chak
de! india - a re-review |
 |
|
Starring |
Shah
Rukh Khan, Vidya Malavade, Sagarika
Ghatge, Shilpa Shukla, Chitrashi Rawat,
Anaitha Nair, Shubi Mehta, Seema Azmi,
Nisha Nair, Sandia Furtado, Arya Menon,
Kimberly Miranda, Masochon V Zimik,
Kimi Laldawla, Nichola Sequeira, Raynia
Mascarenhas, Javed Khan, Anjan Srivastav |
Story,
Screenplay, Dialogues and Lyrics |
Jaideep Sahni |
Costumes |
Mandira Shukla,
Shiraz Siddique |
Art Director |
Sukant Panigrahy |
Sports
Action Director |
Rob Miller |
Hockey
Coach |
Mir Ranjan Negi |
Editing |
Amitabh Shukla |
Audiography |
Manas Choudhury,
Ali Merchant |
Cinematography |
Sudeep Chatterjee |
Music |
Salim - Sulaiman |
Produced
by |
Aditya Chopra |
Directed
by |
Shimit Amin |
|
|
A film with a sporting
backdrop already has half its battle won, since
it deals with the triumph of the human spirit;
of underdogs who make it and of course redemption
from a past failure. Chak De! India has
all this and in that sense, like any other film
of this type, is predictable with typical plot
points. However, it is the other half of the battle
to make an engaging film that takes you through
those very predictable plot points film and script
clichés and makes you feel good about them
when they happen that determines whether the film
works or not. Iqbal (2005)
got it right earlier and now Chak De!
India gets it pretty right too.
The film is inspired by ex-Indian goalkeeper
Mir Ranjan Negi's story. He was the goalie in
the 1982 Asian Games when India lost 7-1 to Pakistan
in the finals. It was Negi who got all the blame
and faded into oblivion. He was accused of taking
money from the Pakistanis to concede goals. Although
unsubstantiated, the allegations ensured he never
played for India again. People even asked if based
on his first name Mir, Negi was a Muslim. Chak
De! India is inspired by how Negi fought
those allegations and redeemed his honour by helping
India win the men’s Asian Games gold in
1998 at Bangkok and the women’s team to
gold at the Manchester Commonwealth Games in 2002.
So Chak De! India looks at how a disgraced
former Indian hockey player, Kabir Khan, finds
redemption 7 years later in coaching the Indian
Women's Hockey Team to victory in the World Cup.
(Incidentally, Negi was involved with the film
as well as a hockey coach)
The
film is involving, feel-good and rousing with
just the right mix of sports and patriotism. Director
Shimit Amin once again scores in his second film,
capturing the sporty atmosphere just right. In
fact as sports film go, Chak De! India
is definitely among the better films of the genre
in India. The film nicely sticks to its subject
and fortunately doesn't add distracting subplots
or items. The girls comprising the team are well
cast and bring an infectious enthusiasm into the
film that makes you care about them and move with
them. One gets engaged in the world cup, following
the team, willing them on to win and rejoicing
when they do so. The screenplay though predictable,
as mentioned, has the key plot points by and large
well worked out be it the girls having their own
agenda before realizing what it means to play
for India, them opposing the coach first and then
coming around, the bonding of the team for the
first time - bashing up guys who make a pass at
two of the girls from the North-East at McDonalds
or the two key forwards coming to terms with each
other in the finale. Dialogue is pretty good especially
in the two key pep talks that Kabir gives the
forwards the night before the final and to the
entire team just before the final.
That said, the screenplay is not without its
set of problems. Kabir's relationship with Vidya
needed to be established more for Bindia to feel
there was something between them but their interaction
is sparce to say the least. The one key plot point
of the men v/s women match is contrived and the
scene and the result lacks any credibility whatsoever.
The back stories and characterisations of the
girls could have done with some more thought and
depth. The back stories where shown (thankfully
it was not thought to give each and every character
a back story) are much too typical with the girls
having problems with either the fiancé
or husband or father who don't want them to play
and regard marriage and family as above sports.
The stories and resolutions too are as pat and
convenient as they come. Also, the treatment of
the girls who have come from all over India is
conventionally regional-stereotypical. For instance
North-East girls are thought to be 'easy' and
the two girls from Manipur and Mizoram come dressed
in sleeveless tops. And of course the Punjabi
girl is all brawns and hatti-katti. Worse, the
officials of the Indian Hockey Association are
total caricatures with their meeting scenes among
the weakest in the film. And the less said about
the scene of Kabir leaving his mohalla in disgrace
and ultimately returning in triumph, the better.
In fact, one other problem with the film is the
depiction of Kabir as a Muslim. What if he were
a Hindu who made a mistake in the match and then
shook hands with the Pakistan captain? Would he
still have been a traitor then? Agreed the makers
might have wanted to show that even today in India,
a Muslim has it that much harder to prove he is
a 'good and patriotic' Indian and we must not
have such biases to him but the scenes with the
media and the interviews with the public following
the Indo-Pak match, not forgetting the scenes
at the mohalla, are tacky as hell and do not help
the film at all.
Coming
to the performances, Shah
Rukh Khan is spot-on as the humiliated ex-player
Kabir Khan who redeems himself in the eyes of
the country. His hurt, angst and frustration,
sternness and final redemption are brought out
perfectly. It is perhaps Shah Rukh's best performance
after Kabhi Haan Kabhi Naa (1993) and
Swades (2005). See him
where he responds to Bindia who brings out his
past and talk of the humiliation he has had to
live with or his two pep talks during the World
Cup and as he struggles to control his feelings
after the girls have won the World Cup. The girls
too are uniformly excellent, their rough edges
and lack of acting experience actually a bonus
rather than a hindrance giving a sense of likeable
reality to the film. What's more they look like
hockey players. In particular, one must mention
Sagarika Ghatke playing Preeti, Chitrashi Rawat
playing the Haryanavi tomboy Komal, Tanya Abrol
playing the big, tough Punjabi kudi Balbir and
the actress playing the associate coach, Krishna.
However, Shilpa Shukla, the one experienced actress
in the team playing the senior most player Bindia,
lacks the spontaneity and freshness of the other
girls. She also looks too old in the midst of
the group. Otherwise a fine actress (Khamosh
Pani (2003), Hazaar Khwaishein Aisi
(2003)), maybe she was too much of an
actress compared to the others. But why on earth
where those B-grade extras, who also are awful
actors, used for the mohalla where Kabir stays?
Not to mention the way the scenes were shot -
like the rural dramas of Hindi cinema in the 1960s
and 1970s.
Technically, mention must be made of Sudeep Chatterjee's
camerawork which fortunately sticks to being more
realistic rather than glossy. Although considering
the film had a hockey coach and a sports action
director, the hockey sequences are adequate but
do not quite have that well covered sports coverage
one is used to today. Also, we never know anything
about the game of hockey or any specific tactics
used in the film if any. Except an absolutely
amateurish depiction of man-to-man marking that
only one player can break! But since one is going
along with the coach and the girls, it still passes
by and the sport sequences are still good if one
goes by past standards here. While the editing
keeps the pace from flagging, one still feels
the full 17 reels of the film running time as
the final match stretches on and on right down
to the penalty shootout. It is difficult to comment
on how good the the sound design is as Salim-Sulaiman's
overbearing and obvious background score drowns
everything else. As for the songs, the best tuned
number in the film is the title song.
All in all, still an engaging feel-good film.
Worth a watch.
|