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Vivah hindi film review
Vivah review
'Vivah' - a charming, idealistic love story (REVIEW)
By Subhash K. Jha,
Film: "Vivah"; Cast: Shahid Kapur, Amrita Rao, Anupam Kher, Alok
Nath, Seema Biswas, Samir Soni; Director: Sooraj Barjatya;
Rating: ***
Sooraj Barjatya rectifies all the mistakes he made in his first
two historic hits "Maine Pyar Kiya" and "Hum Aapke Hain Koun".
The sweet coyness and almost-unbearable bonhomie of his earlier
films are replaced by a far more fluent and fertile imagination
in "Vivah" which nurtures Barjatya's idealistic, almost utopian
view of a joint family.
Gone is the amateurish home-video feel to Barjatya's earlier
familial epics. Yes, there's plenty of singing but blessedly
little dancing in the long but satisfying drama of domesticated
courtship.
The simple charm of the boy-meets-girl story is laced with
untold moments of absolute enchantment.
In his typical fashion, Barjatya weaves together special moments
between the couple as they move in and out of the domestic
flock. Thankfully the joint family is kept at a far more
manageable level here than in his earlier movies.
There are no irksome broods of uncles and aunts who fill up
screen space and the couple in love gets ample breathing space
to let their mutual feelings grow in leisurely grace.
The old-world charm of an arranged marriage is depicted well by
the lead pair (Shahid and Amrita) who go through the mellow
motions of falling in love similar to the adventure of an
unexplored journey.
The external detailing of a small dusty town near Delhi is done
skilfully - the crowded gullies, urchins running after Prem's (Shahid)
car when he visits his in-laws-to-be, the sweet seller's shop
and the night-time bustle compounded by distant sounds of old
Hindi film songs. Art director Sanjay Dhabade's work is
excellent.
The director's sincerity of purpose shines through in every shot
of the crowded but genial gully. Alok Nath has a perennial warm
smile towards his surrogate daughter Poonam (Amrita) and Seema
Biswas does the balancing act between a shrewd step-mom and a
practical mother.
The enchanting relations between these characters, with a chirpy
little sister (newcomer Amrita Prakash) thrown in for sisterly
solidarity, are delightful.
But there's more here. Barjatya takes hold of all the strands of
bustling emotions and harnesses it into a narrative that is
polished and absorbing.
Every component of his vision holds together with remarkable
fluency. The dialogues are in fluent but understandable Hindi
and talk about values that seem to have been lost in the melee
of ruthless ambitions in big cities.
The film takes us back to small pleasures like the bride and
bridegroom's families sleeping on the floor, playing games
together, their friendly banter and mutual respect.
But an unholy fire creates a crisis in the last half-hour.
That's when Sooraj Barjatya shows effectually how much he has
matured as a creative artist.
The sequence where Prem marries Poonam as she struggles between
life and death in her hospital bed is an expression of the
purest form of romance. The drama at the end is handled with
tremendous care.
"Vivah" is about the sanctity of marriage and the importance of
commitment between two individuals. Yes, the central romance is
naively visualised. But the sneaked-in romantic moments between
the to-be-married couple and their stubborn resistance to modern
courtship games makes you crave for the idealism that Barjatya
portrays.
There is no physical intimacy between the two beyond a touch and
no e-mail or mobile connectivity.
"Vivah" is a delicately structured romance between a couple that
decides to fall in love after their marriage has been decided by
their parents. The supporting cast led by Anupam Kher and Alok
Nath as loving and amicable fathers-in-law adds to the central
romance.
The film predictably concludes with the marriage and the groom,
on the wedding night, tells his new bride who suffers from burn
injuries: "Come let me do your dressing."
IANS.
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