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Go for it at the first opportunity and you will come out saying 'What a film' unless of course you have a bad day at the office or a fight with your partner
Vickey Lalwani
Tue Jan 23 2018 406 views 0 likes
Is Sanjay Bhansali in the league of Raj Kapoor and Yash Chopra? A question which I raise and you will answer 'yes' after you see his latest offering, Padmaavat (provided of course if you have seen his HDDCS, Khamoshi, Guzaarish & Bajirao Mastani). And you better see Padmaavat ASAP.
A cricket commentator recently remarked thatVirat Kohli must be a very exhausted man after every match is over, considering the amount of shouting, passion and hard work he puts in. I would like to say the same for SLB after he completes every film.
Deepika Padukone In Padmaavat
I was asking myself- and bet you are still asking yourself the same question- that wouldn't Padmaavat be old wine in new bottle after Ram Leela and Bajirao Mastani? Turns out, we were fools. Here's a simple story executed to perfection, a near masterpiece.
Deepika Padukone In Padmaavat
The music is a let down, but SLB compensates this right from the scene where he introduces his leading lady- and my word, she looks out of this world chasing a deer and trying to shoot him down. And mind you, it's a tough role- though, maybe not on the face of it. Her character has no adaayein, no jhatak matak, no massy dialogues to accentuate it- but she does it with her eyes, and isn't acting all about how you emote through your eyes? Her concern for her husband in the film- Shahid Kapoor- is to be seen to be believed.
Ranveer Singh In Padmaavat
Shahid, on the other hand, squashes all rumours that he was insecure about the length and importance of his role- because he has almost equivalent footage to Ranveer, and mind you, he comes out with 'flying colours'. This man has a great quality of underplaying himself and striking a contrast to his loud colleague- you obviously haven't forgotten Jab We Met! A few might still say that he could have been louder- and I won't disagree with them for few scenes- but the 'flying colours' do not fade.
Shahid Kapoor In Padmaavat
Over to Singh, and he throws himself into the role like never before. Mad, intense, passionate- it's not easy to generate so many ingredients together. A few might still say that he could have been more menacing- and I won't disagree with them for few scenes- but this quirky-dressed actor is growing with every film.
And hey, there's nothing Padmaavat about this. She is Padmavati, everyone in the film calls her Padmavati, including herself!
And Mr. @RanveerOfficial...You amazing, crazy, talented person, you! You own every frame of #Padmaavat completely. Take a bow!
Just watched #Padmaavat & have to say, @RanveerOfficial owns the film from the beginning till the end. While he makes u hate him in the first half, by the time the film ends u end up feeling bad for him and his unsuccessful quest for love as well. Hats off to the menacing #Khilji
SLB creates an epic world with stunning imagery&fantastic shots.@RanveerOfficial brings Khilji alive in ways,only he could.His uninhibited performance shows resilience&fearlessness. He effortlessly brings out Khilji's menace and insecurities.Such a treat to watch him! #Padmaavat
Padmaavat movie cast: Ranveer Singh, Deepika Padukone, Shahid Kapoor, Jim Sarbh, Anupriya Goenka, Raza Murad
Padmaavat movie director: Sanjay Leela Bhansali
Padmaavat movie rating: 2.5 stars
All those agitating over how Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Padmaavat would trample all over Rajput pride, you may rest easy: the director didn't need a memo from the Karni Sena and all the other self-styled armies' on keeping it sanskaari' his entire film is a relentlessly opulent, magnificently-mounted paean to Rajput aan baan shaan'.
Here's how it goes, just in case you are one of those rare people who haven't been breathlessly following the film's troubles: the Rajput king Ratan Singh (Kapoor) is the hero, the Muslim invader Alauddin Khilji (Singh) is the villain, and the object of their mutual adoration is the utterly gorgeous Padmavati, who will always and forever be a good Indian girl, and later, wife. When we see her first, she is fleet of foot and clear of eye, a joyous free spirit who has a will of her own. She ends up committing jauhar', her life and death circumscribed by male notions of honour.
If that's not patriarchy, then I'm Queen Padmavati, who of course did not exist. And while we of course cannot judge the actions of the dramatis personae who presumably lived in the 13th century (even if they were mythical creatures, created by the poet Malik Mohammad Jayasi) by present day gender roles, we do see that the director has a problem on his hands: how do you show a beautiful queen jumping into a pyre, along with hundreds of her compatriots (a shot has a pregnant woman and a little girl), without glorifying the act?
One way of doing it is to stuff the beginning and the middle acts with so much glitter and glamour that we are expected to be swept away. Which we dutifully do: there's a kind of beauty in the way Bhansali creates his frames, even if your eye begins to be overwhelmed by it. Deepika Padukone has never been lovelier. She wears those stunning costumes, never letting them wear her, even if her waist is decorously covered in the Ghoomar song (alert viewers may see a flash of the said body part in other parts of the film). Shahid Kapoor sports kohl in his eyes, and clearly articulated muscles in his chest, often left bare. But this film belongs to Ranveer Singh's Khilji, who bites into mounds of meat (serving well the prototype of the Muslim savage) and his part with such relish that you can taste it.
If it hadn't been for the extreme reactions from a bunch of extreme reactionaries-cum-buffoons which nearly derailed the release the film, Bhansali's latest opus would have been just another Bhansali extravganza, full of costumery and puffery. But given that all art is political, even if it is dressed up art, Padmaavat becomes more than it is, because the director chooses to outline the vileness of his antagonist, and underline the pati-vrata ness' of Rani Padmavati. Far from any subtle touches, Bhansali's black-and-white delineation of the good Hindu and the bad Muslim (who could also, gasp, swing both ways) is so stark that that we are left with no illusion about which part of the political firmament he wants to be on the right side of.
Finally, and we can't get away from this, the question for us while watching this fresh version of the oldest tale in the book ek tha raja, ek thi rani, dono mar gaye, khatam kahani'is, how do we deal with the fact of a woman being forced to jump into a pyre to save the honour' of her husband, and her people?
Of course, Padmaavat is spectacular: no one can do spectacle like Bhansali. This was what he was born to do. You can easily delight in it while the going is good. But nearly three hours of it, and looping rhetoric around what constitutes Rajput valour can and does become tiresome. And that compulsion to make sati' so good-looking, when the singeing of flesh can be so gruesome, is troubling.
If there's one thing that keeps us from brooding too much through the film, it is Ranveer Singh. Not once does he try to make us like him, and that makes us like him even more. As a performer, he has always been unpredictable, in a good way. As Bhansali's Khilji, he is electric. And try as anyone might, so is the attraction between the outsider and the queen: it is their doomed love story, whose embers rain on the screen, that we take away with us.
Originally posted by: Krishnala-
Great to see Padmavaat and Deepika-Ranveer getting so much praise. Hope their hard work pays off.
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