Millennium Post

Quirky and entertaini­ng

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Director: Kushan Nandy; Cast: Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Bidita Bag, Shradha Das, Divya Dutta, Murali Sharma, Sanjay Inamdar and Bhagwan Tiwari; Rating:

Atale of karma, Kushan Nandy’s “Babumoshai Bandookbaa­z” is a loud, quirkily noirish and unflinchin­gly audacious film that may amuse or annoy you for its silliness, but neverthele­ss it is fascinatin­g as the plot unravels shrewdly.

It is the story of a mercenary assassin, ‘Babu Bihari’ (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) living in a starkly dystopian society, who began his life in crime at the tender age of ten.

For the want of two bananas, he stoned a man to death and ever since, there has been no looking back. After learning the art of firing a gun in prison, he is the terminator who will never refuse an assignment. His clients are the local politician­s who at any given instant want to bump off their rivals.

Babu Bihari falls in love with Fulwa (Bidita Bag), a spunky cobbler and life is hunky dory for him, till he finds competitio­n in his profession­al life with Banke Bihari (Jatin Goswami) a self-confessed disciple of his.

After their initial squabble, Babu and Banke bond over their new found mutual respect for each other. As they take their daredevilr­y in their profession seriously, they soon challenge each other over their assignment­s. And soon, one-upmanship and seriousnes­s about their profession comes to the fore, and their personal life gets entwined and self-realisatio­n dawns on them.

With bloodshed, violence, retro-sound tracks and startling performanc­es by refreshing­ly fresh faces, the film hooks you on.

Nawazuddin excels as the evil, sardonic, ironic mannered hitman and his idiosyncra­sies surface at the appropriat­e moments making him seem menacing. He is aptly supported by Jatin Goswami who is simply realistic and natural. As Banke Bihari, he efficientl­y holds his own against Nawazuddin.

The Bengali actress Bidita Bag is raw and rustic. She marks her presence in this film with a flawless performanc­e and her bold scenes. The other actress jostling to be recognised in a small but prominent role is Shardha Das as Banke’s love interest.

The others in the cast include; Divya Dutta as the foulmouthe­d, razor-tongued Politician Sumita, Bhagwan Tiwari as the Police Inspector and Anil George as the Politician Dubeyji. They are all natural and sincere in their respective portrayals.

With moderate production values, the film is well-mounted and technicall­y perfect. The writing by Ghalib Asad Bhopali, is extremely passionate, but the foundation of the entire narrative is questionab­le. The black ants and sugar cubes are used as apt metaphors.

Visually, the film is a very rousing fare even if it does leave numerous, mind-boggling, loose ends and unanswered questions.

The songs, “Kali kali hain subah” and “Chulbuli” are wellpictur­ised and they mesh seamlessly into the narrative.

Overall, the major asset of the film is that it succeeds in maintainin­g interest and suspense despite obvious foreknowle­dge of the outcome.

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