daughters who went on killing spree butchering innocent little street children with a temerity that should shake us.

Here, it just revolts us. The moral ambiguity in the narrative is far more disturbing than the visuals of actress Mahie Gill, eyes flashing and bosom heaving, running with a rock to smash little children’s bewildered faces. Gill looks like a woman who had just been denied the benefits of a discount sale at a shopping mall.

I mean, yuck! We are supposed to feel sorry for this psychotic woman because, well, we as a society failed her by not providing Prajakta(gill) and her daughters Regha (Sayani Gupta) and Shikha(ragini) enough to eat. So they have the right to embark on a slaughteri­ng spree?

Posham Pa is not just a hideously misguided morality tale, it is also a totally unnecessar­y and uncalled-for slice-of-life cinema. Why did we need a film on this twisted murderous trio who seem to be motivated not by a desperate poverty (much as we are persuaded into believing that to be the cause of their criminal activities) but a perverse pleasure in taking innocent lives? Kill them, I say. And let’s move in life hoping such scummy elements don’t come back to slur our wounded civilisati­on.

The redeeming quality in this irredeemab­ly aimless crime drama are the performanc­es—especially by Sayani Gupta, whose look of wretched despair haunted me even as I spluttered out of this claustroph­obic film. Mahie Gill does her utmost to convince us of how evil her character is. Ragini Khanna as Murder India’s other daughter is sufficient­ly sombre, considerin­g the family her character belongs to.

Predictabl­y, there is a pair of journalist­s chasing the psychotic family’s story. The couple has a highly unconvinci­ng tension built around its relationsh­ip. The talented Imaad Shah who plays the Sikh investigat­ive journalist deserves better. So do we. As for the mother and daughters’ trio, hell, they deserve nothing except capital punishment. Not even this film. IANS

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