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51%
2.36 

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A Fairytale Of Greens, Blues And More Blues
Nov 09, 2007 07:19 PM 3138 Views
(Updated Nov 09, 2007 07:52 PM)

Plot:

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Before I even begin, I must say that all of you who have


loved your Dhamaals and Mastis, please do not even think of entering the movie


halls where Sawariya is being shown. If you want a movie where you can stretch


out your legs, put your hands behind your head and give out loud guffaws at


vulgar comedies, please spare dear Mr. Bhansali's creation. Also, Yash Chopra


and Karan Johar fanatics stay out. You are not going to get romance in a


caramel cup here. But those who loved Black, welcome by all means.


So what does Black have to do with Sawariya? There are many


parallels, aside from having the same director. I will be shortly into that.


Sawariya – I don’t know the meaning of the word precisely,


but think it means'someone who improves someone's life'. That certainly goes


with the theme of the film. The overly used greens and blues right from the


promos until the final scene of the film are apt too – the whole movie revolves


around Id. And I am sure Sanjay has given the grand festival of Id the most


opulent salute in the history of cinema, anywhere in the world.


I won't spoil Sanjay's beautiful story by leaking it out to


you. Just the premise is what I will divulge. It is an almost verbatim


adaptation of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's White Nights. It is the story of Ranbir Raj,


a vagabond from nowhere, who chances upon a girl, Sakina, by a bridge on a


pool. He stumbles in love, doesn’t fall yet, but Sakina is not for his taking.


She is there, on the bridge, because she is waiting for someone. That someone


is a lover, Iman, who has loved her once, a year back, and then promised to


meet her on the same bridge when the Id moon can be seen. So, Sakina waits. Raj


is madly in love, and hopeful that she will turn her attentions on him. He


plays the regular wooer, but Sakina doesn’t fall in love. She has the fondest


of feelings ever seen in cinema for Raj, but her feelings for the shadow of her


previous lover are stronger. And so she carries on. Carries on for four nights.


The fourth night is Id.


The story spans just four nights and five characters. Within


these four nights, you see things unfolding right in front of your eyes. It is


made evident from the beginning that the story is set in no particular place,


and the narrator even says that the story is only in her imagination. The characters


are from nowhere; they have no last names, they have no histories(except for


Sakina's romance of last year) and they have no other lives described apart


from the events in the story. This is what makes the story unique. It is only


the love that is projected, and magnificently at that. It's like how a romance


would be written in the style of a fairytale. The characters are made only for


the fairytale, and they have no lives beyond that. Did anyone ask which school


Snow-White or Cinderella studied in?


When it is Sanjay Leela Bhansali, people look forward for


visual grandeur. And that is present here in full measure. You do not see the


sham glorification of sets you did in Devdas, but you see picture-postcard perfect


sets. The first visual itself shows you an arabesque town, clearly reminiscent


of a Faerie Tale Theater Production of the Arabian Nights – there are lots of


domes and minarets. Then there is the set by the poolside where most of the


action happens. Quite smartly, Sanjay has given a family profession for Sakina


as that of a carpet weaver. That gives him the opportunity to film one of the


greatest visuals ever seen in Hindi cinema. I am referring to a carpet dusting


scene, where the carpets are hanging all around her. Sheer cinematographic brilliance!


Incidentally, Sakina is very happy in that scene, and that is the only scene in


the movie with a yellow-gold color. The rest of the movie is filmed in the


trademark colors of blues and greens.


So why is the movie much like Black? For pure cinematic


triumph. Sanjay has broken the mould once again. Check out the climax to find


out. The conventional rule doesn’t apply to Sanjay. He will show what people do


not want to see; what other filmmakers do not want to show. And both the films


are optimistic. While there was a clear optimism in Black, you will see a


resonant optimism in Sawariya, even if the events do not unfold the way the


viewer would want them to.


Enough about Sanjay. Let me now discuss the actors. After all,


it is a launch pad for the next line of the Prithviraj Kapoor generation, and


another very significant Kapoor line too. Both Ranbir Kapoor and Sonam Kapoor


rock. The have the acting passion that can ignite screens. In his first film,


Ranbir Kapoor has shown that five years down the line, he can do what Shah Rukh


Khan and Hrithik Roshan have done. He has emotive eyes, a very expressive face,


and an outstanding dialog delivery. Give him some years, and he will bring much


greater glory to the Kapoor name. Sonam Kapoor is a dazzling addition to cinema


too, though she is more Tabu than Aishwarya Rai, if you know what I mean. She


has a pretty face, a prettier smile, and she is powerhouse when it comes to


acting. Both kids have carried the film on their shoulders magnificently; they


have carried off minute-long soliloquy in the movie with élan. Ranbir has


spoken out huge chunks of dialog without flinching(it might have taken several


takes to get them perfected, though). I particularly liked his soliloquy about


life being like a boxing match.


Rani Mukerjee introduces the film for us, and does a very


good job of whatever she has been given. Salman Khan comes twice in the movie,


and he excellently plays the part of the enigmatic silent lover, for whom love


is not the most important thing in life. And if you do not love Zohra Sehgal


yet, you will love her after this film. The camaraderie between Ranbir and


Zohra Sehgal is fabulous, to say the least.


I won't say much about the music, as you have already heard


it several times, and you know what the music of the film is like. But I will


certainly say this – the whole movie is a song. It is a true fairytale, where


the music becomes a part of the whole thing, not just a kind of entertaining


diversion. Each dialog, each pause in the movie is accentuated with music that


simply fits in the entire scene. That's what good background music should be;


it becomes an inseparable part of the scene, and still adds to its appeal in a


tremendous manner.


If you are in love, watch Sawariya with your lover. If you aren't


in love, still watch Sawariya to know what true love is all about. Do not


expect a sugar-coated romance with this picture postcard musical fairytale. You


will be disappointed if you do so. But if you want to spend several cozy hours


with your lover discussing about love, this movie will give you enough grist to


talk about.


Thank you, Mr. Bhansali, for not letting us down. Our hopes


in you have only increased.


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