| Pinjar
Movie Review
Pinjar revisits one of the most heartrending chapters
of India's modern history - that of the Partition -
albeit in a manner that does not unnecessarily meander
on the blood and gore of the catastrophe.
Yes, it was a painful period in the
lives of many Indians who can still recall those dreadful
incidents with horrific clarity. Its memory will not
go away anytime soon, at least not in the next few generations.
How could humanity have turned so barbaric? Millions
killed, millions raped, millions looted. Why? No one
really knows. No one even tries to. It is indeed distressing
to note that of the umpteen films made and books written
on the tragedy, not one has attempted to answer this
question.
Maybe there is no answer, maybe it is
so disturbing that it better be left unanswered. But,
would treating the subject with respect be asking for
too much? Fortunately, Amrita Pritam does not think
so.
Pinjar is based on her novel by the
same name. It is a story through the eyes of one woman,
Puro (Urmila Matondkar) from the years 1946 through
1948. It is the story of Puro's dreams biting dust and
her hopes turning into despair. It is the story of her
getting sucked into the vortex of circumstances that
fate thrust upon her.
Puro was your average Punjabi village
girl whose only aspiration was to find her Prince Charming
and live happily ever after. She does find him in Ramchand
(Sanjay Suri). Tirlok (Priyanshu Chatterjee), her brother,
and Ramchand's sister Laajo (Sandali Sinha) are also
to be wed. All is well till Rasheed (Manoj Bajpai) kidnaps
Puro a few days before the wedding.
Puro's family refuses to accept her.
She goes back to Rasheed who marries her. Tirlok and
Laajo, and Rajjo (Isha Koppikar), Puro's sister, and
Kirpal (Ramchand's first cousin) are married. Puro's
family considers her dead. They are afraid of losing
their honor in the community if they accept her. But,
Ramchand and Tirlok make all attempts to find her.
Then partition hits the country. Laajo
is taken away to Pakistan where she is treated as a
keep and an unpaid housemaid. Puro and Rasheed find
her and return her to Tirlok. Ramchand is still ready
to marry Puro, but she refuses. She has found love in
Rasheed and stays behind at Lahore.
In a way, partition only forms the backdrop
of the film. However, the issue has been treated with
sensitivity. The film has not blamed any country or
any community for what happened. It does not use patriotic
innuendos. It tells you what happened without connoting
any meaning to it. It set out to tell you Puro's story,
a story that many women at the time could identify with,
and it does just that - without deviating from the plot.
Urmila Matondkar is probably not going
to get another role like this again. It appears that
she thinks so, too, for she has given it her all. You
do not see Urmila in her. You see Puro - a woman who
has lost all and compromised with her fate. Manoj Bajpai
may not have a big role but the man is simply brilliant.
All other actors have done more than what was expected
of them for their respective characters. |