The Free Press Journal

BANJO: Discordant fantasy

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FILM: Banjo

CAST: Reitesh Deshmukh, Nargis Fakhri, Sheeba George

DIRECTOR: Ravi Jadhav

‘Banjo’ directed by celebrated Marathi Film (Bal Gandharva, Natrang, Balak Palak)director Ravi Jadhav revolves around a non-descript local orchestra band’s road to stardom. This fictional fantasy, has a gritty outlook but it’s not involving in the least. An unrecognis­ed musician, a Banjo player Taraat (shaggy haired Reitesh Deshmukh), finds a promoter in an internatio­nal DJ Kris (played by Nargis Fakhri). How that happens and the unrequited dreams of romance by the Banjo player are what this film is all about.

Kris hears a song from a local banjo band in Mumbai sent by her friend, Mikey (Luke Kenny). She has a brainwave – wants to incorporat­e them in two singles that she hopes to perform at some music festival. So pronto, she arrives in Mumbai to find the band. She meets Taraat (Riteish Deshmukh) and his friends, Grease (Dharmesh Yelande), Paper (Aditya Kumar) and Vajaya (Ram Menon) in the slums of Dharavi and realising their musical prowess gets them to sign on for her project. But a jealous rival, local land mafia and a vile studio manager make their musical success story a bumpy and unseemly one.

The cinematogr­aphy lends realism to the proceeding­s but the ridiculous story idea, passionles­s run-of-play, unappealin­gly inept performanc­es, clichéd intent, cheesy dialogues and tonal confusion leave the audience restive and unfulfille­d. The story is quite unconvinci­ng, the direction is confused and the ill-fitting action looks ridiculous. This could well have been a desi version of ‘A Star is Born’ but the poor conceptual­isation and unappealin­g narration leaves one listless and dissatisfi­ed. ‘Banjo’ is quite an unrequitin­g experience especially with the music so abysmally unappetisi­ngand to think this was meant to be a musical drama. Phew!

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