Friday, August 3, 2007

Review: Gandhi My Father

Tryst with destiny
Pratim D. Gupta

August 15, 1947: As the whole country rejoiced at their newfound independence, one Indian was more interested in the sweets that were being distributed and not the flags with them.
That was the “tryst with destiny” of Harilal Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, a streetside beggar by the time Nehru was announcing India’s arrival to the world.
As a father-son story, Feroz Abbas Khan’s Gandhi My Father is not very different from Ramesh Sippy’s Shakti but it is the historical backdrop which turns everything upside down. In fact, there is so much of shock value in the going-ons that Khan (also the writer) has to deliberately jam the brakes on the pace to help the audience soak it all in.
The inner angst of Junior Gandhi — that’s what Harilal was called in Phoenix Settlement in South Africa — was so deep that he would try to change his future by changing religions as fast as he changed his clothes and appearances. But it was the past he couldn’t rid himself of. “Mera itihas lambi hai aur bhugol gol,” he cries in despair.
Thanks to a father who would “define the meaning of independence and then set its parameters”, Harilal was lost in his lineage. As years passed, he kept getting tonked around back and forth from South Africa to India and internally things got so bitter that at one point of time he says: “Whenever I fail, he (Gandhi) succeeds.”
But interestingly, they would both come back to each other from time to time looking for redemption. Harilal would first seek Gandhi’s permission, then his money and then even his identity. He almost tells himself: “I’m Gandhi’s son; how can I cheat?” Gandhi, on the other hand, realises that he could have done so much more for his elder son but cannot take out time to do so. In a telling scene, he asks Harilal to come back to him but, as the train rolls out of the station, he has to leave him there.
Yes, producer Anil Kapoor is right — this is a story that had to be told. And told with the responsibility that Feroz Khan brings on board. You can feel an overtone of Mahatma Gandhi’s insensitivity towards his son but the director never screams it out. Because he comes from a rich background of theatre, Khan’s script tends to become episodic in parts. But the stage-to-screen switch works with the stress on physical acting by the main players. Feroz also uses close-ups of on-lookers to great effect.
Harilal is Akshaye Khanna and not the other way round. Letting go of his familiar dimpled chuckles, Akshaye sinks into the role seamlessly. And the scene when he comes shivering home to his dead wife looks set to become one of the finest pieces of acting in the history of Indian cinema.
Darshan Zariwalla is so effective as Gandhi that you never miss Sir Ben Kingsley, which is quite an achievement. Even Shefali Shah and Bhoomika Chawla are knockouts as the ladies caught in the middle. Another hero of the enterprise is cinematographer David McDonald who uses natural lighting and colour schemes to great effect.
The silhouettes stay with you and so does the lingering question: Was Gandhigiri a fool-proof
formula?

5 comments:

Movie Bug said...

Hello Prats!
This is the place where I can talk to you frelly without having deleted my comments on PFC.

*******************
On your today's 'camp' article:JOHN ABRAHAM does belong to a camp! He's very fond of the Bachchans, I guess. If his statements on Koffee is anything to go by, he indicates that. He's very fond of AB Jr. And he is such a brainless dude! He takes more than 60 seconds to find out which is earlier, BC or AD (KBC 2005), and takes great pride in answering that. Barring a few like Kabul Express and hopefully No Smoking, each one of his film has been trash. His performances were terrible too, then again, barring "a few"!

And yes! I am very fond of this man, he really has the courage to survive in the big bad Bollywood: my beloved Anurag Kashyap. He is always against the big budget ones. And vehemently defends ALL low-budget, low-key films even though they are bad, plagiarized. Take BHEJA FRY for example. HE said, it was a licensed remake for which Sunil Doshi bought the rights. But unfortunately, none of Sunil Doshi or Sagar Bellary is aware of the fact declared by AK. They claim it to be 'just an inspiration'. Memento! Both AKs are same.

And one more! He declares himself a crusader/ passinate in B'wood but eventually writes SHAKALAKA BOOOOOOOOM BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM! Duh! I questioned him here: http://passionforcinema.com/the-new-wave-is-comingbheja-fry-and-manorama-six-feet-under/ (comment no. 45). He is yet to give me an answer!

I am among the ones who abhor the bloody bollywood and strongly admire small but powerful films (that's in my name)like DOR, KHOSLA KA GHOSLA, BLACK FRIDAY. But I certainly have an unbiased view, which is rare in B'wood.

In the Metro article he says Ronnie Screwvala to be ONLY wise man in standing and UTV the best producer. Barring a few, there's been HATTRICK and CHUP CHUP KE!

Are you with the pro-Abhay Deol campaign there in PFC? A modern Devdas? Can AK or AD name a single Sharatchandra prose apart from the most talked-about Devdas? After SLB made Paro dance with Chandramukhi, why are people in B'wood hellbent destroying the Bangla literature.

Why can't they understand that NOW no-one understands literature and films better than Vishal Bharadwaj?

KEEP CHURNING OUT MORE SUCH FANTASTIC ARTICLES, PRATS. U ROCK!

-CHARLES FOSTER KANE aka ANTONIO RICCI

P.S.: Must be tooooooooo many spelling mistakes here! Have no energy to chek it!

Please allow anonymous comments here

Movie Bug said...

Does Abhay Deol seem very natural to you? Not to me at least. My fault but despite a good script he didn't convince me in Socha Na Tha - CFK

Movie Bug said...

Please post comments on the idiotic and still-bought-up National Awards!

pratimdgupta said...

Hi,
I am not a big fan of Abhay Deol... He looks a bit stiff to me and doesn't have any screen presence... Don't know what Anurag will cook with Devdas... All the best to him. I spoke to him about Shaka Laka Boom Boom... He says he wrote something else and what came out was something else...

Movie Bug said...

Prats! Someone in PFC (RK) has actually the audacity to call Ray a commercial director and says he sold the poverty of his country. Fight it back! The link here: http://passionforcinema.com/amitabh-bachchan-the-president-of-india/#comment-34285

See the entire chain of comments.

Please protest! And yes! In whose favour? Bachchan, obviously! Fight it back in your next post. Please!!!!