| Gangaajal
Movie Review
When the purity of truth and justice is sullied in the
murky waters of the criminal-politician nexus, a hero
in khaki shall rise. Or so goes the great Bollywood
legend. With Gangaajal, Prakash Jha seems to hop, skip
and jump alternating between the path well-trodden and
the one that's 'different' - story-wise, that is.
Superintendent of Police Amit Kumar
(Ajay Devgan) is posted to rural Tejpur, where law and
order is a thing of the past, forgotten by the local
populace as well as the men in green. Amit is advised
by his superior to deal with things with 'love and affection',
if he wants a smooth time of it.
Inspector Bachcha Yadav (Mukesh Tiwari),
like most of the police force, is also on the payroll
of local don Sadhu Yadav (Mohan Joshi). But he's basically
a good 'un gone bad due to circumstance. SP Amit makes
his intentions and affiliations (or lack of them) crystal
clear to his reluctant deputies. Seeing his conviction,
the juniors stand up and take the fight to Sadhu Yadav,
his immoral son Sunder (Yashpal Sharma) and their cronies.
Allright, so we, the dumb audience,
get the basic idea man - good cop, bad town, corrupt
superiors, local goondas and laconic subordinates resigned
to their fate. It's all been done before. What's your
point, director? The point, mi impatient amigo, is the
protagonist himself.
SP Amit will go to great lengths to
do everything by the book - even when it comes to reigning
in his over-zealous deputies who have finally found
their long-lost genitals. I mean, these guys have been
oppressed by their condition for so long, they've forgotten
what it means to be an officer of the law. To the audience's
and the Tejpur locals' delight, they finally start kicking
some ass and giving the baddies a hard time and what
does Amit do - threatens to court martial them!
The good-at-heart Bachcha Yadav is given
a second chance by Amit Kumar, and he proves himself
by tricking and capturing Sunder. While Sunder gets
out of jail, Bachcha and other officers go berserk and
brutally blind two of his cronies, pouring acid into
the wounds and calling it 'Gangaajal'. Man - no wonder
there's such a controversy about the name.
The gory act is completely condemned
by Amit, but surprisingly praised and supported by the
public, who are sick and tired of the Yadav bullies.
Here begins a mass hysteria - vigilante justice sort
of thing where the use of 'gangaajal' becomes the preferred
punishment for criminals. However, when Sunder gets
to Bachcha Yadav and kills him, the now stale catch-Sunder
game begins all over again, meanders through further
subplots and eventually reaches the climax.
The father-son Yadavs are finally cornered
by an enraged mob who decide to 'gangaajal' them, but
who should come to their rescue but SP Amit. He gets
to do his American President-in-the-face-of-disaster
speech, and law and order prevails.
Set in Bihar, the characters are all
fictitious (yeah, wink wink). Personally, I thought
Shool was far better as a film and far more effective
in telling the story it set out to tell. Gangaajal just
has so many deviations that while trying to fit them
all in, the director runs out of steam and seems to
lose track of the main story. For the most part, you
have this vague feeling that something's happening but
can't really put your finger on what's the point of
what's happening onscreen. There is gratuitous violence
and more than enough colorful language to keep the audience
morbidly interested.
Ajay Devgan is quite good, but he seems
to have done this movie on his breaks from Qayamat -
an SP with hair stylishly dyed brown?? He also smokes
way too much onscreen, and needs to change his stance
and urgently seek the services of a top notch dentist.
Mukesh Tiwari, Mohan Joshi and Yashpal Sharma all do
really well. Gracy Singh is just there to be the cop's
wife - we all know what that means in terms of a role,
right?
Gangaajal was never meant to be an entertainer.
In its genre, however, it's a decent film, albeit not
classic material. Serious, brooding and pretty violent
that it is, I'd say have a really light meal (if you
must) and prepare to get cleansed, one way or the other! |