Connect with us

Raveena Shines In A Hardhitting Rape Revenge Saga: Movie Review

Published

on

Starring: Raveena Tandon,Madhur Mittal, Anurag Arora

Directed by: Ashtar Sayed

[wp-review id=””]

A raucous raga on the aftermath  of rape, much  of Maatr unfolds in a stern  humourless no-nonsense manner of  a fact-finding newshound who won’t go into digressions—because the film’s heroine knows what one wrong turn can do– just to keep the audience’s perception lightened.Which  is for the best, really.In India we can’t afford to laugh about rape the way the French could in the film Elle.

Maatr is not an easy film to watch. It is relentlessly grim, and often graphic in its gruesomeness. The gangrape and the near-murder of the mother and daughter on  a lonely stretch of a Delhi-Haryana highway reminded me  of  Tom Ford’s Nocturnal Animals. It is not a sight for squeamish eyes. It makes us uncomfortable.

Good! That’s what Maatr aims to do. It strips the act of rape of all its filmy glamour and titillating trappings to portray the agony of a woman who watches her minor daughtergangraped, after she is raped herself. The two are then dumped on the side of the Highway by the seven wayward sons of  influential dads , nocturnal animals who belong in hell. Provided the over-crowded address of Satan’s existence has space for these scummy creatures.

Director Ashtar Sayed doesn’t spare us the sordid details .We wince and shudder when the hospital staff must tell the grievously  injured mother that her daughter was gangrapedbefore being killed. You shudder for the mother when the cop tells her to forget about the heinous crime.Such scenes, shot in stark unglamourous colours by cinematographer HariVedantam, spares us none of the mother’s pain.

Make no mistake. This film is a showcase for Raveena’s skills. Her character goes from grieving aggrieved suffering mother to an avenging diva with a quiet confidence that comes from her years of training in commercial cinema where anything can happen, and it does. To this sur of  commercial escapism ,a la vigilanteism, Raveena adds a pained strain of realism. She mines in her own maternal subconscious to express a mother’s pain.

Some of her sparring matches with the cop in-charge(Anurag Arora, efficiently powerful)  find the actress express a wry disdain at the processes of the law which have let the mother down. When she takes matters in her own hands we know she has choice.

Tragically Raveena’s central performance is unaided by her co-actors. Talented actors likeDivya Jagdale(playing Raveena’s  best friend and confidante) and Rushad Rana(playing her husband) are annoying in their shadowy snapchat avatars. The climax with the worst computer-generated explosion seen in any films, also leaves us embarrassed and exhausted.

But Maatr means well. It tackles the issue of rape headlong and is not afraid to delve into the murkier aspects  of the crime. Raveena and the film’s makers jump  into the filth and are not afraid getting their feet muddy.

A feeling  of stifling  foreboding and inescapable self-loathing runs through the brisk-paced film. Some sequences of violence , like the one where the least violent among the rapists is confronted and cornered  by Vidya(why must a  schoolteacher be named Vidya?) stay with us after the film. The  director averts the danger of sprucing up the proceedings with sexy item songs and other digressions.

He knows what the wrong turn can do .

 

 

Continue Reading
Comments