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Nil Battey Sanatta: Swara Bhaskar Shines As A Mother Dreaming Big Dreams

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Starring: Swara Bhaskar, Ratna Pathak Shah, Pankaj Tripathy, Riya Shukla

Directed by: Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari

Critic’s Rating: For my money time and attention Swara Bhaskar is the real Tanu , whether Manu likes it or not.And I keep telling Aanand Rai, the man who directed  Tanu Weds Manu  and who has so wisely invested in co-producing this week’s gem of a film on a mother’s yearning to see her daughter excel. Swara’s spontaneous unrehearsed seemingly uncomplicated interpretations of the most layered emotions is not only exemplary , it is a one-woman acting school on how not to like you are….well, acting.

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There are many sequences in the very oddly titled Nil Battey Sanatta where Swara sweeps you into her character’s innermost world of melancholy and despair without making you drown in maudlinism. Playing a domestic help Chanda who dreams of making her stubbornspoilt bratty daughter Apeksha(confident newcomer Riya Shukla)  into something bigger than destiny decrees for the poor, Swara delivers a virtuoso performance. She gets the minutest of Chanda’s feeling on screen without screaming for attention.

Nil Battey Sannata

Nil Battey Sannata

Of course it helps that Swara has stunning support from her co-stars. Chanda’s rapport with her thoroughly unlikable daughter, and more specially the easygoing kinship she shares with her employee(Ratna Pathak Shah) are signs of maturity and wisdom way beyond the film’s placard-flashing theme  on female literacy .

Yes, there is a message.And a very basic one at that. Girls need to get educated. Period.

Happily the film is bogged down neither by its pedantic ambitions of making a statement, nor by the protagonist’s financially-challenged status in society. Yes, she is a domestic help. But her employee treats her as an equal. Yes, she lives in a one-room chawl in Agra with her daughter. But the two have a television set blaring out cheesy hits which they dance to when they want, and Chinese meals are ordered for celebrations when the occasion arises.

Director Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari keeps it smilingly simple. Simple and straight.Thankfully there are no bouts of furious sentimentality. Swara plays Chanda with feisty positivity and yet this is not a character or film that romanticizes poverty. It isn’t even a lyrical  celebration of destitution the way Satyajit Ray’s Pather Panchali or Mira Nair’s Salaam Bombay was.

Nil Battey Sanatta occupies a world of half-finished dreams and smothered aspirations with a  spirit of positivity that is the opposite of despair.Apart from a few false notes(for example the sequence when the daughter pipes in during class to eulogize over her mother’s struggles, or that utterly unconvincing sequence where Chanda visits theexccessively kind Collector of the district, played with a sweet sincerity by Sanjay Suri)  the debutante director strikes no false notes , covers no ground that the plot needn’t cover.

The casting goes a long way in adding miles to the director’s long-legged uncluttered narrative. Of course Sawara holds centrestage confirming her place among the most significant contemporary actresses currently on the scene.  But the rest of the cast, including the young boys and girls in the class that mother Chanda and daughter Apekshaattend together , are outstanding. Ratna Pathak Shah and Pankaj Tripathy(the latter as the extremely benign school principal) remind us what capable can do to a worthy film.RiyaShukla as the stubborn daughter slips into an unlikeable part. It’s the kind of sullen sulky daughter’s role that Swara Bhaskar had played with conviction just two years ago in ListenAmaya.

The smallest of parts in this film are beautifully carved out. Chanda’s neighbor Razia is barely there on screen. But she matters.Or  Ratna Pathak’s husand…barely shadow in the background. But nonetheless a character.

This morally uplifting inspirational heartwarming fable is a must watch, if only to see how difficult it is to be simple.And how much we miss those simply told tales of life byHrishikesh Mukherjee and Basu Chatterjee.

 

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