The Asian Age

Shaandaar: Dud characters in a stinking plot

- SUPARNA SHARMA

We know that potty, poop, crap, faeces, shit don’t shit. But Bollywood is an exception. Anything can happen there. There is the standard Bollywood shit: romances around families, in colleges, across the border, in foreign locales, in havelis; and there’s papa/ parivaar/ desh ki izzat ke liye ladai.

These are films by those whose worldview is born of and nurtured by Bollywood. Writers and directors who consume Bollywood and then excrete it. This year we’ve had, with excruciati­ng regularity, films regurgitat­ed from formulaic screenplay that are past and spurious.

We are used to this same old shit. But now, imagine, if Bollywood’s standard stinking shit were to take a dump.

That shit, that poop has been served this week. And they are calling it Shaandaar.

This shit’s shit has been produced by not one but three Bollywood worthies — commercial king Karan Johar, indie diva Anurag Kashyap and Bollywood’s indie hope, Vikramadit­ya Motwane. I shit you not.

The film begins with Naseeruddi­n Shah’s voiceover and cartoons to tell a fairytale. There’s Bipin, his evil Mummyji ( Sushma Seth), a nondescrip­t biwi, their daughter Isha, and the wide- eyed orphan, Alia, he brings home one day. Mummyji disapprove­s but Alia is not one to wilt. Tenacious and wicked, she gives it back to Mummyji in exploding doses. Bipin and Isha love Alia. But she’s an orphan and this sad fact robs her of sleep. She stays up all night, every night, talks to night animals, gathers trivia to irritate us. It’s cute and should have stayed that way. But the film takes a leap. Cartoon is

replaced by real actors and real places and there on begins a long, worthless journey that’ll consume almost three precious hours of what’s left of your life. Beeps ( Pankaj Kapoor), as Alia calls Bipin, worries about her and makes little sketches of dreams she can dream when she sleeps. But she doesn’t. So he decides, mann hi mann mein , that he’ll marry her to the one who makes her sleep. He awaits a rajkumar who will rescue his sleepless beauty.

Rajkumar arrives on a bike, smoking and making smoky eyes. Papaji, as Jagjinder Joginder ( Shahid Kapoor) calls Beeps, is not impressed. But JJ is bewitched. He sees Alia and things happen. Dragonflie­s embossed on her clothes start to fly, heavens shower petal.

And, lo and behold! JJ too can’t sleep. He too has a sad story.

She’s an ullu, he’s an ullu ka pattha, and that makes us ullu ke patthe barati who have spent our precious money to watch this shit.

Of course, there is some sort of plot about a marriage that’s really a business deal motivated by bankruptcy and engineered by the evil Mummyji though Sushma Seth looks scarily fragile, not evil at all.

The Fundwanis arrive, in gold, led by Harry Fundwani ( Sanjay Kapoor). They bling us and the film blind, and then they cease to be, except Robin ( Vikas Verma) who is to wed Isha.

An English country house carved out of north Indian phoren fetish serves as the grand stage for all involved to display their monumental stupidity.

What ensues is a desi familial tale with a Broadway musical hangover.

It’s a cuckoo idea and could have been fun. But that required execution. Not intermitte­nt choreograp­hy performed to terrible songs while the rest of the time we must sit and admire the great comic genius hidden in characters’ names, force out laughter at jokes that are decidedly limp, and suffer tedious nonsense courtesy hash brownies and magic mushrooms.

There’s no story, no romance. Just a garbled scheme of things.

The writer- director and his two female co- writers ( Anvita Dutt and Chaitally Parmar) seem to think that a game of chupan- chupai between the lead pair constitute­s romance.

Cretinous Robin does get to drive the plot a bit, by poking fun at “healthy” Isha. This leads to a big hug for the big girl from all those who love her.

The film has such an incredibly warped view of being fat that it ties itself in knots repeatedly, and can only slither out of it by way of a big hug. Love heals all, you see.

There are about two heartwarmi­ng moments in all, thanks to Pankaj Kapoor. But each one sinks into stupendous stupidity only too soon.

And then come the mother of all inanities — mehendi with Karan, where Alia Bhatt again gets the buzzer but doesn’t redeem herself.

The incestuous­ness is staggering.

After Chillar Party ( 2011) and Queen ( 2014), Vikas Behl has made Shaandaar. It’s the sort of screenplay that should have made him vomit. It’s a septic tank full of stinking ideas Bollywood had used and excreted several times over.

Watching the film is like wading through waist- deep muck lit- tered with dead ideas, dud characters, rotting cliches.

Cute Alia gets the full attention of the cinematogr­apher and the audience, but seems listless and a bit out of it all. In any case, she has no character except that she can’t sleep till she sleeps.

The film thinks that two dimpled people smiling at each other is romance. Well, the lead pair is hardly riveting. They emit bada bhai- choti behen vibes. Only the rakhi is missing.

Shahid Kapoor and Pankaj Kapoor create more chemistry.

But then, Pankaj Kapoor can generate chemistry with a pink phantom bull.

Vikas Verma and Sanah Kapoor could have made a much more interestin­g pair and were much better than the film’s Alisters put together.

Didn’t Anurag Kashyap grandly announce earlier this year that he’s pakki kutti with this country and Bollywood? Didn’t he, after that great disaster called Bombay Velvet, say to the effect that “I’m so great, can’t bear this mediocrity any more, I’m moving to France”?

Why hasn’t he? Why is he still here and funding crap?

I mean, hypocrisy is one thing. But this is a broken promise.

Or did France reject him after watching Bombay Velvet?

We could all, you know, try and put in a word and make France an offer — take him and we’ll give another free. Karan Johar.

Since his pakki kutti with Shah Rukh Khan has led him to invest time and money in such filth, he could go there to detox, settle Kashyap in. Or the other way round. One of their passports needs to be thrown into the Mediterran­ean. Because together they are only making shaandaar shit. Like, twice already.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India