| Jaago
Movie Review :
The saving grace of director Mehul
Kumar's film "Jaago" on the rape of a child
is that he knows where to stop before being accused
of trying to win salacious points.
"Jaago" purports to be a wake-up
call for a somnolent desensitised nation of people who
believe crime has nothing to do with them.... even if
it comes knocking on their doors.
Hence when little Shruti (Hansika Motwani)
is brutalised by three men on a local train in Mumbai,
a woman, her daughter and an old man are mute spectators.
Mehul Kumar has earlier issued reel-wrapped
wake-up calls for our collective social conscience in
"Tirangaa" and "Krantiveer", where
Nana Patekar sermonised the castrated masses so hard
they had to be startled into an awakened state.
Since "Jaago" deals with the
most sensitive social crime in the book of atrocities,
one expected Mehul Kumar's tone of narration to be less
screechy.
"Jaago" is as violent and
aggressive in tone as Kumar's earlier films.
Dialogue writer K.K Singh gets plenty
of opportunities for rhetorical gymnastics in the courtroom.
Even when the characters aren't in a session they talk
as they though they are in an invisible courtroom.
The dialogues are the maim-stay of this
jarringly jingoistic journey into crime. Then there's
the background score. Last week in "Maqbool",
Vishal Bhardawaj showed us how an effective background
score can reveal the torn and tortured world of the
characters.
In "Jaago", Sameer Sen's background
score is like an invitation to a rock video. The notes
don't fall, they hurl down on the verbose soundtrack.
The score includes the sounds of crowing
crows each time a corrupt lawyer saunters in and the
carefully copyrighted and patented "Happy Birthday
To You" tune.
It's fortunate that there are no songs
in the narrative.
Between Sen's over-the-top (and how!)
backgrounder and the loud K.K Singh-sound, there isn't
room for a breath of fresh air, let alone a song.
The absence of songs by themselves cannot
be counted as a virtuous leap-forward for a filmmaker.
For all practical purposes, Mehul Kumar continues to
play the role of the clamorous crusader.
Apart from a sequence with one of the
rapists' mother where she derides her son for his ghastly
crime, and a sardonic chief minister's venomous ironical
diatribe against the crime when one of the rapists'
bureaucrat father tries to pull powerful strings to
save his son, there isn't one laudably subtle and thought
provoking moment of social comment.
Where Mehul Kumar needed an ampoule
he opts for a barrel. Loud and belligerent in tone,
"Jaago" fails to get across the enormity of
the crime against child with even a reasonable amount
of conviction.
We should've been one with the bereaved
parents, Raveena Tandon and Sanjay Kapoor's, unspeakable
grief at the rape and death of their child.
The minute Raveena gets into seductive
clothes to trap her daughter's rapists in the same railway
compartment (with the same witnesses looking on!) the
narrative plunges with Raveena's neckline, never to
rise above the level of a street play on crime against
women.
Severely handicapped by a script that
projects ham handed situations through characters who
simulate seriousness rather than absorb and feel the
immensity of the subject, "Jaago" is worth
watching only for Manoj Bajpai's restrained take on
a cop's repulsed rejection of departmental inertia and
corruption.
It's interesting to see how different
this cop is from the one Bajpai played in "Shool".
The outraged indignation of the earlier crime buster
is now frozen into a steely determination to rid society
of scum before it's too late.
The character's idealism, though affective,
gets submerged in tons of outrageous scenes and dialogues.
When a corrupt cop whisks away the eyewitnesses to the
crime, our cop-hero kidnaps his colleague's wife and
child!
Then there's the alarming and unbecoming
differentiation between the bad criminal and good criminal.
Puru Raj Kumar makes a belated appearance
as jailed gangster who approves of the rapists being
punished by extra-constitutional methods. As if anyone's
asking!
One of the offenders is murdered by
the raped girl's mother, another by the father and the
third is hanged by the cop-hero while the parents and
other members of the fury watch with smug satisfaction.
Rape finally finds its level.
Now we can sleep peacefully. |