Aankhon Dekhi review: a beautiful film about a wise old fool

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Posted: 11 years ago
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Aankhon Dekhi review: a beautiful film about a wise old fool

by Suprateek Chatterjee Mar 21, 2014

#Aankhon Dekhi #Aankhon Dekhi review #Bollywood #Bollywood movie review #Rajat Kapoor.

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The best films are those that subvert your expectations as a viewer. It's impossible not to have expectations, of course, as we now walk into movie theatres after being bombarded by teasers, trailers and interviews; all of them trying to force us to reach a pre-determined opinion for any upcoming release.

Aankhon Dekhi is an exception. Not only is it a film that has been criminally underpromoted, but it does something few of us would've expected. Sanjay Mishra, a comedic actor best known to many as the bumbling Apple Singh, breaks our hearts with his astounding performance as Raje Bauji, a man who dares to look at the world differently.

Directed by Rajat Kapoor, Aankhon Dekhi is a tour de force set in the heart of old Delhi about Bauji, the grizzled patriarch of a joint family who decides that he will no longer believe anything that he hasn't seen with his own eyes. A simple and idealistic conceit, one would think, and not enough to sustain an entire feature-length film.

A still from Aankhon Dekhi. IBN Live.

But Kapoor breathes life into this story that focuses on The Great Indian Mohalla by creating real, flesh-and-blood characters that are played by one of the most talented ensembles seen on screen in recent times. These include Seema Pahwa as Bauji's shrill, long-suffering wife, Maya Sarao as his daughter, Taranjeet as his stressed-out sister-in-law and Kapoor himself as his younger brother. It is a film that captures Delhi - 6 in a manner Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra never did.

The incident that triggers off Bauji's epiphany is a familiar one: young Rita (Sarao) has been caught going out on a date with Ajju (Namit Das), who is said to be a laundiyabaaz. After the family tracks Ajju down to teach him a lesson (with one typically clueless Delhi cop in tow), Ajju cowers in fright and breaks down. Bauji then realises that hearsay is a dangerous thing - surely no womanising wolf would behave in such a manner?

The beauty of the concept and how it plays out is that Mishra's character is both Lear and fool. Too often, in these kinds of films, we're given protagonists who are either beyond reproach or flawed beyond recognition, and the stories around them usually exploit these qualities to create situations to push the filmmaker's agenda forward. Here, Kapoor's sure-handed writing allows Mishra's character to jump into the ocean and swim in myriad directions without ever losing the audience.

Bauji's quest to find the absolute truth is met with a variety of reactions: jeers, derision, sympathy, concern, acceptance and obeisance. But it is never a predictable, linear graph. Some characters, like Bauji's wife, forever treat it as a burden. Others, like his children, humour him until he cramps their style. The neighbourhood sycophants, played by an assortment of actors, including the brilliant Brijendra Kala, alternate between hero worship and scathing in their dealings with Bauji.

The story moves forward with the aid of jump cuts in an unspecified time period, leading to several gaps in the storyline that the audience is forced to fill. Sometimes the answers to these aren't entirely satisfactory. For example, how a mathematics professor is convinced by Bauji's facile logic that pits simple arithmetic against accepted geometrical concepts is slightly hard to swallow. Another time, Bauji discovers his life's first vice " gambling " and becomes a regular at the neighbourhood adda. However, aside from it leading to gossip about Bauji, the film does nothing significant with it, denying us a look into what the characters in his immediate life think about this development.

In terms of portrayals and production design, Aankhon Dekhi is about as accurate as a film can get. Every character is pitch-perfect in terms of their accents, mannerisms and looks. The lower-middle-class family dynamic is explored beautifully, with the family watching haplessly as their patriarch runs amok, unable to do much about it. Meanwhile, the background score by Sagar Desai uses sitars and sarangis playing ragas such as Lalit and Malkauns to supplement Bauji's evolution - an unusual choice of arrangements nowadays, but one that gives the film a meditative and spiritual glow.

And finally, as Bauji, Mishra, a National School of Drama alumnus, finally finds a role into which he can sink his guthka-stained teeth. With remarkable restraint, he adds layers to the archetypal knowledgeable fool' character: concerned father, hapless husband, difficult brother and doting grandfather. This is one of the best performances you'll see this year.

Aankhon Dekhi is not a film that will invite public love, the way Queen or Highway have managed to garner over the past month. It eschews typical Bollywood razzle-dazzle to paint a stark but vivid portrait of the search for meaning and truth in our lives, where the laughter and the tears both come from the truth laid bare on screen. It is an intensely rewarding experience, with an ending that will haunt you for days afterwards

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chimchimcher-ee thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#2
Here is the review for the movie Ankhon Dekhi. Watch out this space for more updates!
Rating:3.5/5 Review By:Mohar Basu Site:Koimoi
Ankhon Dekhi has every element in it that makes it a flattering watch. Heart warming in parts and easy to get entrapped in, the film is mindbogglingly engaging. Its impossible to dismiss this film, because of its mounting moments that soar all through.
Rating:4/5 Review By:Shubhra Gupta Site:Indian Express
Kapoor directs with a sure eye and an unerring ear for the sounds of the Delhi 6 ( only quibble, the background music swells too loudly : those moments didn't need that kind of underlining). He is also one of the few Indian directors who understands whimsy : it is in every frame, but never overdone, making this a film rich in what appear to be small but are actually significant pleasures.
Rating:4/5 Review By:Suhani Singh Site:India Today
Through such a scene, Kapoor accomplishes the rare feat of making a film which both entertains and also compels you to think. Bauji's mantra is seeing is believing. Only be seeing Ankhon Dekhi will you be doing justice to it.
Rating:/ Review By:Suprateek chatterjee Site:Firstpost
Aankhon Dekhi is not a film that will invite public love, the way Queen or Highway have managed to garner over the past month. It eschews typical Bollywood razzle-dazzle to paint a stark but vivid portrait of the search for meaning and truth in our lives, where the laughter and the tears both come from the truth laid bare on screen. It is an intensely rewarding experience, with an ending that will haunt you for days afterwards
HolyGround thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#3
Never heard of this film before
But I like Rajat Kapoor and reviews seem good
Might watch it
HolyGround thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#4

Nothing but the truth!

Ankhon Dekhi

Rating: 3.5

March 21, 2014

Cast: Sanjay Mishra, Seema Pahwa, Rajat Kapoor, Maya Sarao, Namit Das, Brijendra Kala, Manu Rishi

Director: Rajat Kapoor

Life is a medley of experiences, but are you savoring them or do you just go through the motions? Through the wonderfully whimsical Ankhon Dekhi, writer-director Rajat Kapoor shows us how the journey could be more meaningful if we lived life the way we choose to. Sanjay Mishra is aptly cast as Bauji, the 55-year-old patriarch of a joint family in Old Delhi. After an epiphany one day, Bauji decides that he will only believe what he can see for himself, refusing to go with the accepted truth.

This poses its own set of problems, especially when Bauji quits his job as a travel agent because he can no longer honestly sell holidays to cities like Amsterdam, when he has never been abroad himself. His family is exasperated, and his younger brother Rishi (Kapoor himself) moves out with his wife and son when he can't stomach Bauji's eccentricities any longer. Bauji's wife Pushpa (Seema Pahwa) is much more vocal in her anger, and several of Ankhon Dekhi's brilliantly comical scenes are when she explodes theatrically.

Slowly, Bauji collects a motley bunch of disciples who first question and laugh at his theories, but later hang on to his every word. In one humorous scene, Bauji and his chelas head off to the zoo to find out for themselves if there's any truth to the commonly accepted belief that tigers roar.

Through Bauji's existential quest for the real, the film offers vignettes that are out of the real. Like that bit when a nephew is caught in a trance and can't seem to stop talking. While everyone around treats him like an oddity, Bauji holds his hand and listens patiently, until the boy falls into silence and snaps out of it. It's as if the film is offering a case for accepting people just as they are.

But Ankhon Dekhi does meander in parts, especially when Bauji takes a vow of silence, or later when he discovers a knack for gambling when he goes to the local den to pay off his son's debts. Despite its lush cinematography and moving score, the film tends to feel stretched. Yet we are mostly taken in by Kapoor's gentle narrative, enhanced by an ensemble cast that delivers natural performances. Chief among them is Sanjay Mishra, instinctive as the oddball Bauji, mild-mannered and generous in spirit. Seema Pahwa is magnificent as his drama queen wife, often agitated by Bauji's whims, while Rajat Kapoor is entirely believable as Rishi, quietly hurt and disapproving of his brother.

The director makes a strong case for familial bonds, like Bauji's superglue attachment to his daughter Rita, played by spirited newcomer Maya Sarao. There's also the authentic portrayal of a joint family. Beneath their closeness, there are undercurrents and understandably, moments when their patience with each other wears thin. The family drama plays out before the entire neighborhood, and it's through scenes like these that Kapoor skillfully offers you an India that you recognize and love.

I'm going with three-and-a-half out of five for Ankhon Dekhi. It's a flight of fancy that I recommend you do not miss.

DobbyDeol thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#5
always knew it would be good...but sadly these movies don't get the deserved recognition in BW!

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