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Welcome to Sajjanpur Review
Cast:
Shreyas Talpade,Amrita Rao,Ravi Kishan
Director:
Shyam Benegal
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A delightful satirical take on a contemporary Indian village.
By
Ashok Nayak
It is one of Benegal's warmest, funniest and raunchiest pieces of cinema - where every character is a human being you'd bump into if you visit a Sajjanpur.
By
Subhash K Jha
By
Jahan Bakshi
Fri, 19 Sep 2008
Bhelcome, o, bhelcome
- all you
sajjan
members of the audience. Benegal Babu's latest
phillum
is one rather unsatisfying chillum and leaves one with mixed feelings, as by its end it clearly overstays its bhelcome.
Welcome To Sajjanpur
is that breeze of fresh air that doesn't quite blow you away.
What it's about: The film is a social satire set in a quaint North Indian village with its unique bunch of colorful characters- or as many may argue- caricatures. The film unfolds through the eyes of Mahadev (played by Shreyas Talpade), an aspiring novelist, who being the only literate individual in the hamlet earns a living by writing eloquently worded letters for the many illiterate people in the village. The film and its characters thus unfold through the protagonist's bittersweet encounters with them.
What didn't work
: Okay, bad things first. There's not much of a story here, in the first place, and the film depends almost totally on its characters, most of which are hardly memorable or exceptionally performed. The satirical yarn is more preachy than sharp, and at nearly three hours, it clearly begins to descend into tedium. Perhaps the makers realized this, and hence we have an abruptly wrapped up end that leaves us even more dissatisfied. Shantanu Moitra's music, barring the peppy and upbeat
Sitaram
number, is tepid and eminently forgettable, besides the fact that the listlessly picturised songs only hamper the narrative. The film also often feels oddly staged and the writing very play-like, and while this may be deliberate, it somehow doesn't really work. But the main flaw here is the screenplay, which meanders way too much into fickle subplots, many of which are pretty pointless.
What worked
: Shreyas Talpade. The actor mostly reduced to playing sidekicks finally gets his due in a film again after
Iqbal
and
Dor
, and he doesn't disappoint. Talpade is endearing and earnest and he is definitely the glue that keeps you on your seat and the disjointed screenplay from falling apart totally. Writer Ashok Mishra may have faltered otherwise, but he writes with an assured hand, and his dialogues even when risqué have an old-world charm and understated quality to them. Of the supporting cast, watch out for Ravi Jhankal who is clearly the standout in the supporting cast for his stellar and spirited portrayal of the feisty eunuch Munnibai. While it lacks it depth or coherence, Welcome To Sajjanpur is clearly both well intentioned and socially responsible, both salient features of all of Shyam Benegal's films.
Bottom line: People expecting too much out of Shyam Benegal, considering his past body of work are bound to be disappointed. Still, the weight of expectation aside
Welcome To Sajjanpur
is not a bad watch- it's honest cinema that's rare to come by these days, even if it is ultimately deeply flawed.
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