Director: Anurag Kashyap
Actors: Kalki Kochelin, Prashant Prakash, Nasseruddin Shah
Rating: 4 out of 5
The 60s were wonderful time for Indian cinema. The
government set up FTII to impart cinema education and FFC (Film Finance
Corpration) to fund creative cinema. The result – beginning 1969 India saw what
is today called ‘The New Indian Cinema’ that resulted in some of the greatest
films ever made in the nation.
Recently, with the onslaught of digital filmmaking, little
droplets of creative cinema have been foreshadowing another cloud-burst of
creativity. However it needs patronage. Perhaps NFDC, transformed from FFC,
would provide that shot in the arm to extremely talented, but unfinanced
filmmakers in India .
And ‘The Girl In Yellow Boots’ (TGIYB), co-funded by NFDC, could be that game
changer.
A British national of Indian origin, Ruth (Kalki), is in India looking
for her dad who had left her when she was young. To fund her trip she works in
a shady massage parlor charging Rs. 1000 to give ‘happy endings’ to her
customers. She is caught up in her druggie boyfriend’s mess but a greater mess
awaits her in the discovery of her father.
TGIYB is good news for Indian cinema for many reasons. Firstly
it is perhaps India ’s
first commercially released film to be not just entirely shot in digital (LSD
was the first) but for it to be shot on cameras that are usually used to shoot
stills. Seeing what digital can do on big screen, like LSD, an experience and
lesson in filmmaking.
Secondly it will perhaps become the second innings of NFDC. The
brilliant films produced by its precursor FFC in the 70s and 80s will vouch for
the veracity of how much creative cinema needs and deserves governmental
patronage. In a few months time NFDC will also release Dibakar Banerjee’s ‘Shanghai ’.
Shot in 13 days, TGIYB is spot on in almost all departments.
It is carried forward by a stellar performance from its cast, especially Kalki
Kochelin, who’s also the co-writer.
TGIYB is a statement on modern life and society. The character
of Ruth, despite her seeming loss of innocence and purity, is the purest character
in the film. Yet, like a beautiful flower in full bloom, she is trampled upon
by a ruthless society that ceaselessly uses her. Her yellow boots becomes a metaphor
for the beauty and cheer that is stolen from her.
Violence, though rarely physical, is inflicted upon her till
she becomes insensitive to the innocence of another like her. Her trampling
seem complete, till in the end she redeems himself, by refusing to act as per
her impulse.
This is a typical Anurag Kashyap film as it returns us to
the themes that form the backdrop in many of his films – sex, drugs and
violence. The quirky characterization and the pun of language is all there. Who
else can pun a name ‘Chittiappa Gowda’ and pull it off or juxtapose the banal telephonic
conversation of a chatty woman and serious confrontation on phone between
mother and daughter at the same time?
Yet, the film is also atypical of Anurag for unlike his other
film he exercises great restraint. And it is in this control, of not ending the
film in violence, lies its greatest power.
The time is ripe for another cinematic revolution in the
country, where filmmakers are not shackled by nepotistic and uncreative
production houses and corporate houses married only to profits. Hopefully TGIYB
will prove to be the first, in the many to follow.
This review has been written for the newswire service, Indo-Asian News Service (IANS)
This review has been written for the newswire service, Indo-Asian News Service (IANS)
well said Mr. Bordoloi. Especially on the NFDC new innings.
ReplyDeleteSaw the film couple days back. Liked it quite a lot.
ANURAAG, AFTER HIS MASTERPIECE, DEV D, HAS GIVEN THE DISCERNING FILM VIEWERS YET ANOTHER RAREST FILM. THE FILM GRAPHICALLY DEPICTS THE HARROWING LIFE OF SINGLE WORKING WOMEN IN URBAN INDIA. ONLY A DIRECTOR OF ANURAAG'S EMINENCE CAN TOUCH UPON A SUBJECT LIKE THE UGLIEST AND DEMONIC FACE OF SEX IN THE MOST APPROPRIATE CINEMATIC LANGUAGE. KALKI TAKES THE AUDIENCE DEEP INTO THE HEART AND SOUL OF THE CHARACTER SHE HAS PORTRAYED WITH HER STERLING PERFORMANCE. THE FILM LEAVES A EVERLASTING IMPACT ON THE VIEWERS MIND. PRODUCERS OF BOLLYWOOD, INSTEAD OF PROVDING THE USUAL SONG AND DANCE MOVIES, SHOULD ENCOURAGE ANURAAG TO DIRECT SUCH FILMS TO EXPOSE THE GROWING ROT AND FILTH IN THE SOCIETY. LET MORE SUCH SOCIALLY CORRECTIVE AND MEANINGFUL CINEMAS COME FROM THE MAVERICK DIRECTOR ANURAAG IN THE COMING YEARS------ASHOK KUMAR
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