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KANK
Hindi film Review
KANK
Review :
Johar's KANK sensitively
explores taboo territory
By Subhash K. Jha, Indo-Asian News Service Rating:
* * * *
Film: "Kabhi Alvidaa Na
Kehna"; Starring: Amitabh Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Rani
Mukherji, Abhishek Bachchan, Preity Zinta, Kirron Kher;
Director: Karan Johar;
Sometimes you hold a film close to your heart not because the
characters embrace you, but for the opposite reason.
The four protagonists who colonise Karan Johar's marital romance
are so distanced from their spouses and their dormant desires,
you wonder why they got married!
Or, why any two people decide to opt for what many would say is
an obsolete institution in the first place!!
"Kabhi Alvidaa Na Kehna" (KANK) is indeed a definite sign of
Karan Johar's maturation as an artiste and a filmmaker. This is
a film that derives its inspiration energy from
Karan's favourite filmmaker Yash Chopra's interesting but
abortive "Silsila".
Even more interesting is the casting... the role of the
unfaithful husband played in Chopra's film by Amitabh Bachchan
has gone to Shah Rukh Khan. A cranky bitter failed footballer
Shah Rukh uses his wounded ego as a battering ram to destroy his
marriage to the career-driven and yet domesticated Preity Zinta.
So far so cool! It's Abhishek Bachchan playing the utterly
devoted husband's role done by the dependable Sanjeev Kumar in "Silsila"
who hits the most honest notes.
KANK showcases the biggest Bollywood stars in roles of fatally
flawed spouses that normally would shake up the egoistic
equilibrium of our stars.
Hats off to Shah Rukh Khan for moving away from his Peter Pan
image to play a husband and father who's churlish and
unreasonable - believably so. Shah Rukh imbues the tough role
with his inherent charm, playing off his character's bitter
sarcasm against the two female protagonist's supple femininity.
Rani playing Abhishek's cold cleanliness-obsessed wife who comes
alive in Shah Rukh's company is the toughest character to play.
A lot of eyebrows are going to go up at her unpredictable and
often cruel rejection of a caring doting sensitive (etc, etc)
husband for an embittered sharp-tongued man who projects his
frustrations on his wife and timid 10-year-old son.
Walking the tightrope of caprice and unreasonableness, Rani
plays the most challenging role of the film with a calm
conviction that collects the scattered lives in this New
York-based drama, into a clasp of classy emotions.
But why is her relationship with her husband dead when he's
equally good in the head and the bed?
Some of the comic moments among the principal actors are evoked
in a borrowed giggle... The sequence where Rani barges into her
home with an eye mask determined to try some rough-and-tough
stuff on her husband, is straight from the serial "Sex & The
City'.
But the emotions remain largely and gently indigenous. KANK is a
triumph of star-driven opulence. If at heart it's a clever take
on infidelity, on the surface level it remains to the end a very
good-looking film. Every technician from Anil Mehta
(cinematography) to Sharmishta Roy (production design) to (Niranjan
Iyenger (dialogues) and Javed Akhtar (lyrics) has striven
passionately to furnish Karan Johar's mellow-drama with a
bedrock of aesthetic believability. The film looks glossy and
glamorous and yet believable.
Some episodes (for example the prelude where the bride Rani
Mukherji sits chatting with a complete stranger Shah Rukh while
her groom-to-be waits inside for the wedding) acquires
unintentionally surrealistic overtones.
The search for true love (an ongoing obsession in the cinema of
Yash Chopra) takes the characters of KANK into self-destructive
areas of self-indulgence. Fortunately Karan Johar's journey into
forbidden territory is far more smooth and satisfying than his
characters' unattainable yearnings.
Karan Johar redeems and sublimates them through deft fingers
that knit the pastiche of pain and passion into palatable
episodes of varying sensitivity. Finally, the film
moves the adulterous couple into the 'safe' zone of
self-sacrifice and martyrdom where they'd have remained were it
not for the couple's respective spouses (Abhishek and
Preity) getting together to encourage the 'forbidden' union.
It's hugely interesting to see how Karan Johar bends the rules
and reverses conventions. While Abhishek plays the devoted
sincere husband and son, his wife Rani and father Amitabh
Bachchan are cold and raunchy, respectively. Indeed Bachchan
Sr's spirited performance as 'Sexy Sam' brings the house down.
But junior Bachchan in his anguished vulnerable moments with his
screen wife Rani steals the show.
A shimmering showcase for exceptional talent, KANK reveals the
truth about marital disharmony through vibrant and vital
vignettes. Not all the pieces of the trendy jig-saw
add up. But who said the age-old problem of marriage had easy
solutions?
In his latest creation Karan Johar goes into a taboo territory.
But we don't come away after looking at fantasy creatures. Each
of the characters, from the chic magazine
editor Rhea Saran (played with endearing equanimity by Preity
Zinta) to her earthy and practical mom-in-law (Kirron Kher, who
shares a wonderful platonic relationship with 'Sexy Sam')... the
criss-cross of relationships formed among a clutch of anguished
Indians in New Yorkers besieged by domestic trouble, refuse to
leave your mind.
Love them or hate them. You can't easily forget these capricious
and full-blooded characters looking for love in a cold but non-judgemental
city of New York.
Love never seemed more desirable... and unobtainable. There's
only one death in KANK, besides, of course, two dead
relationships.
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