aaja
nachle – a re-review |
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Starring |
Madhuri
Dixit, Kunal Kapoor, Konkana Sen,
Divya Dutta, Raghuvir Yadav, Vinay
Pathak, Ranvir Shorey, Akhilendra
Mishra, Jugal Hansraj, Sushmita Mukherjee,
Uttara Baokar, Akshaye Khanna, Irrfan
Khan |
Story |
Aditya Chopra |
Screenplay
and Dialogue |
Jaideep Sahni |
Art Direction |
Sukant Panigrahy,
Fali Unwala |
Costumes |
Manish Malhotra,
Mandira Shukla, Dolly Ahluwalia Tewari |
Editing |
Ritesh Soni |
Audiography
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Indrajit Neogi |
Cinematography |
KU Mohanan |
Lyrics |
Jaideep Sahni,
Piyush Mishra |
Music |
Salim-Sulaiman |
Produced
by |
Aditya Chopra |
Directed
by |
Anil Mehta |
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Synopsis
After years of being away from the town
of Shamli, Dia (Madhuri Dixit) receives a call
in New York. Makarand (Darshan Jariwala), her
guru, is dying and she must return to Shamli -
the town where she grew up, where she learnt to
dance. It is an emotional return; not only has
her guru passed away but the institution that
he so lovingly nurtured, Ajanta theatre, is in
decay and under threat of demolition because the
local political authorities feel it a waste of
prime real estate. With the help of Doctor (Raghuvir
Yadav), the caretaker of Ajanta, Dia sets out
on a mission to resurrect the spirit of Ajanta.
In an atmosphere of ridicule and active hostility,
Dia agrees to achieve the near impossible task
of putting together a theatrical production of
Laila Majnu. She must also ensure that every member
of the production is from Shamli town and has
only two months to prove her point. So begins
her tumultuous journey of dealing with small town
prejudices, encountering the resentment of the
powerful contractor, the cynicism of the local
political powers, resolve the delicate tensions
of inter personal relationships and rally her
motley team of non starters - a low level goon
Imran (Kunal Kapoor), the tomboy Anokhi (Konkona
Sen), local ex-MLA Chaudhary Om Singh (Akhilendra
Mishra), a vulnerable tea stall owner Mohan Sharma
(Ranvir Shorey), a responsible government official
Mr. Chojar (Vinay Pathak), a struggling insurance
agent Sanjeev Mehta (Jugal Hansraj)…
The film
The
good news first - Madhuri
Dixit is back and yes, is as good as ever.
The Indian screen definitely needs to see more
of this gorgeous actress who shows no signs of
rustiness in either the acting department or her
phenomenal dancing capability despite being away
from the screen for 5 years now. The bad news,
however, is that Aaja Nachle is terribly
disappointing.
Barring Chak De!
India, 2007 has not been a good year for the
Yash Raj banner at least qualitatively. TaRaRumPum,
Jhoom Barabar
Jhoom, Laga Chunari Mein Daag, all
poor films, have even failed to set the box office
on fire as expected. Aaja Nachle is possibly
Jaideep Sahni’s weakest script to date and
the end result for director Anil Mehta, otherwise
a fine cinematographer in his own right, is a
dreary film, salvaged only by the ever dependable
Ms. Dixit.
Agreed the script is centred entirely around
Madhuri and while one has no complaints on that
front, the supporting cast largely suffer from
stereotypical, poorly sketched and one dimensional
characterisations. Various issues raised like
nurturing of art versus modern development are
skimmed over casually. The movement of the narrative
is flat without any interesting ups and downs
in the story whatsoever. The romantic track of
Konkana and Kunal is unimaginative to say the
least while the sequence of the auditions of actresses
for the Laila role is woefully unfunny. (Incidentally
the heroine audition sequences in Om
Shanti Om too were also a big no-no) In fact,
few scenes linger on in your mind and the script
and execution of the film is full of logical loopholes
with typical Hindi film liberties taken. For instance,
if Madhuri struggles to get even the limited actors
she has at her disposal, how is it that in the
actual Laila Majnu performance we suddenly see
a whole lot of extras and background actors. What’s
more, they also move and dance in perfect sync
on huge multiple film-like sets! While on the
Laila Majnu performance - it is extremely long
drawn and tedious and just seems to go on and
on and on. An American in Paris finale it aint!
Madhuri
is the life and soul of the film lifting it several
notches with her acting and dancing. It is a fine
performance by a fine actress. Just see her in
the sequence where she comes to Ajanta and speaks
to her guru up in the sky before the first day’s
rehearsal or her scene with Ranvir where she tells
him they haven’t spoken about their past
when she ran out on him with the American photographer.
And her sublime dancing once again proves there
is no heroine in Bollywood even today remotely
close to Madhuri. She is just at another level
altogether. The supporting cast are earnest enough
and do what they can in the few moments they are
given. Divya Dutta is extremely effective in her
reconciliation sequence with Madhuri as is Ranvir
Shorey in his scene with Madhuri where she tries
to bring up the past. Konkana Sen, Vinay Pathak,
Jugal Hansraj and Akhilendra Mishra are efficient
enough without being spectacular while Kunal Kapoor
in particular is defeated by an extremely weakly
written role and Darshan Jariwala looks distinctly
uncomfortable in the guru’s get up. Akshaye
Khanna as Madhuri’s likeable adversary has
his moments but Irrfan and Uttara Baokar, two
extremely fine artists, are wasted.
Technical pluses include KU Mohanan’s able
cinematography. Thankfully for once Salim-Sulaiman’s
background score has been kept at a lower level
so as not to intrude on the film. Their compositions
for the songs however is just adequate at best.
A Yash Raj film and one with dance as the backdrop
deserved better and a far more memorable musical
score. The title track and O Re Piya are
among the better composed tunes while the English
song in New York City is just strange. The film
suffers from a languid pace suffering in particular
in the second half. But again, one has to say
that an editor can only work with the material
he is given with. In terms of production design,
the small town recreation is much too set-like.
All in all, a big thumbs up for Madhuri and thumbs
down for the film.
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