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Life Mein Kabhie Kabhiee
Life Mein Kabhie
Kabhiee review
'Life Mein Kabhie...' has its touching moments
By Subhash K. Jha, Indo-Asian News Service
Film: "Life Mein Kabhie Kabhiee"; Starring: Dino Morea, Aftab
Shivdasani, Sammir Dattani, Anjori Alagh, Nauheed Cyrusi, Annuj
Sawhnney, Koel Puri; Directed by: Vikram Bhatt; Rating: ***
Vikram Bhatt's best-scripted work to date is about the dreams
and ambitions of the very young, and not so young.
Dreams die hard in "Life Mein Kabhie Kabhiee" (LMKK). As they
fall with a thud to the ground, Vikram Bhatt, displaying a
sensitivity seldom on evidence in his films,
catches the tears and laughter and splashes them in this film
about five friends and their scattered shattered dreams.
The film moves into various strands. Manoj Tyagi's screenplay
weaves in and out these warm lived-in lives with a dextrous
flourish.
Like many of Bhatt's works LMKK is suffused with characters.
Miraculously they all seem to have a life even when Pravin
Bhatt's camera isn't looking. Bhatt gives each of
the five protagonists a reverberant existence that takes them
beyond the stylised sets and clichéd locations, (does a film on
the young have to have happy songs on the
beach and the pub?) sometimes straight into our hearts,
sometimes a little higher.
Even a seemingly minor sequence tends to take the narrative
above the routine. Watch the sequence in the mall where Raj
Zutsi's first wife runs into his new play thing. "I
can see from the shopping bags how happy you are," says the
first wife to the second.
Girish Dhamija's outstanding dialogues reveal the continuity of
the state of mind known as unhappiness.
Every character hurls towards his or her imagined happiness. But
is finally looking into a yawning inertia echoing what Milan
Kundera described as the unbearable lightness
of being.
There's Rajeev (Dino Morea), who breaks away from his
strait-laced entrepreneur-brother (Mohnish Behl) to pave his own
tortuous path to success. Mona (Nauheed Cyrusi) takes the easy
route to stardom - the casting couch with a caddish leading man
(Rajat Bedi), while the loving supportive boyfriend (Annnuj
Swahney, as dependable as a character as he's as an actor)
languishes at home.
Then there's Ishita (Anjori Alagh) who marries money (Raj Zutsi)
only to look straight into the eyes of desolation.
And yes, there is Jai (Sammir Dattani) the troubled, tormented
guilt-stricken politician trying to find his way out of the dark
deep tunnel of self-recrimination.
Shivdasani doing his cute eye-rolling wide-eyed goofy-grin act,
is the one who holds the laughter in place in this aromatic ode
to the scowl of life.
The plot seems outwardly a mass of unmanageable ideas. Thanks to
some deftly-written scenes dotted with dialogues that make you
sit up and listen, this segmented,
sighing, sobbing giggling chirrup of chain reactions comes
together with a sun 'n' shade virtuosity.
Yes, technically the film needed a hand-up. Often the project's
modest undertaking clearly shows up in the sets. Also Pravin
Bhatt's cinematography is unable to create an even uni-view into
the lives and loves of the characters.
Barring a few performers (Sammir's psychiatrist is a laugh, and
so is Dino's love-interest), the quality of acting conceals the
technical leaps. From the tried and tested Raj Zutsi and Mohnish
Behl to their contemporary counterparts like Dino Morea and
Aftab Shivdasani, everyone gets into the skin of things.
Newcomer Anjori Alagh has a
complex gold-digger's part. She is able. On the other hand
Nauheed Cyrusi looks as lost on the casting couch as she does
off it.
But it's Sammir Dattani playing what could be interpreted as a
modern-day version of Sunny Deol in Rahul Rawail's "Arjun"
blossoms into an intense and watch-able actor.
This should've been Sammir's debut film. But even if it isn't,
that's okay. At last he got here.
That's what "Life Mein..." tells us. Don't create a labyrinth of
regrets in your life. Live in the moment. But don't fritter away
the echoes of eternity that carry human aspirations
from here to eternity.
IANS.
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