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81%
3.39 

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Our ambitions drive us from dreams in CORPORATE
Jul 08, 2006 04:56 PM 1859 Views
(Updated Jul 10, 2006 12:24 AM)

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SO finally it’s about the conscience.


All of Madhur Bhandarkar’s best works, including his latest Corporate, certainly qualify as fine progressive pieces of cinema - which finally boils down to the question of the conscience and the individual. Corporate sets its feet firmly in a culture-specific work-oriented milieu. It then finds an emotional bedrock in its innumerable characters, portrays them as people trapped in ambitions and desires over which they have no control after a point. This is a director who packs in a precious punch in the plot.


An unscrupulous tycoon who would go to any length climb his way up the corporate ladder, is so adept at showing his troubled conscience that you wonder which came first - the conscience or movies crystallising its dilemma.


The corporate world, which is so much a part of television serials, has never been exposed on the large screen since Shyam Benegal’s Kalyug. To his credit, Bhandarkar, with considerable help from his editor, slices through these ambition-driven personalities with the urgent hiss of a car negotiating a craggy highway.


The screenplay that Bhandarkar has co-written with Manoj Tyagi has enough twists and turns to make the corporate jargon decodable to a layman.


Though Bhandarkar forms an amazing criss-cross of undercurrents in the two rival families headed by Rajat Kapoor and Raj Babbar (even the peons are shown making nudge-nudge-wink-wink remarks about their bosses), the narrative finally narrows down to being a burnished love story between two colleagues, played with rhythmic restrain by Kay Kay and Bipasha.


While they both work on the same side of the fence, yet they drift away due to their inability to control the swing of destiny.


As the morally upright Nishigandha who steals her rival’s project only to pay an unimaginable price for her indiscretion, Bipasha Basu pulls out all stops to deliver a performance that avoids artifice.


This one is straight from the heart. Though this is all about agile entrepreneurship, it is the heart that eventually triumphs over the head in this smartly told drama of doom and redemption.


We’re finally watching them with their souls naked to the camera. Every performance from Bipasha Basu to Sammir Dattani (who plays a brief but bright role of a young executive in her office) is credible and often compelling. Rajat Kapoor and Lillete Dubey (also in a brief role) are front-runners in the performing sweepstakes.


Yes, the film’s industrial mood and language may be impenetrable to those who think tycoons wear expensive suits and have meetings in five-star hotels.


One look at the lies beneath, and the gloss vanishes, the grime bubbles to the surface. His plot is wide and often deep, giving incidental characters a sudden but sure sweep of self-expression. Rajat Kapoor’s domestic life or the beginnings of a romance between new recruit Minissha Lamba and Sammir Dattani are dealt with in just one sequence each.


To begin with, Corporate may lack the dramatic intensity of the director’s earlier works. But once Bhandarkar takes you in, he turns the screw hard, reminding us of how far away ambition has driven us from our dreams.


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