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Charas Movie
Review
Good idea gone awry. That's the apt way to
describe Tigmanshu Dhulia's CHARAS.
Undoubtedly, a subject like this has rarely been
attempted on the Hindi screen. Of course, there
was CHARAS [Dharmendra, Hema Malini] and HARE
RAMA HARE KRISHNA [Dev Anand, Mumtaz, Zeenat
Aman], but the addictive drug was just one of
the issues in the film.
In CHARAS, the film begins with charas
and ends with a bloodbath in the valley, where
charas is manufactured. Sure, it requires guts
to attempt a film on an offbeat theme like this.
But how one wishes Tigmanshu wouldn't have bowed
down to commercial diktats and made a khichdi
in the process.
An English boy, Sam Higgins [Adam Bedi], a
student of Botany, disappears from Himachal one
day.
His parents being well connected in the
political circles manage to send an Indian cop
from the Scotland Yard, Dev [Jimmy Shergill], to
India for investigation.
A minister in England, another minister in Delhi
[Jehangir Khan] and an ex cop [Irrfan Khan] are
the three pillars of the trade.
An Indian cop [Uday Chopra] is assigned the duty
to keep a watch on Dev. Both become friends
without revealing their true identities to each
other. As Dev gets closer to his answers, he is
implicated as a Pakistani spy. The Indian
counterpart has orders to arrest him.
Circumstances motivate both men to go up to the
mountains where the actual crime is being
committed and find the answers.
The problem with CHARAS clearly lies in its
scripting. Instead of concentrating on one
track, CHARAS unfolds multiple stories as it
moves ahead. Resultantly, a few sub-plots
impress, while the remaining ones stand out like
sore thumbs.
A competent storyteller, Tigmanshu the director
is letdown by Tigmanshu the writer. The film
starts off well - the characters are well
defined, the setting [Kasol, near Kullu-Manali]
gives the film an authentic feel, the goings-on
move at a brisk pace - and the viewer is
completely hooked on to a world that he may have
heard about, but not witnessed. So far, so good!
So, where do things go haywire? Walk in the two
leading ladies - Namrata Shirodkar and Hrishitaa
Bhatt. While the characters of the men [Irrfan,
Jimmy, Uday] are well defined, there's a problem
with the characters the ladies portray.
Namrata is meant to be a journalist, but does
nothing to expose the shady dealings in the
valley. Hrishitaa claims to be a school teacher
but turns out to be an accomplice of drug
dealers. Tigmanshu hasn't worked enough to
justify their characterization and if at all he
did work, the roles don't come across as
convincingly on screen. Even the romantic track
[Jimmy-Namrata, Uday-Hrishitaa] is haphazard and
poorly worked upon.
Another glaring flaw lies in its post-interval
portions. The flashback portions take the film
to a new high. The reason that prompts an honest
cop to become a law breaker is told with amazing
flair and maturity.
But the moment the flashback ends and the heroes
[Jimmy, Uday] decide to go in search for their
answers, the pace starts dropping alarmingly. To
be honest, the entire Afghanistani episode
appears forced in the narrative. Their motive of
destroying the Indians responsible for the death
of the Italian drug dealer also doesn't come
across too well.
Also, one fails to understand what actually
prompts Irrfan to commit suicide. In fact, this
is in sharp contrast to his character. He had
the guts to speak against the government
machinery when he was being felicitated and move
over to the other side of the fence, becoming a
drug dealer with a worldwide network. Surely, he
couldn't be such a coward suddenly!
Tigmanshu does deserve marks for attempting a
daringly different subject, but he should've
ensured that the narrative is as simple as
possible. Incorporating multiple tracks in a
film is alright as long as you remember to give
a proper culmination to every sub-plot in the
finale, but in this case a few questions remain
unanswered till the very conclusion.
In a film like CHARAS, there's no scope for the
song and dance routine. Yet, Raju Singh's
musical score is fairly arresting thanks to the
Namrata and Hrishitaa tracks. Cinematography [Setu]
is outstanding. Not only are the locales of
North India bewitching, Setu's lens also
captures them with amazing results. Dialogues [Tigmanshu
Dhulia] are fantastic. The confrontations
between Irrfan and the Afghani [Varun Badola]
are well penned and well executed. Action [Allan
Amin] is first-rate, especially the chase in
Delhi [flashback].
CHARAS belongs to Irrfan Khan. The actor
surprises you yet again with a performance that
deserves an ovation. After HAASIL and MAQBOOL,
this is yet another performance that the actor
will be remembered for.
Jimmy Shergill seems to be getting comfortable
with the camera with every film, getting more
and more natural with every release. Uday Chopra
is inconsistent - at times competent, at times
not in complete form.
Both Namrata Shirodkar and Hrishitaa Bhatt don't
really get much scope. In a brief role, Varun
Badola does justice to his character. Kabir gets
a few scenes and he does leave an impression in
those. Anoop Soni is wasted in an insignificant
role. Farid [Rohit Bal lookalike] is
appropriate.
On the whole, CHARAS is a half-baked product
that disappoints. At the box-office, the film
will face rough weather!
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