| Murder
Movie Review
On a wet and windy morning in Bangkok,
a forlorn Indian housewife Simran (Mallika Sherawat)
in a clinging blue chiffon sari waves frantically for
a taxi, drops her shopping bags in the wet chaos, and
comes face to face with a sensuous silhouette.
"Come to my apartment for a cuppa?" the smirking
stranger tells the housewife. Face mirroring a repressed
sexuality and challenged values, she refuses, and then
changes her mind...to plunge into a lustful liaison
that brings her well-ordered life to a crashing crescendo.
Welcome to the second remake of Adrian Lyne's "Unfaithful"
in a week. With a far better cast, production values
and music score than last week's "Hawas",
"Murder" nips murmurs about exploitative adaptations
in the bud.
Where you expect a sleaze-fest, you get a tastefully
mounted, deftly cut tale of betrayal and redemption.
In combining body with some soul, director Basu spins
a sensuous coiling-recoiling yarn. Though the post-interval
half after the housewife's lover is murdered gets a
wee too languorous and eager to please, the vice-like
grip never falls away from the narrative.
There're
some amusing attempts to Indianise the wanton adulteress,
make her more acceptable to the Indian middleclass'
scrambled sensibility. Hence, borrowing a bit from B.R.
Chopra's "Gumrah", the neglected housewife
Simran is actually married to her brother-in-law after
her sister dies leaving behind a child, and a void in
the widower's heart that Simran finds impossible to
fill.
In one of the strongest roles written for a woman protagonist
in recent times, Mallika Sherawat gets to the heart
of her character and creates a woman who's as appealing
in her persona as in her acceptance and comfort-level
with her sensuality.
In the scenes depicting the housewife's loneliness and
in her arguments with her workaholic husband, Mallika
is surprisingly equal to the occasion.
Wish the same could be said about her two male co-stars
who are just about adequate.
Though a decent actor in "Footpath", Emran
Hashmi's hunk act is way out of line here. He seems
to have been chosen only because he's an adept kisser.
Sure enough his skill in that area is employed generously
in the love scenes.
Ashmit Patel in the husband's role is thoroughly miscast.
The role required someone world-weary and middle-aged,
like Jackie Shroff perhaps.
True to the Bhatt style, there aren't too many supporting
characters swamping the central scenario, except Raj
Zutsi as the belligerent cop whose interrogation yields
a two-toned narration, with both the protagonists owning
up to the murder.
It's only when the film begins to get too clever for
its own good that the plot loses its cool. The end game,
an invention that takes "Murder" away from
its source material, is typical of the Bhatts's cinema.
The heightened horror, with a dollop of Hindu mythology
whereby the now-repentant wife fights to save her marriage
and dignity from the lover's clammy clutches, is the
"Raaz" formula rehashed and heated at a titillating
temperature.
To the film's credit, the plot is peopled by arresting
moments of erotica and emotions. From the windswept
opening to the over-the-top climax, Fuwad Khan's camera
plays a captivating game of light and shade with the
inner and outer locations.
The absence of humbug is largely appreciable, though
attempts to make the adulteress sympathetic - for example,
Simran very conveniently knows the lover from before
marriage - dilute the woman's dilemma.
And yet what remains behind is on the whole, not only
worth watching, but at times, a little beyond that.
Anu Malik's music is a big help. "Bheege honth
tere" is filmed with the fecund fluidity of a free-flowing
erotic painting. Though the background music gets suitably
oppressive towards the end, the narrative has a remarkable
soundtrack, cleansed of extraneous sounds and yet containing
enough incidental noises to indicate a life beyond the
immediate words.
Though some of the love scenes go boldly beyond the
prescriptions of mainstream eroticism, they are tastefully
done.
Most of all, there's Mallika giving to her role the
kind of erotic energy and restrained emotionalism that
one last saw in Urmila Matondkar in "Rangeela"
and missed sorely in Bipasha Basu in "Jism".
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