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Film Review: Nayak
SHE MAY not have the tresses which unfold like a cascade in full
bloom. Her eyes may not be sparkling enough to illuminate a
gloomy evening. Her voice may not deserve to be recorded for
posterity. And her figure may not be admired by guys or envied by
gals. However, her smile lingers. And when she taps her
curvaceous lower lip with her shapely fingers it sends
palpitation down many a luxuriantly endowed hairy upper lip,
leaving one with durable dreams of domestic serenity. In flaws
lies Rani Mukherjee's beauty, a girl so simple she could be
mistaken for the girl nextdoor. Yet in her everyday looks lies
her extraordinary appeal, a passport to accessibility with the
common man who may not go to bed with dreams of sharing his good
times and the bad times with a Ms. Universe but still secretly
yearning for times when he would come back to home and hearth,
play an easy game of cricket with kids and find his wife making
the best possible use of the limited assets she has at her
disposal. No floral beds. No picnics to Switzerland. Just simple
joy unfolding with the slanting rays of fading sun.
Domestic serenity. Personal tranquillity. Why are we talking of
these matters when director Shankar's ``Nayak'' which released at
cinema halls this past week is all about the relegation of
responsibility by the common man? A film about men who come back
from work and settle down to a quiet cup of tea with suitably
acquiescing spouse, lamenting about the politicians ruining this
country. They crib, carp and complain. But when an opportunity
presents itself, they look the other way. Men like you and me.
Politics for us is a cesspool.
It is a film which questions the system where the ill have to die
because of a transport strike, where the youth have to stay
unemployed because of a ``chakka jam'', where thousands have to
stay homeless because a handful have taken over the land which
would suffice for many times over. All under the patronage of
corrupt politicians. Corruption here, as in real life, does not
stem from the roots. It percolates, a new version of Macauley's
downward filtration theory.
This lavishly mounted film - which has done well in its original
Tamil version and has breathtakingly beautiful songs - is the
story of an intrepid TV reporter who exposes corruption and pays
the price for stirring a hornet's nest. Shivaji - played by Anil
Kapoor with easy professionalism - reveals the true face of the
Chief Minister during a live interview: He is the man behind the
riots, strikes, unemployment, homelessness and every possible
malady. Until Shivjai himself is asked to take over the onerous
task of administering the State for a day. This is one day which
changes his life. And of millions more.
In one single stroke thousands are suspended for dereliction of
duty, many punished for malpractices, and balm applied to the
hearts and bodies of many more at the receiving end of the
system. But one swallow does not a summer make. The masses need a
messiah, not an Aladdin. And the man who would rather be at the
desk in a Government office or chase down politicians behind cars
blaring out the sirens, is forced to take the plunge. To cleanse
the malaise, to rid the society and polity of its many- headed
Ravana.
The film covers many things at one go and may occasionally not
convey everything with a punch. It may even be short on the
suspense element. But it keeps the viewers generally tuned in to
the developments and somewhere down the line manages to strike a
raw chord with those similarly affected.
As for Rani, well, she breezes in for romantic interludes and
proves that here is a girl waiting for one role which will take
her a notch higher than the good variety.
ZIYA US SALAM
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