The Guardian (USA)

Gulabo Sitabo review - mildewed mansion drama bustles and crumbles

- Mike McCahill

The first big Indian release of 2020 to divert towards streaming is an offbeam, strangely mismanaged parable about property management that renders its stars all but unrecognis­able. The establishe­d Amitabh Bachchan is buried beneath old-age latex and thick-lensed glasses; emergent pin-up Ayushmann Khurrana is weighed down by a (presumably prosthetic) middleaged spread. However director Shoojit Sircar’s gaze keeps drifting beyond them, to a location you couldn’t makeunder: a mildewing Lucknow mansion house, lorded over by Bachchan’s shuffling miser Mirza, ever looking for ways to kick Khurrana’s collected waifs-andstrays to the kerb. The curious, altogether tentative drama that ensues may be as close as any film-maker has come to signing off on a Hindi redo of TV’s Rising Damp.

Alas, it’s also one of those cases where forced idiosyncra­sy tries the patience from an early stage. With 2015’s sharp, breezy Piku and 2018’s delicate but involving October, Sircar had nudged Indian commercial cinema in a rewarding, naturalist­ic direction; but this just feels like a strain. A laboured first half scopes out the characters’ dingy surrounds without threatenin­g to go anywhere, and feet are apparently being dragged because Sircar and generally reliable screenwrit­er Juhi Chaturvedi aren’t themselves sure which direction to move in. Brakes are soon applied to the mounting narrative of landlord-tenant class war – “Parasite!”, yells Mirza, reminding us of a more decisive film on a similar subject – in favour of a softer landing as both antagonist­s fall prey to creeping gentrifica­tion.

While the supporting cast successful­ly suggest a bustling, mutually sustaining community, the stars come to seem like liabilitie­s, which wasn’t the case with Sircar’s previous films. Bachchan works hard at his swaddled meanie character, but make-up and props are doing most of the work, work that ultimately serves to distance actor from audience. A tired-seeming Khurrana, meanwhile, presents as blandly anonymous, reducing a final push for pathos to a limp shrug. Everyone appears at the mercy of shaky narrative foundation­s; even a cursory survey would suggest that whatever happened on this story’s journey to the screen, vital elements just didn’t take. You watch puzzled as – like the ageing pile at the story’s centre – the film flakes, moulders and crumbles before you.

• Gulabo Sitabo is available on Amazon Prime from 12 June.

 ??  ?? On shaky foundation­s ... Gulabo Sitabo. Photograph: Amazon
On shaky foundation­s ... Gulabo Sitabo. Photograph: Amazon

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States