| Maqbool
Movie Review :
Tortured lives, anguished faces,
brooding crime and reverberating punishment -- "Maqbool"
transports us to a threshold of pain and redemption
hitherto unknown to Hindi cinema.
From Francis Coppola's "Godfather"
trilogy to Ram Gopal Varma's "Satya" and "Company",
you've probably seen scores of great and not-so-great
films on the underworld.
But "Maqbool" takes its emotional
content beyond any other film from the genre because
this is Shakespeare's "Macbeth" trans-located
to Mumbai's underworld and because Vishal Bharadwaj
has selected a dream cast to portray his nightmarish
world of crime and retribution.
"Maqbool" lays open a whole
new universe of passion play unexplored in the original
text.
Bharadwaj reveals the politics of lust
and passion with a confidence seldom witnessed in Hindi
cinema.
Hence the king from Shakespeare's story
becomes a doddering paunchy underworld kingpin Abbaji
(Pankaj Kapur) and Lady Macbeth becomes Nimmi (Tabu),
his companion, whose passion for Abbaji's most trusted
lieutenant Maqbool (Irfan Khan) rips her life, womb
and conscience apart.
Bharadwaj, whose previous feature-film
outing was the kids' flick "Makdee", brings
Tabu to a level of performance that renders the general
acting standards of Hindi cinema redundant and overdone.
There is a demoniacal look on Tabu's
face as she provokes Irfan to get rid of Abbaji. But
even in her most horrific moment, Tabu preserves the
"poetry" of violence in her performance.
Yes, she's remarkable. But to hold on
to her performance is to do injustice to the sublime
and seamless quality of Bharadwaj's Shakespearean voyage
into the damned.
Every actor builds a poetic life for
his character and then plunges his own personality into
the lucid, lyrical angst of lives on the edge.
Unlike that other recent brilliant exposition
on gangsters, "Company", Bharadwaj doesn't
abide by the ground rules of portraying the Mumbai underworld.
The characters don't spend time scampering
through crowded narrow gullies with guns in their hands.
Most often they're confined to meticulously created
locations where they don't appear to have been airdropped
just minutes before the camera rolled.
Hemant Chaturvedi's cinematography particularly in the
scenes capturing the dark guilt and inescapable atonement
of the murderous lovers is beyond anything imaginable
in terms of cinematic expressiveness.
However, most of the film looks like
Ram Gopal Varma's "Company". Which truly is
a tragedy because many people would inevitably compare
the two great works.
Although the Irfan character's regard
for his mentor reminds us of Al Pacino with Marlon Brando
in "The Godfather", Bharadwaj's take on the
tormented destiny of the underworld is uniquely autonomous.
The director packs in an astonishing
density and some tongue-in-cheek barbs at Bollywood's
notorious links with the underworld.
The structuring of two sets of love
stories, between Nimmi and Maqbool and Abbaji's innocent
daughter Sameera (Masumi Makhija) and Guddu (Ajay Gehi),
is an ingenious method of projecting the two aspects
of love, the murky and the un-violated.
When, in the stunning finale, the dying
Nimmi asks Maqbool, "Was our love pure?" we
are looking at the underbelly of passion through an
epic lens where crime is simultaneously subjective and
objective.
In the way he projects emotions buried
under the macho milieu, and also the austere use of
his self-composed songs and music, Vishal Bharadwaj
demonstrates a narrative control that most filmmakers
don't achieve in a lifetime, let alone in their second
film.
The performances do the rest. After
"Warrior", Irfan Khan again dons the tormented
conscience-stricken protagonist's mantle. Khan's "Maqbool"
goes from stern self-denial to tortured crime and retribution.
Pankaj Kapur is a revelation. His expressions
of steely revenge melt into displays of utter compassion
for his enchanting companion. Kapur corroborates Bollywood's
myopic disregard for its truly outstanding performers.
There is a glorious gallery of able-to-outstanding
supporting performances by actors like Piyush Mishra
and Ajay Gehi.
Naseeruddin Shah and Om Puri as buffoonish
corrupt cops and narrators, however, seem wasted in
a film where every character epitomises a will to achieve
the state of damnation.
"Maqbool" takes frightful
risks with narrative devices and audiences' tastes and
comes out in triumphant colours of dark despair. |