The Sunday Guardian

A rocking sequel that keeps the old spirit alive Rock On 2

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Director: Shujaat Saudagar Starring: Farhan Akhtar, Shradha Kapoor, Arjun Rampal, Purab Kohli, Shashank Arora, Prachi Desai and Kumud Mishra There is a life-defining sequence in the early part of this stylishly-cut film where the excellent Shashank Arora, playing a young struggling musician — a sarod player in this day and age — if you must know, pleads with the supremely accomplish­ed Kumud Mishra playing a rigid musician, for a hearing. A request that falls on deaf ears because Guruji is a purist who believes music must not be tampered with to create a contempora­ry sound.

Ironically, this is what Rock On 2, a worthy resounding­ly successful sequel to the 2008 genre-defining musical, attempts.

It breaks the barrier of sound and drama to give us an experience that moves the feet and the soul, sometimes in unison. From the first frame, when we hear ‘Killer Drums’ KD (the very endearing Purab Kohli) trying successful­ly to regroup our thoughts on the band that we saw eight years ago, the sequel is on a winning streak, creating an immaculate balance between the past and present without straining to give credence to the characters’ inner voices.

Rock On 2 is rugged and engaging, with its dramatic core blending into the fabric of music, masti and ‘magik’ with an elan that suggests the birth of a significan­t new mainstream Bollywood director.

Shujaat Saudagar, take a bow, for bringing back the Rock On!! characters with such effortless expertise, and for adding new characters in and outside the musical band with a fluency that defies the limitation­s time necessaril­y imposes on works of pop art that are left out in the cold for too long.

Everything in Rock On 2 fits. And fits without a squirm. Even the attempt to yoke a socio- political conscience into the musical format is not strained by over-kill. By situating a major part of the plot in Shillong and Meghalaya, the screenwrit­er has displayed exemplary dexterity. The narrative conveys a commanding comprehens­ion of inter-personal dynamics.

The characters seem to ‘belong’ to their surroundin­gs from long before the camera caught them on screen in postures of delightful­ly reposeful unselfcons­ciousness. This is as good a moment as any to say that the Belgian cinematogr­apher Mark Koninckx has captured the characters’ inner and outer worlds with the minimum of ostentatio­n even when the band is on stage performing with a subtle swagger that leaves us hankering for more.

It won’t be stretching the argument to say this film does for Meghalaya tourism what Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara did for Spain.

Miraculous­ly, what I carried home from the film was the silences that punctuate the music and the dialogues.

Every character seems to understand the need to stand back and let the music play without self-congratula­tion. Purab Kohli and Arjun Rampal slip into their characters as if they have not done anything else in the interim. These actors should be seen a lot more often.

Watch Arjun in the sequence where he talks about his childhood poverty, and when he gets on stage to play the guitar, you will wonder if Imtiaz Ali cast the wrong actor in Rockstar.

Shashank Arora of Titli fame is a welcome addition to the team. As a struggling sarod player, he is a scene stealer. Farhan Akhtar dominates the proceeding­s. His character Adi is a complex compendium of shifting emotions, including guilt which plays a very important part in this segment of the franchise. In one sequence, where Shraddha’s character tries to exonerate him of the guilt that haunts him, Farhan is deeply moving.

Come to think of it, Rock On 2 is pretty much the most engaging and authentic sequel I’ve seen coming out of Bollywood in recent times. If as William Shakespear­e volunteere­d, music is actually the food of love, then this film is a feast. IANS

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