I am sorry Ranbir. But for a change I would have to be
fair. Trust me; my fingers are itching to write a long ode about your talent, eyes, smile, depth, evolution curve and contagious ‘what next can I be’ curiosity after watching another of your masterpieces.
Words and applause pour out almost involuntarily like the
beating of heart, when you surprise your fans, movie after movie. I guess it
was somewhere between ‘Rocket Singh’ and ‘Wake-Up Sid’ that this ‘Duh! Another
star-son to torture us in Sawariya’ became
the top reason to stay glued to Bollywood for many fans like me.
You never stopped torturing though. Leaving us zapped,
dumbfounded and numb with your brilliance and versatility that no one has ever
even attempted so far. For your contemporaries and even your seniors, that’s a
sad truth that probably hits them in the heart as they silently crawl under
their skin watching utterly-impossible roles that a Ranbir pulls off like
Barfi’s bicycle.
Barfi! Oh yes, that’s what I am supposed to write about.
See that’s exactly what I was referring to. But time to restrain the itch and
be objective. More so because Barfi just entered the profound pantheon of Siddharth , Jordan
and Harpreet by stirring another pure, brave and adventurous soul to life.
Not just because it did not disappoint. That’s true but
grossly underwhelming the character. (True because, whenever a movie goes high
on hype and promotion-decibels, audiences like me flinch, hoping against hope
that a ‘much-anticipated-story’ does not bite the dust of disappointment.
Exceptions like Barfi, keep the flicker alive.
And while we have hit this spot, let me take the liberty of
advising all marketing machinery at UTV – Why the heck did you spend so much
TRP time and money on spinning the Barfi spiel? Are you nuts? Movies like these
are the last ones to lay their backs on promotions. An Anand or a Munna Bhai never
need crutches called sales brochures. When a good note touches the frequency of
heart, it echoes on its own.)
Like the crescendo we heard from a deaf boy's story. Truly moving music is all about some spaces left untouched. Most of us noticed them today.
While we were listening to a deaf and mute boy, that, by the way, came out as a sound more profound than the ringing of cash-registers and the noise of daily grind.
Yes, we saw them. The many layers beneath the obvious Sweetmeat of
‘Love’. The movie beats you in the very first settling-down-with-your-popcorns
string of minutes if you expected it to reek off legends like a Sadma or a Koshish.
That’s precisely why I am forced to spend these few
minutes writing aloud some questions instead of shutting myself in a Darjeeling
world with its songs.
Yes, Anurag, we got the song you were trying we could
hear. That ‘Love is still the most rarefied miracle’, and it can still be the
free-winged bird that has no time or radar for boundaries that dumber mortals
are fettered with. That ‘to be born’ is a proof of all possibilities, happiness
and adventures irrespective of one’s handicaps, social posture, or IQ. Yes, we
agree: It’s all about chasing the butterfly called heart, and knowing much
beforehand that though you will never catch it, it’s so so much worth it.
The song you strummed with this movie cuts deep. But the
subliminal melody that runs underneath this phenomenon called Barfi, is an
incision on its own. It unravels many spots that only Barfi could bare. And so many questions I am still scratching my head about:
1. How
can someone capture the essence of someone’s sadness and joy without any
dialogues? Wait, forget that. How can sadness and happiness even be on the same
plane? Aren’t they anti-polar?
2. How
can the nostalgia of the 70s and 80s be so splendidly woven together with the
heavenly fog of North East, and embroidered over an atypical story and so
seamlessly?
3. Were
the cameras from Mars? Is this cinematography of this era or borrowed from the
future?
4.
Was anyone from this era? Selfless,
floating-without-baggage kinds of relationships: servants, masters, caretakers,
fathers, sons, friends, enemies, broken-hearts, re-discovered lovers.
5.
The promos said that the cast includes Priyanka
Chopra. Where was she? Where was that irritating-shallow-beauty-pageant winner
(You got it, I am not a fan of hers, as an actress)? Who is this lovely girl
who convinced her of Jhilmil’s innocence and simplicity-soaked love in every
scene?
6.
How in the world does Ranbir manage to
buffoon-dance so very endearingly? (Anurag must have spotted this talent in Chillar
Party)
7.
The theatre was punctuated with the usual crowd of
hooters and mocking-comment-passing party-poopers. They managed to spoil many
scenes with their crap-vomit. But what made everyone go silent in the scene when
Barfi emotes his despair and angst after trying to meet the girl’s parents? Did
I hear tissues coming out? He hardly said a word and only punched his cycle?
8.
Why do people with challenges (financial, physical
or social) always come out with outlandishly ace Jugaad ideas? Socks’ drying, tyre-puncturing, cop-escaping,
doorbell-ringing, shoe-throwing for a Hello, friendship-lamp-post-testing or
using pockets and shirt sleeves for hand-holding?
9.
How can a mute, rejected, almost orphaned character
not evoke pity, drama, sitar-music- sympathy but warmth and
‘wish-he-was-my-friend’ feelings instead? Why does one want to slap the girl for being
blind in seeing him as dumb-and-deaf?
10. How
can any director finally manage to handle a story that transitions between
different time-windows so smoothly? There are no supers or background
narrations to guide the audience about a change in time-frame or sequence of
the story’s scenes, and yet it doesn’t feel uncomfortable.
11. Can
a simple, heart-tugging, plain love story along with a few actors and a hill
station silhouette make such a rich mise-en-scene?
And since when has music and background score become part of the script? In a way that imagining the movie is impossible without the dreamy, happy universe they stitch around the characters.
And since when has music and background score become part of the script? In a way that imagining the movie is impossible without the dreamy, happy universe they stitch around the characters.
12. Is
it possible to create scenes where people are running, laughing and behaving
like idiots on the surface while they bring yummy tears to your eyes?
13. Is it possible to challenge someone who has already etched his name in history’s notebook with Rockstar? To watch him take another huge leap and jump along? Is it possible to not be amazed at the wonder called Ranbir Kapoor as a Director? But create someone that will outlast him too – Barfi.
13. Is it possible to challenge someone who has already etched his name in history’s notebook with Rockstar? To watch him take another huge leap and jump along? Is it possible to not be amazed at the wonder called Ranbir Kapoor as a Director? But create someone that will outlast him too – Barfi.
A
sweet hangover like this calls for a cheesy line. “There are some things that
will make you laugh. There are some things in life that will make you cry. But
very rarely, destiny will let you bump into things that will make you smile with
tears.”
‘Rarely’?
Umm, Let’s take ‘that’ word off.
For
Ranbir has just incarnated Barfi.
I
wish I could talk about the actor and not his character, but may be some other
day. As I said, 'Sorry Ranbir!'
Pratima H
P.S.: It feels great to have been born in the same age where talents like Anurag and Ranbir live. If our parents say 'We grew up watching Amitabh'; we can stop being jealous.
1 comment:
This tribute to Barfi and Ranbir is better than what an Oscar would have given. Good job!
I was impressed with Ranbir's talent right from Wake Up Sid. He was paired with Konkona, who is a great actor. But never once does the audience see any disparity between the two actors' performances. Ranbir more than just leveled up in that movie. And as you said, he does have the ability to 'talk silently.' Barfi was perfect for him. It made you laugh and weep at the same time with very few dialogues. :-)
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