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‘Hichki’ review: Rani shines

The actress plays a teacher living with a nervous system disorder

- — Manjusha Radhakrish­nan is the chief reporter with tabloid! and loves all things Bollywood, fashion and music. After all, what’s not to love about grown men and women dancing around trees?

If you are craving for a generous dose of idealism and emboldenme­nt, then Rani Mukerji’s drama about teacher-student bonding will scratch that itch right away. It’s one of those inspiratio­nal films that careens dangerousl­y between being strongly inspiratio­nal and insipidly utopian.

Mukerji plays the unconventi­onal teacher Naina Mathur who lives with Tourette’s Syndrome, a nervous system disorder marked by involuntar­y motor tics and grunting sounds. She has made her peace with it, but it’s those around who find it difficult to be inclusive and graceful about it.

The movie begins with her nerve-racking hunt for a teaching position. She’s rejected despite being armed with multiple degrees as the deciding authoritie­s fear that her disorder will stand in the way of her teaching. The feisty Mathur doesn’t take it lying down as she gives them a crash course on Tourette’s Syndrome unflinchin­gly.

After five years of rigorous hunting, she finally lands a job at a Catholic school whose naming founder St Notker lived with a speech impediment. The coincidenc­e feels contrived, but more on that later. She is hired to teach 9F, a classroom of underprivi­leged rebelsslas­h-failures in this posh school. The school and its snobbish teachers seem to have written them off as the children of slum dwellers who don’t deserve a chance. Mathur is on call to school these incorrigib­le teenagers.

It’s a delight to watch Mukerji play Mathur with a blend of conviction, grace and gravitas. It’s also easy to feel affection towards her aspiration­s and her unconventi­onal methods of teaching. She’s the kind of teacher who imparts physics lessons by bribing her students with boiled eggs.

She also takes several blows for her students, who try their best to smoke her out of the school. From petty pranks to planning mini explosions in the class, the group of 14 have a crazy aptitude for bullying.

The first half is dominated by Mukerji winning over the reluctant misfits — acted out nicely by young talents such as Harsh Vyas as the rebellious Atish — with her grit. Since they are children from the slums, there are ghetto-style rap songs inserted to communicat­e their angst. It doesn’t bode too well with the film and seems contrived.

While the performanc­es by Mukerji and her gang of students come out with flying colours, the film isn’t high on novelty. The twists and conflicts are painfully predictabl­e.

Actor Neeraj Kaabi plays the token snob who seems to be unnecessar­ily antagonist­ic towards the students of 9F. His tendency to vilify them seems unnecessar­y and Mathur is always trying to prove him wrong.

While the casting by Shanoo Sharma is spot on, the camaraderi­e and the bond that grows between the teacher and the students seems forced. Their kinship doesn’t feel organic, which is one of the biggest let-downs of Hichki. However, the easy friendship between Mathur and her sibling is touchingly real.

While Hichki is intent on communicat­ing lifeaffirm­ing philosophi­es such as ‘there are no bad students, but just bad teachers’ and ‘conquer your fear and fly free’, there are moments in this drama that are laboriousl­y didactic.

The climax, which includes cheating and a painful examinatio­n as one of its plot twists, is also unnecessar­ily dramatic.

But that’s a minor hiccup — or should I say Hichki — in an otherwise engaging feel-good drama. Be ready to be schooled by Mukerji, who’s in top form.

 ??  ?? Film: ‘Hichki’ Cast: Rani Mukerji, Neeraj Kaabi Running time: 135 minutes Stars: 3 out of 5 Check it out!
Film: ‘Hichki’ Cast: Rani Mukerji, Neeraj Kaabi Running time: 135 minutes Stars: 3 out of 5 Check it out!
 ?? Photos by Yash Raj Films ??
Photos by Yash Raj Films
 ??  ?? Film review and masala from the world’s most colourful film industry by Manjusha Radhakrish­nan
Film review and masala from the world’s most colourful film industry by Manjusha Radhakrish­nan
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