Loose Cannons
  Saturday, January 28, 2006 10:47:15 IST  These days, if a film has a message 
and purpose, it deserves  some kudos-even if..           
     
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 These days, if a film has a message and purpose, it deserves  some kudos-even 
if, like Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra’s latest Rang De Basanti, the  end product 
turns out to be a well made but muddle-headed mess.
Taking  inspiration-inadvertent though it may be-from films like Hindustani, 
Dil Chahta  Hai, 
Yuva and Lakshya, Mehra fashions a 17-reel ode to how young people can  be 
useful to the Motherland!  Noble intentions then, goading the beer-guzzling,  
lukkhas of Delhi to arouse their patriotic genes and ‘do something’;  
unfortunately that ‘something’ is not just dangerous, it’s counterproductive.  
Then, he justifies this unthinking populism by saying that if Bhagat Singh 
could  kill for the country, so can you, young man!  But even in a flawed 
democracy,  violence cannot be offered as a solution to corruption or any other 
public  misdemeanour.
That apart, Rang De Basanti has several other problems, the  frequent shifts to 
the sepia-tinted Bhagat Singh footage is one-at least Indian  audiences are 
familiar with the story of the young revolutionaries from text  books, TV, 
documentaries and five feature films.  Using Bhagat Singh as a  catalyst for 
the awakening of a dormant conscience is pointless. The boys in the  story 
could be affected by the death of their friend and the subsequent cover-up  by 
higher-ups without this fake goading from history.
To summarise the plot,  Sue (Alice Patten) motivated by the diaries of her 
grandfather who had seen  Bhagat, Azad, Rajguru and their band of freedom 
fighters suffer in jail and die  smiling, comes to India to shoot a documentary 
on them.  Even when her bosses  nix the project, she decides to do in on her 
own (how does she raise funds for  the lavish period recreation?).
Her Indian contact Sonia (Soha Ali Khan),  introduces her to DJ (Aamir Khan) 
and gang, whom she immediately casts in the  film.  Poor little rich boy Karan 
(Siddharth) as Bhagat, DJ as Azad, girl-crazy  Sukhi (Sharman Joshi) as 
Rajguru, angst-ridden Aslam (Karan Kapoor) as Ashfaque  Khan, Sonia as Durga; a 
Bajrang Dal type Laxman Pande (Arul Tiwari) muscles into  the role of Bismil. 
That done, they fool about some more, Pande and Aslam glare  daggers at each 
other, and the film keeps cutting to footage of Sue’s  documentary (it looks 
more like a feature!).
It’s well into the second half  when Mehra finally comes to the point, and Rang 
De Basanti becomes a different  film. Enthused by the spirit of the 
revolutionaries they have portrayed, the  overgrown ‘Boys’ take on the corrupt 
government that caused the death of Sonia’s  fiancé (Madhavan), the earnest and 
patriotic fighter pilot Ajay Rathore. (This  bit is inspired by real life 
incidents of pilots being killed in faulty MIG  planes).  But in the days of 
aggressive TV news reporting, why would they choose  a radio station to convey 
their message?
The story progresses in a slow,  jerky fashion, with very little attention to 
character development, but taking  little unscheduled stops at DJ’s mother’s 
(Kirron Kher) dhaba, Pande’s party  office, Aslam’s cloistered house with 
father (Om Puri, wasted) and older brother  demanding why he has Hindu friends, 
Rathore’s home with strong mother (Waheeda  Rehman) talking of what it’s like 
being an army wife. None of which add anything  to our understanding of the 
Boys.
Perhaps, the film has also come a little  too late-India today has a booming 
economy, young people are very focused, and  unworthy politicians have been 
thrown out via the electoral process.  Of course,  there is a huge class of 
underprivileged poor but that problem tacked in Swades  and Shikhar is not an 
issue here.
If at all, the film is saved by the  technical finesse, a couple of Rahman’s 
songs and the performances-Aamir Khan,  with perfect Delhi lout accent, living 
the role of a boisterous but insecure  bloke; Atul Kulkarni radiating 
intensity, Karan Kapoor and Siddharth mirroring  the confusion of youth.
 Rang De  Basanti
At: Fame and other  cinemas
Directed by: Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra
With: Aamir Khan, Alice  Patten, Atul Kulkarni, Sharman Joshi, Soha Ali Khan, 
Kunal Kapoor, Siddharth and  others
Rating: ***


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