Banaras Movie
Review
Pankuj Parashar has
attempted diverse films in his career: PEECHHA
KARO, JALWA, CHAALBAAZ, RAJKUMAR, HIMALAY PUTRA,
TUMKO NA BHOOL PAAYENGE and INTEQAM. For the
first time in his career, the efficient
storyteller tackles a film that combines a love
story with spiritualism: BANARAS - A MYSTIC LOVE
STORY.
Frankly, you ought to watch BANARAS - A MYSTIC
LOVE STORY with an open mind. It's not one of
those masala films that Hindi cinema is
generally associated with. The film tackles the
caste system [still prevalent in certain pockets
of the country] and also looks at life not from
scientific, but spiritual point of view. Look
for answers within you, is the message the film
tries to convey.
However, if the unadulterated, pure concept is
its USP, it's also a downer since the theme and
the execution of the subject are not the type
that would appeal to those who tilt towards
entertainment-driven stuff.
Artistic to the core and sensitively treated,
BANARAS - A MYSTIC LOVE STORY caters to a niche
audience. However, that's no consolation when
you look at the efforts [and money] spent at the
end of the day.
Shwetambari aka Shweta [Urmila Matondkar], the
bright young daughter of rich Brahmin parents
[Dimple Kapadia and Raj Babbar], studies science
at the local university in Banaras. Sohan [Ashmit
Patel], called Soham by Babaji [Naseeruddin
Shah], is a low caste mystic who teaches music
at the University. When the two fall in love,
hell breaks loose.
At first, Shweta's parents disapprove of the
match, but when truth dawns upon them that Soham
is a Hindu, they decide to get the lovers
engaged. Even the marriage date is fixed, but on
the day of marriage news filters in that Soham
has been murdered. A shattered Shweta decides to
abandon the very city she loves the most. In
despair, she turns inwards to look for answers.
Seventeen years later, Shweta, now a world
teacher in philosophy and religion, is
confronted with a final choice -- whether to
return to Banaras to meet her dying father or to
continue to deny all attachments. When she
returns to Banaras, the sleeping demons and the
dark secrets lying underneath erupt like a
dormant volcano.
Delicately treated BANARAS - A MYSTIC LOVE STORY
may come across as a love story on the surface,
but the moment the titles end and layer after
layer is peeled, you realize that there's more
to the film than the love story of an upper
caste girl and a lower caste boy.
The spiritual journey of the protagonist --
Urmila -- is treated with utmost sensitivity.
From being the doting daughter to rich Brahmin
parents, to her fondness for a lower caste boy,
to the tumultuous events that change her life,
right till the climax, when all unanswered
questions are answered, every sequence in the
film has been composed and executed with rare
maturity.
The film is rich in emotions and the concluding
reels -- Urmila returning to Banaras to meet her
dying father -- take the film to an all-time
high. Keep your kerchief handy at this stage,
for the concluding 20 minutes are sure to melt
even the stone-hearted. Without doubt, it's the
highpoint of the enterprise.
On the flip side, a film like BANARAS - A MYSTIC
LOVE STORY has its limitations. Although the
subject matter is aimed at a universal audience,
the theme as also the slow pacing wouldn't
really excite every strata of the movie-going
audience.
Irrespective of how this film fares, director
Pankuj Parashar will earn a lot of respect for
his handling of the material. Beautifully shot
and excellently treated, BANARAS - A MYSTIC LOVE
STORY is -- from the aesthetic point of view --
Parashar's finest work to date. His handling of
the emotional moments take you by complete
surprise since Parashar has never ever attempted
a film on relationships.
The review would be incomplete without
acknowledging cinematographer Nirav Shah's
contribution. Not only are the stunning locales
of Banaras beautifully captured on celluloid,
even the texture of the film is of international
quality. Himesh Reshammiya's music is okay,
although the background score [Surender Sodhi]
is far more effective. Dialogues [Javed Siddiqui]
are natural and seem straight out of life.
Urmila has already evolved into a fine actor and
BANARAS - A MYSTIC LOVE STORY only cements her
status further. Watch her in sequences when she
gets to know that Ashmit has been murdered or
towards the finale, when she returns to her
dying father, and you'd agree that only an
accomplished actor could've portrayed the part
so proficiently.
Ashmit Patel is a revelation. The youngster, who
didn't make much headway as an actor in his
earlier films, gets to prove his mettle in this
film and he impresses tremendously.
Raj Babbar and Dimple Kapadia excel yet again.
Babbar is competent all through, while Kapadia
is outstanding in the climax when she reveals
the truth. Naseeruddin Shah is first-rate. Akash
Khurana is highly competent. Arif Zakaria [cop],
Rajiv Mishra [Maha Maya], Javed Khan, Om Katare
and Perveez leave an impression as well.
On the whole, BANARAS - A MYSTIC LOVE STORY is a
sensitively handled story that will earn immense
praise from connoisseurs of meaningful cinema.
But the film has very little to offer to the
masses, which in turn will reflect in its
overall business. A strong word of mouth from
the gentry/elite should help its business at
select multiplexes.
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