Review: Maazii

Maazii
Starring: Sumeet Nijhawan, Mona Wasu, Mohd Zeeshan Ayub,Pankaj Tripathi Directed by Jaideep Chopra Rating: *** ? The disconcerting prelude of this probing piercing pulsating study of crime and atonement is among the best opening sequences we have seen in recent times. It shows that extraordinarily talented actor Pankaj Tripathi (a regular in Anurag Kashyap’s films) narrating to a dumbfounded cop in a mofussil thana his adventures at a home that the chronic criminal has just robbed. In a very matter-of-fact tone Tripathi tells the khaki-uniformed gent how he raped the wife and killed the matriarch of the family. And then before we can ingest the infinite immorality of the goon’s proclamations Tripathi kills all the cops and flees. This is the kind of introduction Quentin Tarantino would have thought of. Or maybe Vishal Bharadawaj on a good-hair day.Or maybe Ram Gopal Varma in his Satya season. Maazii revels in a kind of implosive violence that is hard to sustain without toppling into mayhem. First-time director Jaideep Chopra manages to keep the bloodshed and bullets on an even footing. Even when characters stumble and collapse under the weight of their immorality the narrative is never caught hobbling on one foot. Though the happy finale seems a bit of a go-home-happy concession, till the very end the sharply wound-up tightly-structured screenplay (written by Shirish Sharma and Sumeet Nijhawan, the latter also plays the film’s lead) keeps many steps ahead of us, leading us open-mouthed through a labyrinth of crime and retribution. Uniquely the film first introduces the bad guys. Then we meet the hero, a monk-like florist Tarun (Sumeet Nijhawan) with a vivacious wife (television actress Mona Vasu, adequately cast) and a cute daughter. Even though we know this idyllic family would soon see rough days there is surprising skill evident in the way the screenplay creates a collage of crisis in this nuclear family. The narration is fitful and filled with events and incidents right till the end. But the wheels of the narration never get jammed with over-activity. The director Chopra makes vivid use of various locations. The hill station at the start with its postcard-perfect topography almost mocks the lies, uncertainties and the violent past behind the protagonist’s seemingly tranquil life. And the backwater crime towns are captured in their bare essentials. Naked and exposed. The scenes are written deftly. In the sequences suggesting gut-wrenching violence the director allows the characters space to build the intrinsic tension without having to worry about where the next ‘cut’ would truncate the momentum of their emotional graph. The in-sync sound is remarkably sturdy and unwavering in its determination to catch characters’ inner-voice as they grapple with the complex morality of their existence. It surely helps the characters’ cause that their dialogues are impressively ironic and catchy without getting showily bombastic. In fact the writing in Maazii could teach a trick or two to the veterans and stalwarts of Bollywood who dabble in the world of crime only to make heroes out of scumbags. There are no larger-than-strife heroes in Maazii. The one hero that we take away with us is Tarun, who is grappling with the demons of his past by dodging the violence that hits him on the present. It’s a complex role which newcomer Sumit Nijhawan plays with stoicism and smothered anger. Just how much of this dispassionate implosiveness is attributable to the actor’s inexperience we do not know. It works fine for the character as he moves from a life of blissful stress free idyllism to a stunning finale that takes him through the cluttered bylanes of Meerut in search of a missing loved one. The protagonist’s journey is undertaken in the spirit of a reversed pilgrimage. The sins that we presumed were washed away in a past phase revisit Tarun and scoff his genteel existence. He must move without genteel grace from his working-class sobriety to street-wise violence. It’s a cleverly designed role played with under-expressed intensity. Nijhawan gets some unflinching support from actors of impeccable ability, notably Pankaj Tripathi, Mohd Zeeshan Ayub. Last seen as Dhanush’s best friend in Raanjhanaa Zeeshan makes an arresting appearance as a sharp-shooter in the second-half. And Manish Choudhary’s cop-act is again, supported by credible dialogues. Everyone gets clever and sensible lines to speak in this crime-tale. We would call Maazii the shocking surprise of the season. Maazii, which means the past, takes us back to the stylish thrillers of B.R. Chopra like Dhund and Ittefaq. The sound design and the fluent and virile cinematography (Surjodeep Ghosh) bolster the ballsy script, whipping up a kind of excitement that is raw and earthy and yet very stylish. Though set partly in the crime-land of Meerut, no one abuses anyone’s mother or sister. There is no attempt to generate earthy violence through verbal or visual aggression. Though this is Jaideep Chopra’s first film he doesn’t try to impress with a fusillade of flamboyant gutturalism. Because you are not force-fed the violence you cannot take your eyes off the goings-on in Maazii. It is one of the most watchable films of the year which comes to us without the loud recommendation of stars promoting their products like detergent soaps. The lather here is legitimate. You cannot miss this one.
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Submitted by SubhashKJha on Thu, 09/26/2013 - 14:04

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