Friday, 26 February 2016

Aligarh movie Review

Review & Rating


Cast & Crew

                                                       Starring           :Manoj Bajpayee,Rajkummar Rao

                                                       Directed by     :Hansal Mehta

                                                       Produced by    :Sunil Lulla,Shailesh R.Singh

                                                       Music by         :Karan Kulakarni

                                                       Release Date   :26 February 2016(India)

Review:

             Words do not make poetry, Aligarh University professor Shrinivas Ramchandra Siras (Manoj

Bajpayee) tells Delhi journo Deepu Sebastien (Rajkummar Rao) well over an hour into Hansal

Mehta's Aligarh.

So, in addition to being a portrayal of the gay experience in an unjust and insensitive society, Aligarh

is a human drama with universal resonance. It encapsulates the plight of all dissenters. Mehta strips

the tragic true story of all vestiges of overt sentimentality. Instead, he fills the depths of the

understated but intensely moving drama with genuine, unsettling emotion.Aligarh, essentially a study

of a victim of entrenched prejudices, articulates its poetry of pain with remarkable precision, right

down to the subtlest of its nuances.Rajkummar Rao, in his third outing with Hansal Mehta, provides

the ideal foil to Bajpayee with a performance modulated to perfection. With every pore and sinew

pressed into service, Bajpayee, in a miraculous osmosis, becomes inseparable from the tragically

reclusive figure that the Marathi teacher and poet was.As Siras, the actor projects much more than

just a mimetic guise. He digs very, very deep to totally internalise the man's debilitating agony.

Manoj Bajpayee, as a gentle, dignified soul whose privacy is invaded by a blinkered society

intolerant of its non-conformists, propels Aligarh forward.In fact, he says that he does not understand

what the word 'gay' means. He abhors labels, but he is too soft and meek a man to wage a concerted

war against his tormentors. Siras rues that today's youngsters tend to reduce everything to convenient,

sweeping adjectives - fantastic, fabulous, awesome, et al - losing out in the bargain on the possibility

of grasping the subtleties of life and love.What Siras leaves unsaid is that it is his sexual orientation

that places him most directly at odds with the guardians of an ultra-conservative campus.The

protagonist of Aligarh is at multiple removes from his milieu. As he himself spells out early in the

film, he teaches Marathi in a city of Urdu-speaking people. He is also single in a colony of married

people and conventional families.Both Dil Pe Mat Le Yaar (which also had Manoj Bajpayee in the

male lead) and City Lights (with Rajkummar Rao) homed in on migrants pushed into acts of

desperation in an unwelcoming adopted city, Mumbai. In a more general sense, this gutsy film also

extends the director's favourite theme - outsiders refusing to blend in and falling afoul in the process.

Aligarh is an obvious companion piece to Hansal Mehta's Shahid, which, too, told the story of a

member of a minority group fighting a lonely losing battle.The principal spaces that Deepu occupies -

the newspaper office and his PG accommodation - are infinitely brighter and more cheerful. The

enthusiastic young scribe, on the other hand, is only starting out in life and has no reason to be

downbeat about the future. Both the sound design (by Mandar Kulkarni), which allows ample space

for silences, and the cinematography (by Satya Rai Nagpaul) accentuate the dark mood that encircles

Siras. Melancholy hangs heavy on Siras. Even the two Lata numbers that he savours - both soulful

Madan Mohan compositions - are gloom-drenched.The older man, battered by the vagaries of life, is

a few months away from superannuation. He clings to his pint of Royal Stag and fix of old Lata

Mangeshkar songs to tide over his solitude.The interaction is germane to the film's structure as the

two characters represent two opposed realities of contemporary India. But in film editor and

screenwriter Apurva M Asrani's script, the two men have heart-to-heart conversations (even though

Siras's eyes rarely meet Deepu's), bond with each other, and even take a selfie during a boat ride.In

real life, the reporter who chases the Siras story never actually met the professor in person. They only

spoke on the phone a few times.The film returns repeatedly to the pivotal opening sequence in which

Siras' privacy is invaded, and each replay reveals crucial additional details and perspectives.The

lecturer, with his back to the wall, finds an unlikely sympathiser in a rookie journalist who decides to

get to the bottom of the dynamics at work on the campus against Siras.What follows is an ugly,

concerted campaign by the university authorities to hound the professor and break his spirit.Siras

loses his professorship and his staff accommodation after two media men armed with a video-

recorder barge into his home and film him in bed with a rickshaw-puller.Aligarh hinges on the legal

battle that Siras fought against his university to have his job, home and dignity restored to him.The

film is set in the months following the 2009 Delhi high court ruling that held Article 377

unconstitutional and decriminalized homosexuality - the verdict was overturned by the Supreme

Court in 2013. The story, an introductory disclaimer asserts, is inspired by real events modified on

the basis of related media reports and legal proceedings. Aligarh is equal parts a powerful character

study, an incisive social commentary, a tragedy of harrowing proportions and a cautionary parable

about a society rife with contradictions.Mehta's treatment of an emotive theme is sensitive and

sedate; the film's impact is searing.Aligarh, as pointed and poignant a portrait of loneliness as any

that Indian cinema has ever produced, is unwaveringly true to that dictum. Poetry, says the

sexagenarian protagonist, is what springs forth from between the lines - the pauses and the silences.



Rating:

             Cinemacart : 4/5



Check out this trailer






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