Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

'Mukkabaaz' Anurag Kashyap's Most Sensitive Film, Hits A Hard Punch

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Jan, 2018 11:40 AM

    Starring: Vineet Kumar, Zoya Hussain, Jimmy Sheirgill, Ravi Kissan

     

    Directed by Anurag Kashyap

     

    Rating: * * * *

     

    Really, we couldn't hope for a better start to our movie-going spree in 2018. Mukkabaaz is many things at the same time. To begin with it isano, it not just an ode to pugilism. It is an ode to that thing called love.

     

    Mukkabaaz is Anurag Kashyap's most romantic film to date. It's about, believe it or not, love at first sight when Bareilly's self-proclaimed Mike Tyson, aka Shravan Singh (Vineet Singh, startling in his transformation into a ferocious fighter) happens to see Sunaina (newcomer Zoya Hussain, expressive in her silences).

     

    The sequence where Shravan falls in love brilliantly yokes violence and tenderness, and sets the pace for what is to follow. This is a film steeped in the ethos of ethnicity, immersed in the culture of caste and gender prejudices.

     

    But it's not as bereft of hope and humour as one would think Kashyap's milieu of mofussil mayhem would be. This is a mellower more sensitive world, a world of love and compassion in a universe of corruption and debauchery.

     

    The smalltown setting is chilling in its bold undertones of violence. Kashyap's Bareilly (as we come to know the setting to be) is run by a glorified goon Bhagwan Das Mishra (Jimmy Sheirgill) a sadistic patron-saint, who early in the narrative asks the local Tyson to drink his urine from a bottle, "like holy water".

     

     

    We never know whether Shravan actually performs the offensive act of subservience. The film's anxious editors (Arati Bajaj, Ankit Bidyadhar) cut away from the sordid sequence of subjugation.

     

    But knowing Shravan we can easily conclude he would never eat shit, or drink pee. This is a boy-man on a mission to prove to the world and his disapproving father, that boxing is not a soft option but a hard career decision.

     

    In the film's most powerfully acted episode Shravan hits back hard at his father's contemptuous reading of his son's ambitions, taunting the older man for achieving so little in life. It's a scene of abject filial cruelty performed with such guilt and hurt by Vineet Kumar, that a potentially stereotypical father-son confrontation scene acquires a towering personality denoting the entire gamut of conflicts that go into the aspirations of one generation as they are passed on to another.

     

    Son says, father has no respect for his passion. Father thins son is talking about 'fashion'. It's a silly confusion, that hides the larger growing tensions simmering in small towns where youngsters want to make something of their lives. But what????

     

    Linguistic confusion plays a major part in driving the plot forward. The actor Shree Dhar Dubey who plays the hero's buddy insists on using smatterings of angrezi in his conversations. A conceit that infuriates our Shravan.

     

    Elsewhere cow vigilantes are busy, for no particular reason, thrashing a suspect while someone films the brutality on a phone. In the smalltown fables of Kashyap and his ilk of directors mofussil directors, video recordings on phone are indicative of how roughly hewn technology is into every day life.

     

    Our hero roughs up his casteist senior at his workplace. When the man wets himself in fear Shravan gleefully films the man's humiliation. It's not just villains who expose their dirty subconscious.

     

    The dialogues and situations are pronouncedly scatological, as they are wont to be in a Kashyap film. But the tone changes oh-so-delicately when Shravan is around the love of his life. Balancing between bouts of boxing brutality and episodes of unfettered tenderness Mukkabaaz is Anurag Kashyap's most vividly written and fluidly executed film since the underrated Dev D.

     

    The performances are so powerful you fear they would outdistance the director's mastery over the patois of mayhem, and none more powerful than Vineet Kumar in a career-making role and performance that compares favourably with Robert de Niro's boxer's shots in Martin Scorcese's Raging Bull.

     

    Not that Kashyap is Scorcese. Heavens, no! Kashyap is on a trip of his own, tripping cheekily over the live wires that are thrown all over the bleak brutal and wounded landscape of his films.

     

    And it's not just Vineet Kumar who comes forward with a performance that defines the director's quenchless thirst for searching out the violence that underlines life lived on the fringes. Ravi Kissan and Jimmy Sheirgill are rqually superb in their roles as the coach and the ganglord. These are actors who know the culture of caste and gender politics. They feel the throbbing veins of violence.

     

    As the narrative progresses it acquires the personality of a tightly-wound entity coiling and recoiling into shapes of tenderness and venom. Mukkabaaz is a different more balanced and less unsettled beast than any film Kashyap has made. While all his recent films portrayed the dark ugly sinister underbelly of mofussil existence this time, just this once, the Director has allowed himself to explore the tricky relationship between love and violence with gentle care.

     

    This is the Director's most sensitive film to date. It hits a hard punch. And not just in the boxing ring.

    MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

    Movie Review: 'Son of God' - bland, lacks spirit

    Movie Review: 'Son of God' - bland, lacks spirit
    Director Christopher Spencer's "Son of God" is a far cry from a faith film as it impassively encapsulates Jesus' life in the backdrop of the Jewish-Roman conflict of that era.

    Movie Review: 'Son of God' - bland, lacks spirit

    Jaya Bachchan, Akhilesh woo voters

    Jaya Bachchan, Akhilesh woo voters
    Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav and Rajya Sabha member Jaya Bachchan Sunday asked voters to cast their ballot in favour of the Samajwadi Party, saying it has put in major efforts to develop the state.

    Jaya Bachchan, Akhilesh woo voters

    Movie Review: 'Transcendence' - stylish off-beat film

    Movie Review: 'Transcendence' - stylish off-beat film
    A tragic love story, constructed on the foundation of, "heal the planet for a better future for all of us", "Transcendence" gives an insight of what would happen to the primitive organic life or "the soul after death". In other words, it is the scientific and technological interpretation of life after death

    Movie Review: 'Transcendence' - stylish off-beat film

    Review: 2 States - a magical north-south love story you wish wouldn't end

    Review: 2 States - a magical north-south love story you wish wouldn't end
    Two world, two cultures, two families, one love story...."2 States" re-defines and rejuvenates the love-marriage space. Simple and yet striking, gorgeous and graceful, this is a film where we come away hankering to know what happens to the couple after the film is over.

    Review: 2 States - a magical north-south love story you wish wouldn't end

    Movie Review: 'Rio 2' - Mild Entertaining Fare

    Movie Review: 'Rio 2' - Mild Entertaining Fare
    Though the film is visually appealing and picturesque, the highlight of "Rio 2" is the beautifully choreographed soccer game in which Blu finds himself at the receiving end.

    Movie Review: 'Rio 2' - Mild Entertaining Fare

    Movie Review: 'Bhootnath Returns' wins you over with its clean heart

    Movie Review: 'Bhootnath Returns' wins you over with its clean heart
    Watch little Parth Bhalerao spar effortlessly with the formidable Mr Bachchan. And you see in front of your dazzled eyes the future of Indian cinema.

    Movie Review: 'Bhootnath Returns' wins you over with its clean heart