| Girlfriend
Movie Review
Hell is where Karan Razdan takes us in "Girlfriend".
Nothing wrong in a view from the underbelly. But alternate
sexuality cannot be turned into an occasion for exhibitionism.
Razdan discards every
sensitive bone in his creative body to make a frontal
attack on our perceptions of romantic love as defined
by cinematic boy-meets-girl formulas.
In "Girlfriend",
Aashish Chowdhary meets Amrita Arora. But she, the poor
babe in the woods, has a problem -- an over-possessive
female friend Tanya (Isha Koppiker) who is a closet
lesbian.
Hindi cinema comes of
age... or does it?
It's hard to believe
that during all the years they spent together, living
out of the same house and even the same bed, Sapna (Amrita)
didn't suspect Tanya's lesbian intentions, more so when
Sapna finally confesses to her boyfriend Rahul (Ashish
Chowdhary) that the two female friends had "done
it" in a drunken stupor once.
Razdan's cavorting camera
quickly cuts to a lengthy and explicit love making sequence
between Amrita and Isha whose impact is deliberately
heightened by the soundtrack.
If Razdan truly wanted
to portray the downside of misplaced sexuality, why
did he need to take his two heroines into bed? There
are many other far more aesthetic and effective ways
of showing intimacy between two individuals.
At every step of his
narration, Razdan wants to shock audiences. Hence what
begins as a fairly authentic story turns into a macabre
"Fatal Attraction" kind of horror story, with
Isha going from restrained dominance to violence, kick-boxing
et al!
To her credit, Isha
rides the waves of absurdity in the plot to emerge with
a rounded and credible performance.
Her transformation in
the second-half from closet gay to brazen lover girl
is achieved through her body language, hair and clothes,
as well as the actress' sharply desolate eyes. A lot
of her performance in the second-half seems inspired
by Urmila Matondkar in "Pyar Tune Kya Kiya".
Amrita is sufficiently
squeaky and mousy. But when she takes turns with her
female co-star to cavort in swimming pools, she tends
to get carried away.
Even though he does
play a guy in a very strange situation, Aashish Chowdhary
should have exercised more self-control, specially over
his facial muscles.
He needn't despair.
"Girlfriend" is a film about excesses. Though
the mounting is professional enough to make us forget
the director's last sojourn into sleaze, "Hawas",
"Girlfriend" is still not honest enough to
qualify as a serious study of alternate sexuality.
Before plunging into
lesbianism, Razdan needed to research his subject as
well as the main character's psychological encumbrances.
In one sequence, Tanya says she was violated repeatedly
by her father.
Need we go on with this?
"Girlfriend" makes us wonder where erotica
is heading in Hindi cinema, and in how many ways filmmakers
would circumvent conventional morality to get the audience
interested.
(Review by: Glamsham.com) |