Review: Mangal Pandey

By Bharadwaj Rangan

FACT AND FRICTION
The New Sunday Express
August 14, 2005

Real history rubs uneasily against a make-believe story, but Aamir Khan almost 
makes it work.

We first see Aamir Khan in Mangal Pandey when he’s about to be hanged – but we 
don’t actually
see him. We see his feet, shackled in chains. We see him from the side (his 
much-celebrated
tresses hiding everything above the neck). We see him from above, from behind. 
Only then do we
see his face – and it’s framed by the noose. This sequence initially teases us 
with the enigma
of the man, then instantly establishes him as a legend, a martyr, a... hero.

And yet, Mangal Pandey isn’t your average Hindi film hero. For one, he doesn’t 
have a widowed
mother, clad in white – he’s alone; a throwaway bit shows him making rotis all 
by himself –
and, more interestingly, he’s coloured in shades of grey.

If Mangal intervenes on an act of sati, it’s to save not the girl, but his 
friend, Officer
William Gordon (Toby Stephens), who rides to her rescue and gets trapped amidst 
angry Hindus.
If Mangal pounces on a randy Brit harassing the gorgeous prostitute Heera (Rani 
Mukerji), it
isn’t knight-in-shining-armour business. (Why, this staunch Brahmin, unsure 
what her jaat is,
flinches when she merely tries to touch him!) He’s mad at the British for 
making him shoot his
own people; it’s that pent-up anger he’s venting. Even when the familiar 
rise-against-the-Raj
story is set in motion by the introduction of cartridges greased with cow and 
pig fat –
offensive to Hindu and Muslim soldiers, because the bullets have to be bitten – 
Mangal is upset
only because, having tasted cow fat, he’s become an untouchable, an achhoot 
within his
community. That’s the root of his rage, not some overwhelming anti-British 
sentiment.

>From that, to becoming a proponent of democracy, a patriot who proclaims, 
>“Aazadi ki jung shuru
ho gayi hai” – that’s one hell of a leap. Ending with archival footage of 
Gandhi and Nehru, the
film suggests that they realised the “aazadi ka sapna jo Mangal ne dekha tha.” 
It’s his dream,
we’re told – but that’s exactly where Mangal Pandey stumbles, in showing how 
one man’s personal
agenda grew into a nation’s political consciousness, how his dream resulted in 
democracy.
“Where history meets proud folklore, there legends are born,” trumpets a title 
card at the
beginning, and while the folklore part – the timeless friendship-love-revenge 
themes involving
Mangal, Gordon, Heera, and Jwala (Amisha Patel) – unspools entertainingly 
enough, the history
part comes unstuck.

Mangal Pandey is packed with painstaking research about the British Raj, and 
some of this is
absorbingly woven into the story – when the public auction of Heera leads to 
the insight that
the whites bought themselves exclusive whores to avoid disease, or when the 
native operating
the pankha lusts after his memsaab’s creamy legs, hardly heeding her petulant 
commands to speed
up the fanning. But more often, the information – sorry, The Information – is 
awkwardly
shoehorned in. Someone exclaims how beautiful a bunch of poppies is; bang, 
there’s a lecture on
the opium trade of the time. Worse, Om Puri’s non-stop drone of a narration 
threatens to
transform the film from historical fiction to The History Channel.

Yes, it’s important to anchor fiction with fact, but why are the once-great 
new-wave filmmakers
– first Benegal with Bose; now Ketan Mehta here – proving so tedious with this, 
making it feel
more like coursework than cinema? There’s a scene where angry women fling cow 
dung on a
villain; replace the dung with chilly powder, and you’re reminded of Mehta’s 
own Mirch Masala,
which magnificently put together fiction and period fact. Why has he 
increasingly abandoned
those strengths and sensibilities for those of mainstream cinema, whose 
heart-before-head
appeal clashes directly with his head-before-heart aesthetic?

There’s a terrific visual of thunderclouds gathering on the horizon, presaging 
the stormy
segments in the post-interval half – the outdoor shots are exquisite, with the 
light-filled,
water-coloured look of impressionist paintings – but those clouds could just as 
well signify
how Mehta has rained on AR Rahman’s musical parade. Only Takey Takey (which 
says everything’s
for sale, and shows Heera being sold) and Al Maddath Maula (an equivalent of 
Lagaan’s O
Paalanhaare, invoking a higher power at an hour of need) have some sort of 
context – otherwise,
the songs, though terrific, land on screen with all the grace of an axe-blow to 
the neck, with
little regard for what’s before, what’s after. The various versions of the 
rousing title number
are wasted on a bunch of elephant-riding sutradhars, who appear with 
jack-in-the-box suddenness
and disappear equally alarmingly. You could argue that song-and-dance is just 
our way of
telling stories, but that’s an art, and not everyone’s an artist in that 
regard. If I wanted to
see a group of gypsies fanning the flames of the heart – as in Rasiya here – 
I’d watch Pardesi
from Raja Hindustani. Why do I need Ketan Mehta for that?

Luckily, Mehta’s talent for characterisation and conflict is intact. (Well... 
somewhat, if you
ignore the number of Evil Brits who appear to have grown moustaches only so 
that they could
twirl them while inflicting indignities on the natives.) The women are 
essentially in cameos –
the mandatory love angles involving them barely seem to interest the 
filmmakers; they interest
us even less – so the film’s emotional appeal is mainly from the men. Stephens 
is wonderful as
a man torn between honour and heart, and he works so well with Aamir, their
friends-torn-apart-by-ideology storyline plays like Namak Haram set during the 
British Raj. And
Aamir, expectedly, walks away with the movie.

He rousingly plays to the gallery – while spouting (80s Dharmendra-style) 
dialogues like,
“(East India) Company ko jalaa kar raakh kar doonga,” or while spitting on a 
Brit despite being
battered to bloody pulp, or while rallying his reluctant, outnumbered troops 
with a fervour
you’d associate with Henry V at Agincourt, thundering, “Waqt aa gaya hai marne 
ka ya mar jaane
ka.” But it’s the quieter moments that take your breath away – his 
disappointment on
discovering that the information Heera has for him was obtained from someone 
she slept with, or
his reaction when Heera approaches him with sindoor... The latter, frankly, is 
a bogus moment.
(They’ve had one song, two bits of dialogue – suddenly they’re soul mates!) But 
when Aamir’s
eyes well up with tears, when his mouth twists into a half-grimace-half-smile, 
you buy his
sincerity even if you don’t buy the scene. You buy into his Mangal even if you 
don’t entirely
buy into the movie. 

"We neglect our cities at our peril. For, in neglecting them, we neglect the 
nation."
-John F. Kennedy




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This August, Discover the Birth of Your Independence
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Music released: Jul 14, 2005 Movie releases: Aug 12, 2005

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