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Bas Ek Pal review
Bas Ek Pal
Review :
'Bas Ek Pal' - lethal
passion-play with cast of five
By Subhash K. Jha, Indo-Asian News Service
Rating: * * *
Film: "Bas Ek Pal"; Cast:
Urmila Matondkar, Sanjay Suri, Juhi Chawla, Rehaan Engineer and
Jimmy Shergill; Director: Onir;
Funny, this thing called life. It never fails to take you by
surprise. Director Onir's chamber piece, telescoping five
intertwined lives in a lethal yet lyrical passion-play, is an
original slice of art.
The voice of Onir's reason is not incumbent on conventions of
Indian cinema. Rather, this courageous filmmaker forges ahead
with much the same convictions that manoeuvred his vision in
that elegiac post-card from the edge of the conscience called
"My Brother Nikhil".
"Bas Ek Pal" opens and closes in a pub where the first of the
many passionate encounters occur between the restless, violent
and doomed characters looking for a place to rest their
uncertain hearts.
When after years abroad Nikhil (Sanjay Suri) walks into the
crowded place of pleasure, his life changes. He meets the
mercurial Anamika (Urmila Matondkar) who teases, flirts and
reduces Nikhil to a lifetime of slavery.
The passion underlining Nikhil's undying love for Anamika also
purports to underline the theme's spectral content. But the
swelling emotions don't always make it into the frames. We often
feel rather than see the acutely pained quintet of characters
reaching out to one another across an immense gulf of pride and
hurt.
All the characters are in one way or another linked with one
another. Even the men, Nikhil and Rahul (Jimmy Shergill), share
complex, ambiguous relationships.
In one notable moment of tormented confession, Nikhil tears off
his shirt in front of the paraplegic Rahul and confesses he was
raped in jail.
But the crime for which Nikhil went to jail is deflected to
another even darker character, the spouse-beating Steve (Rehaan
Engineer) whose heartbreakingly fragile wife Ira (Juhi Chawla)
wants to leave him but can only be liberated in death ("Till
death do us part").
Guilt runs through the criss-cross of wounded relationships in
this film of unstated recriminations.
Even the ostensibly free-willed Anamika opts for compassion (the
crippled Rahul) over passion (the incarcerated Nikhil).
She silently suffers Rahul's bitter taunts, just like Preity
Zinta in Karan Johar's "Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna", though the
relationship here is done in far darker tones.
One of the more absorbing side-shows in this drama of muted
feelings is the dark undertones that are applied to every
character's conscience. None of the five protagonists is a happy
person. None of them finds solace, comfort, let alone love, in
his or her partner. They all seem to be driven more by desire
per se than its fruition.
We often wonder what these characters would do if they actually
found love! So driven are they by the search for love that
they've forgotten where they're heading.
The tone gets a shade darker with every sequence. In the later
scenes, Nikhil becomes a stalker in Anamika's life - he even
does a kind of bizarre pantomime of a 'b' grade Hollywood
slasher movie by describing every move of his object of desire
on the phone.
The distinctly Shakespearean finale leaves three of the five
protagonists dead.
We finally see Anamika and Rahul looking pensively into the
great wide open. The contrast between human desire and nature is
quaintly created in the end. But we never see the characters
from close up. In their arching self-pity they all seem to be
replicas of modern martyrs rather than those pragmatic
metrocentric creatures, who treat the man-woman relationship as
a means of keeping tabs on their heats and libidos rather than
the conscience.
The swelling of a Shakespearean passion for Anamika in Nikhil's
soul needed to be mapped more meticulously. Tragically, the
narrative is as restless as the characters. The quiet more
thoughtful moments mostly emanated from Juhi.
You suspect the tranquillity around this battered character
comes more from the actress than the editor (Irene Dhar Malik)
who cuts across these disembodied lives with ruthless celerity.
Sachin Kumar's camera captures the conflicts of the characters
in striking silhouettes and dark contours. The hints and
whispers created through the lens go a long way in detailing the
inner world of the pain-lashed characters.
All five actors penetrate the heart of their characters. Urmila
has never looked more tranquil in her torment, and Juhi uses her
ability to portray hurt and guilt with minimum effort.
Among the male actor Sanjay's eyes follow the course of his
character's destiny with pained transparency.
But finally we know little about them or their motivations.
Conceptualised completely from the outside, the people who house
Onir's second film are driven down to damnation by their own
desire. Their voyage into disillusionment has some wonderful
interludes of introspection.
Check out Suri's reunion with Urmila in the pub called
Anti-Clockwork where they first met or the sequence where Jimmy
tells Urmila he can't make love to her.
To make love and to love, the physical and spiritual aspects of
human passion propel the people in "Bas Ek Pal" to a rather
macabre nemesis.
Starting off as an authentic take on urbane mores -- the pub
shootout where Rahul loses his legs and Nikhil his everything,
echoes the Jessica Lal incident -- the narrative gets
progressively Shakespearean in tone.
The film is shot mostly in the night and towards the end, in the
lashing rains, to create an aura of doom and pain.
"Bas Ek Pal" is an interesting though flawed study of gender
equations in a competitive society where feelings are casualties
of ambitions.
And ambition not only at work places. The rivalry in the bedroom
can be even more cutthroat. Onir knows.
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