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Ekalavya review
Eklayva review
'Eklavya' - a dark chronicle of
defeat (REVIEW)
By Subhash K. Jha, Indo-Asian News Service
Film: "Eklavya: The Royal Guard"; Cast: Amitabh Bachchan, Saif
Ali Khan, Vidya Balan, Sharmila Tagore, Boman Irani, Jackie
Shroff, Jimmy Shergil; Director: Vidhu Vinod Chopra; Rating: **
1/2
Can form, no matter how glorious, be a substitute for content?
In "Eklavya", lack of content isn't a problem. It's the tense
and dark nature of the content that proves to be a dismaying
impediment to enjoying the virility of Vidhu Vinod Chopra's
storytelling.
How do we define the plot of "Eklavya"? It partly borrows the
dark, indefinable pathos of Shakespeare's tragedy and partly
reverts to the palatial pathos of the Mughal Empire where
patricide frequently collided with complex Oedipal equations. "Eklavya"
takes us into a territory totally unexplored and designed to
create an ethos of infinite resonances.
"Eklavya" is a film of many virtues. Screenwriter Abhijat Joshi
and Chopra aim for a sense of heightened tragedy that underlines
the cinema of Kurosawa and the music of Mozart. The quality of
the sound design (Biswajit Chatterjee), background score (Shantanu
Moitra) and cinematography (N. Natarajan Subramaniam) elevates
the bizarre tale of a dysfunctional royal family to heights of
lyricism.
Some stories are better left unsaid. "Eklavya" tragically seems
to belong to that rare genre of stories that lose their
relevance in their rendering. The characters, all ruefully
rooted to a decadent and dying aristocracy, are either neurotic,
manic or self-destructive.
All the people who crowd the tightly cordoned stratosphere of "Eklavya"
are grandly wedded to destructive forces. Unwittingly they end
up looking preposterous in their self-conscious postures of
assumed dignity.
In their inability to see beyond their own hefty hunger for
self-assertion, the characters often mimic, rather than
replicate, the Shakespearean tragedy.
Chopra is undoubtedly a master craftsman. At times he becomes
self-indulgent in his visual panache. In the sequence where "Eklavya"
slaughters Jimmy Shergil, the recurrent pigeons-leitmotif (seen
earlier in "Parinda") are classic Chopra embellishments best
left behind in a film that in many ways crosses the boundaries
of mainstream conventions.
Indeed, if Vishal Bhardwaj's Omkara was more Ram Gopal Varma
than Shakespeare, Eklavya is more Virginia Woolf than
Shakespeare.
Chopra is brilliant at capturing neurosis through the lens of
the camera. At times he makes room for tenderness. Watch
Bachchan's expression of tender nostalgia as Vidya Balan sings
the ancestral lullaby.
You often see the characters framed frantically as wounded,
scarred mortals hurtling towards their ruin - they do not
connect with us in any significant way.
Reciting Shakespearean sonnets on death-beds, sobbing into the
night, stabbing each other in their aristocratic backs, playing
mind games that echo the travesties of titular existence,
Chopra's people come alive more through their externalities
rather than his efforts to internalise their angst.
Chopra spares no efforts to penetrate the steely wily hearts of
these bereft souls. Rajasthan is captured in telltale
silhouettes as the stately royal guard Eklavya (Bachchan) forms
a fertile bond with a family of doomed aristocrats.
The narration begins as a mother-son story and builds with
magical volition into a father-son tale of clenched trauma. By
the time Eklavya points a gun at his own heir-apparent, we are
left looking at a family that doesn't need redemption. It just
needs to be buried in the slinky sand dunes of time.
The performances by Bachchan and Saif Ali Khan - the royal heir
who finds out that the family guard is actually his father -
lift the tale to luminous heights. Boman Irani, as the infertile
royal patriarch, plays his character with just that shadowy hint
of mischief that puts him a cut above the routine slime-ball.
"Eklavya" is a chronicle of defeat. People who belong to no
specific time zone seem to be manoeuvring their lives beyond the
rhythms of the rationale.
There's poetry in the soul of the movie. But the lines do not
represent any significant symbiosis of form and content. With
its unforgettable images of elemental forces, "Eklavya" is a
film that was probably as hard to make as it is to profile and
define.
At the end, it remains an honourable failure, lifted to
distinction by Bachchan's stately performance.
Instrumental tracks rule 'Eklavya' (MUSIC REVIEW)
By Meghna Menon, Indo-Asian News Service
Film: "Eklavya"; Music Director: Shantanu Moitra; Singers: Sonu
Nigam, Swanand Kirkire, Hamsika Iyer; Ratings: **
"Eklavya - The Royal Guard" is essentially an instrumental
soundtrack, expected for a movie of this genre. The album
comprises eight numbers, of which five are instrumental.
Most special is singer Hamsika Iyer's "Chanda re", which
captures the amazingly soulful and melodic voice of this new kid
on the block.
Moitra, who's known for music of this genre, has done an
excellent job. The song has a slow pace and is romantically
poetic. The credit for the wonderful lyrics goes to Swanand
Kirkire.
The next song by Sonu Nigam and Swanand is "Janu na", a
classically oriented number with the two contrasting voices
pleasing to the ear. Not really a hit song, but good for an
occasional hear.
"Suno kahani" begins on a peppy note. Lines from "Janu na" are
used. It's a short song and is only a pepped up version of "Janu
na". Nothing much to write about.
Next in the album is "The Gayatri mantra theme". An instrumental
piece, this track is okay but it works in a period movie like "Eklavya".
Another instrumental piece comes in the form of "The killing",
the music of which lives up to its title. But again, it is a
track only meant to be heard during the course of seeing the
movie and not otherwise.
The melodic voice of Hamsika returns in "The love theme", again
an instrumental piece with the vocalist humming throughout.
Hamsika really deserves a special mention for standing out in
this entire album.
"The theme of Eklavya" ends the soundtrack. This musical number
is still better than the other songs but again can be heard only
while watching the movie.
Though the effort involved in composing the album is more than
evident, it doesn't look as though the music is going to rake in
any moolah for the producers.
IANS.
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