Good. Decent. Delightful.

Reviews: Kasthurimaan, Being Cyrus, Mixed Doubles

Kasthurimaan is the remake of a Malayalam movie directed by LohithDas with Prasanna and Meera Jasmine in the lead. The story is fairly simple - boy meets girl. Falls in love. Whether boy and girl overcome a number of hurdles to live happily ever after or not is what the movie is about. Where the movie departs from the beaten path is in the nature and magnitude of these hurdles. For starters, both of them are poor - not movie sort of poor - but real middle class sort of poor. It’s a challenge to make ends meet, but something gets done to make sure bills are paid (or at least the more important ones do). They are both ambitious, but willing to make the necessary sacrifices. One of them supports the other to achieve a long cherished ambition, and with success come complications. Of course, there is also a villain, who brings a twist to the story.

The point I’d like to stress is that absolutely nothing in this movie feels unreal. This is the sort of movie that makes you go, “Aaahhh! So it’s a remake of a Mallu flick? that explains it.” Every time I watch Prasanna play one more character with both-feet-planted-firmly-on-the-ground, I think to myself, “This was great, but isn’t he going to run out of these nice-guy roles?” I am happy to see that he continues to find roles that truly suit him.

Final verdict: Kasthurimaan has young people who don’t hate soap and water, whose ambitions are tempered by morals, and who manage to be happy and successful despite such crippling handicaps. A good movie for anyone fed up with movie-makers who believe that ‘Violent loser(s) + {pretty} female(s) + Ugly villain(s) = One great movie’.

Being Cyrus is an English (not Hinglish) movie with Bollywood stars. It is a dark comedy of manners, with a nice enough twist that some might see coming a mile off (for the record, I wasn’t one of them. But then, I am always surprised to find out that the butler did it). With Saif Ali Khan, Naseeruddin Shah, Dimple Kapadia and Boman Irani, the cast is impressive. The last three are fun to watch, but it’s Manoj Pahwa who is lovely in more ways than one.

Shah, Kapadia and Irani are members of a dysfunctional Parsi family. Shah’s character is a has-been pottery artist, who is more into pot than art at the moment. His unhappy wife, played by Kapadia, is not too discriminating in her choice of escape. Shah’s brother (Irani) holds the family’s purse strings, and everyone with the exception of Naseeruddin Shah is trying to get his hands on the money. Saif is Cyrus, an orphan who insinuates himself into this family. Then there is Inspector Lovely (Manoj Pahwa). This minority-hating, crass Punjabi serves as the perfect contrast to the glib Parsis that this movie abounds in.

Everyone thinks they are outsmarting everyone else. Some end up dead for their trouble. The nice thing about this movie is that you are not invited to like any one in it. Just when you start feeling sorry for someone, you’re shown a side to them that makes you feel that they deserve whatever they have coming. But while they last, they’re a fun bunch to watch.

Final Verdict: Decent. The closest comparable movie is The Perfect Murder, another English movie with many Indian characters about another murder. It’s a relief that the multiplex culture is starting to have some positive payoffs.

I was saving the best for last, so here goes.

Mixed Doubles is an absolutely delightful comedy directed by Rajat Kapoor. Some might remember him as the creepy child molester from Monsoon Wedding. This is his second feature length film, and there’s very little that’s creepy about it.

Sunil (Ranvir Shorey) and Malti (Konkana Sen Sharma) have been married for ten years. They have a kid in the first grade. Their love life has begun to pall, and Sunil hears of a way that might just put a little “swing” back in their lives. Despite his boundless enthusiasm for the idea, Sunil is quite an innocent when it comes to the practicalities of setting something up. Of course, it’s quite a feat to get the wife to consent to the idea in the first place. But he manages to get Malti to give the idea a shot after using every trick in the book.

Finding the ideal “broad-minded” couple is the next challenge. Several hilarious interviews follow - one guy interrogates Sunil closely about his preferences for fruit, and rejects him after Sunil expresses a preference for cutting mangoes over peeling them. Sunil is, of course, completely clueless through out the conversation. Enter Kalpana (Koel Puri) and Vinod (Rajat Kapoor) - rich, sophisticated, and almost everything Sunil himself wants to be. Whether or not the two couples go ahead with their plans is what the movie is about.

When I read my summary of the plot, I am afraid I’ve made it sound a bit staid. But trust me, the movie is anything but. The script is sparkling and the humor hardly ever vulgar. OK, before someone challenges me about the last claim- people, let’s not forget that this is a comedy about wife-swapping. And yes, while it is a comedy, it probably isn’t the sort of movie you want to watch with your parents-in-law. But I’ll still stand by my claim of this movie not being vulgar - there’s little of the nudge-nudge wink-wink type of “A” humor that one normally associates with the typical desi ‘adult’ comedy, and when people do make jokes about their sex lives, it sounds funny and natural.

Shorey and Sen Sharma make a great pair. Between the two of them, they’ve created the most natural on-screen couple I’ve seen in Indian movies in some time. I realize that if one remembers Shorey from his VJ days, one is quite old. But Shorey has grown up, and how! He is absolutely charming as the misguided husband who has as many excuses as he does double standards. That Shorey can pull off such a weighty part comes as a pleasant surprise, as does watching Sen Sharma play a woman who is vulnerable but also quite cute (I think I’ve let serious fare like 15 Park Avenue and Page 3 bias me about the lady’s range).

Kudos to Kapoor for directing a great comedy about grown ups without ever letting it slip into sleaze, despite the subject matter. And to Anurag Kashyap for dialogues that remain light and refreshing throughout.

Final Verdict: After all this praise, do you want me to spell it out for you? Go watch the movie, already! Am going to see if I can lay my hands on Raghu Romeo, Rajat Kapoor’s other movie.

Note to self: Watch Pudhupettai and lay off Indian movies for the next 6 months. You don’t want to break up this unbelievably lucky run.

Comments (8 comments)

DoZ,
I just loved Mixed Doubles! In fact, all of Rajat Kapoor’s films have been really really good. (Mixed Doubles is his third feature film following Private Detective: Two Plus Two Plus One and Raghu Romeo.)

Zero / June 3rd, 2006, 11:59 am / #

‘Raghu Romeo’ is a sparkling delight, am definitely looking forward to catching ‘Mixed Doubles’. ‘Being Cyrus’ left me much disappointed though — almost seemed like the erudite, metropolitan meanderings of a superlazy scriptwriter who decided to enter a one-day story marathon, starting with a skeleton and filling it in as he went along with characters he has met somewhere along the way. And yes, I was one of those who saw the twist coming twenty minutes into the film:).

Matto / June 3rd, 2006, 3:15 pm / #

hey
i happened to see your review of mixed doubles
it makes me happy to read this
by the way i am on to my next film- which, if all goes well will start shooting in july- with ranvir shorey again
this one is called MITHYA.
once again congrats on your reading of mixed doubles
rajat

rajat kapoor / June 5th, 2006, 1:39 am / #

Zero: Thanks for the tip about Private Detective. Will add that to my list.
Matto: Yeah, I agree that Cyrus wasn’t great, but hey, compared to regular Bollywood fare, I felt that it was a decent attempt.

DoZ / June 5th, 2006, 10:38 am / #

Rajat: Wow! Thank you so very much. It’s difficult to gush electronically, so I’ll just say that I am a *huge* fan and that I look forward to Mithya. Congrats to you and your team on Mixed Doubles!

DoZ / June 5th, 2006, 10:51 am / #

Nice, so we got celebrities visiting the blog now. Rajat, welcome :)

And Namita dear, how come you never show up to tell me if you liked my reviews?

Karthik / June 5th, 2006, 12:27 pm / #

Raghu Romeo is very watchable……(but not quite “great”). Could have done with better editing, to make it crisper. It’s got great moments though, and Vijay Raaz is superb. One of the most under appreciated actors in India today…….

But I was a little disappointed with the second half of that movie…

And….wow! Rajat visiting the blog! Karthik, DoZ….way to go :-)

sunil / June 7th, 2006, 6:13 pm / #

Thank you, Sunil!
Will likely watch Raghu Romeo sometime this week. Will watch out for Vijay Raaz.

DoZ / June 7th, 2006, 11:35 pm / #

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