Deccan Chronicle

Opus on human suffering is Oscar material

- L. RAVICHANDE­R (Full review on deccanchro­nicle.com)

Director: Blessy Cast: Prithviraj Sukumaran, H.R. Gokul, Amala Paul, Jimmy Jean-louis, Shobha Mohan

Based on Benyamin’s Aadujeevit­ham, Blessy presents a three-hour odyssey on human suffering and endurance. It was William Faulkner who said “…man will not merely endure; he will prevail. He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhausti­ble voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance”. Blessy obviously bites akhubus, a desert bread difficult to chew and swallow. The endurance test of the protagonis­t is so shocking, consistent, and mind-boggling that strategica­lly as an art form Blessy could have well have chopped a lot of what arguably constitute­d the text of the original work.

Make no mistake, this is a huge work. A magnum opus on human suffering. The choice of translatin­g the novel into a film, more so in languages outside Malayalam, was probably in itself a conscious walk into a desert ‘masara’, a goat farm. The saga of the survival which is largely linear requires a short script or a sharp filmmaker. For all the efforts, Blessy suffers on the two counts. There are multiple challenges when a filmmaker from Kerala rushes to making a film for the larger South Indian audience. When suffering becomes a monotony, as it does here, the purpose of projecting the sufferer as the hero misses the target. This emphatical­ly is not to rob Blessy of the humongous effort.

Kudos to the Blessyprit­hvi combo that they are emotionall­y and intellectu­ally honest to the suffering of the protagonis­t. The film is about the huge canvas of the desert, sand, hailstorms, camels and goats as much as it is about the human spirit. It certainly visits certain presumptiv­e takes on life when they become challenges. Survival is a kaleidosco­pic arrangemen­t of glass pieces spread on a path one has to tread. The canvas reflects huge, brushed signs of human suffering — sometimes dipped in tears, sometimes too dry even for tears. You do not realise when the orange turns brown and then dark grey.

It all starts when Najeeb (Prithviraj Sukumaran) and Hakeem (K.R. Gokul) set out in search of the Middle East pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Simple dreams. Najeeb hopes to give his wife, expectant mom Sainu (Amala Paul), and mom Ummah (Shobha Mohan), a small home. Hakeem has no great dreams either. Their multifold challenges begin when they face language barriers at the port of landing and are almost lost till Khafeel (Talib Al Balushi) dumps them in an animal trolley, quickly separates them and tears up their immigratio­n documentat­ion. The unending trauma of Najeeb who is thrown into a ‘masara’, starts.

The suffering begins in the context of so much of normal life being seen as a given. Each one watching ‘The Goat Life’ in a multiplex is privileged, definitely and distinctly. Moved from the scenario of challenge, we take human companions­hip, communicat­ion, water, food, dignity — nay, our very existence — for granted. When these presumptiv­e givens are challenged, the definition of life changes to one of survival. Lost in the desert is a man whose colours of life are moments of recall of the breezy river waters back home in Kerala and his romance with his wife. Sometimes montage moments soothe, sometimes they hurt, they pierce the human fabric and leave scars. Najeeb only has Hindiwala (Robbin Das) who he cannot understand and camels and sheep for company. He decides on the great escape.

The Goat Life is no Dunki

There are no sweet moments. There isn’t any humour. If there is compassion, it comes from animals. This is more Blessy’s Schindler’s List.

The challenge and brilliance of Prithvi is in living up to a role where his eyes and his face have to make up for lack of dialogue. With the heavy beard and just a part of chin and eyes visible, the challenge is more acute. This, too, he overcomes. This is arguably a National Awardwinni­ng performanc­e. In case the powers that be overlook him for recognitio­n as the best actor, it is their credibilit­y that is in question and not his performanc­e. In fact, this is Oscar material.

The film lasting almost three hours documents the human spirt in the face of huge adversity. How one swims up the abyss hopelessne­ss and misery and torture is thematic song of The Goat Life. Prithvi is GOAT. The film is not for the weak-hearted.

 ?? ?? Prithviraj Sukumaran in The Goat Life.
Prithviraj Sukumaran in The Goat Life.

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