For what feels like the first time in mainstream Hindi cinema, a young girl who played the guitar on screen actually looked like she was playing the guitar. That's not the only impressive thing about this performance, of course, as Wasim convincingly fleshed out the surprisingly layered character of a little girl who loathed her father and, in turn, kept lashing out at anyone showing affection toward her.
Seema Pahwa is a superlative actress, a gifted and highly natural performer who - as a mother concerned about the marriage of her daughter - brought immense believability to two films this year, Bareilly Ki Barfi as well as Shubh Mangal Savdhaan. Deciding to pick each actress only once, I choose the second film because of an unforgettable scene where Pahwa, completely carried away by talk of romance, waxes nostalgic and starts reciting erotic poetry to her daughter.
The role of the hapless, helpless wife is a Hindi film cliche, but Vij displays a tremendous amount of heart as a woman who can't even begin to comprehend the idea of leaving her husband, or breaking up her family. She is also a starry-eyed dreamer, one who pleads that her child hold in his bowel movements so she can finish watching a filmi award show on TV. At the end of the film, when Vij takes a line of officials spoken to her by a guard and turns it into a declaration of intent, she proves herself to be the truly secret star.
Is there anything Shah cannot do? No.
In this film, she throws off a masturbation sequence with a certain thehraav, with beauty in her longing. There is a startling level of truth in all of Shah's work, and the infallible actress brings credibility to this film. In a role Shah could sink her teeth into, she plays a matriarch who discovers lust and discovers also that she loves how it makes her feel. Super.
In one of the most understated and sensitive performances of the year, Behl shines in Mukti Bhawan as an old widow who continually changes her name (for paperwork purposes) to keep staying at the titular hotel, where she checked in ages ago in order to die in peace. In this self-selected limbo, she meets an old man - played by her real life husband, Lalit Behl - and, briefly and dazzlingly, allows herself a true and marvellous romance.
This is a difficult film that demands a truly fiery heroine, and Bhaskar delivers with both force and grace as she plays a bawdy dancer who emphasises the need for consent. This is a film that belongs entirely to the actress as she mouths the hardest and most necessarily brutal of lines, drawing blood with her tongue and her spirit. All that and she dances up a storm - but only when she wants. This is an awesome performance, and among the year's bravest.
Keeping it together is easier said than done. This moody and atmospheric film about a family vacation in the 70s leaned heavily on type, and while actors around her were cast in more extreme and exaggerated roles, it was Shome who played the reasonable and credible elder sister, one who has a ear for gossip but would never be impolite in front of even an unwanted dinner guest. Bonnie, with a piercing giggle and expressive eyes and exacting kitchen requirements, is a character we have met or are related to, and Shome plays her without a single false note.
Shome is also excellent in Hindi Medium as a shark who guides young parents toward school admissions, her enjoyably over the top performance setting the tone for the film.
The introductory song calls her 'jagraati Julia,' Julia worth staying awake nights for, and this is no exaggeration. As a stuntwoman heroine in pre-Independent India, Ranaut is a stunning, operatically high-strung character in a film packed with melodrama. She is a woman leashed by her wealthy lover, as well as a girl aroused by a muddy soldier. She is intelligent and untameable though she pretends to be none of those things, and there is an electricity to her performance - not least because she cracks her whip, embraces bare-backed stunts, and carries off an old-school masque with defiant grace. Call the actress or her character what you will, but Julia is certainly a true original.
What can you say about The Undefeatable?
Sulochana Dubey is a force of nature and a whirlwind of optimism. She walks out of a radio station having quit a job, forced to reluctantly admit that this is not her life. She is crushed but, while walking out, she strikes up a conversation with a whiny receptionist based on what she has overheard about the catering. Suddenly, there's Sulu fixing rates and setting up an impromptu business plan. Life might frequently get Sulu down but she has an incredible spirit, ready to spring up in an instant. Nothing is out of bounds.
Sulu thinks up schemes to get better, talks her way into the most unlikely of jobs, and imperiously gets her handsome husband to massage her feet. Our movies - and our middle class - haven't seen a finer champion all year.
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