Cast: John Abraham, Nargis
Fakhri, Rashi Khanna, Siddhartha Basu, Ajay Rathnam, Prakash Belawadi
Director: Shoojit Sircar
Ever since the onset of hindi
cinema, the onus of being the movie backdrop exclusively lies with north and
west India. Recent times has witnessed diversification to east India (Devdas,
Yuva, Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey, Lootera) as well. Now South India seems to have
caught the fancy of Bollywood filmmakers. Be it autobiography (The Dirty
Picture), comedy (Chennai Express) or issue awareness (Madras Cafe), the
backdrop and supporting cast is intermittently South Indian!
Madras Cafe primarily deals
with LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) during the mid 1980s, followed by
the assassination of our late Prime Minister, Shri Rajiv Gandhi at the onset of
1990s. However, the movie does not claim to be a celluloid presentation of the
same. Throughout the movie, the rebel group is referred to as LTF.
The movie is kind of well
made. Scenes are beautifully derived out of approximately thirty years old
photographs of evacuation and massacre that took place in the Sri Lankan
regions that were infested with the rebel groups – both Tamil and Sri Lankan.
This able derivation does remind you of the international movie Frida (Salma
Hayak, Alfred Molina). Therein too scenes are beautifully derived out of
paintings done by Frida Khalo.
Most of the cine goers of
today were either not born or were very young during the mid 1980s. And thus,
the movie does create the required awareness. The producer-director duo, John
Abraham and Shoojit Sircar did a fantastic job with their debut film ‘Vicky
Donor’ and they continue to create the same magic with ‘Madras CafĂ©’, in spite
of the two movies being as contrasting as chalk and cheese. Shoojit has
intelligently played upon the strengths of John and the result is good. Also,
hats off to the makers for refraining from showing unnecessary gore, death and
item numbers. Please note that, the Sri Lankan Civil War killed an estimated 80,000-100,000 people
between 1982 and 2009.
However, the problem lies in
the style of movie narration. Most of the hindi speaking audience is not well
informed about the ongoings of the southern region, nor do they understand an
iota of any of the southern languages, or the local culture that prevails
there. Madras Cafe deals with a complex subject as it entails – the Indian PM
and his Cabinet, Indian Military and Intelligence, Rebel Forces in Sri Lanka –
both the Tamil and the Sri Lankan, Sri Lankan Army, Media and Armament
Suppliers from abroad. And then, there are possibilities of leaks in all the organizations.
Each leading character is prone to have a personal motive along with the
political motive. Now, such a complex tale requires a lot of precision and clarity
in its method of story telling. In the absence of which, you are very likely to
get confused, unless you are an avid reader and movie enthusiast of international
political thrillers. The aforementioned confusion very much prevails in the
first half of ‘Madras Cafe’.
During the climax of the
movie, you make an interesting observation. The climax deals with the
assassination of the ex Indian PM by a human bomb (South Indian lady).
Normally, during such scenes, you pray till the last second, to call off the fast
approaching calamity as you simply don’t want it to happen. Till the last
second, you pray for the hero to come and save the day for everyone. But, here,
you actually want to see it all happen! You want the black day in the history
of Indian politics to be re-created right in front of your eyes, as you were
very young and confused when this event actually took place!
Actingwise, all are OK.
Within his range, John is wisely experimenting with his roles, and he is doing a
good job out of it. It is a pleasant surprise to see the popular Indian television
producer-director and quiz show host, Siddhartha Basu perform well. Ajay
Rathnam as ‘Prabhakaran’ looks effective. Special accolades for Prakash
Belawadi for playing the drunken and shrewd south Indian official in Jaffna,
Sri Lanka. His facial structure resembles that of the legendary musician A.R.
Rahman. Nargis Fakhri plays the role of a hard core British journalist. Her
naturally accentuated English has suited the role perfectly. Also, she has well
adopted the cold demeanor required for such a role.
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