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Jugnuma: The Fable That Fumbles With Confident Pride

Rating: *** ½

 It is hard  to categorize, let alone fully absorb  and  appreciate, the  bonding between Man and Nature which  writer-director Raam Reddy has attempted  to achieve  in his  second, far more complex and  ironic, feature  film where Man and Nature never really get to  collide dramatically even if we want them  to.

Push never comes to  shove  in  Jugnuma. This is not that kind of cinema. It is    slowburn test  of the audiences’ ability to  get under the skin of  a film without prompting.

Raam Reddy, whose  first film Thithi (in Kannada)  explored the comic  and cosmic complexities of  a death  in the family, here  in Jugnuma plunges  much deeper into the  spiritual and emotional conundrum of the  relationship between  Man and mortality,  between Nature and Man’s fluctuating   relationship with  Nature.

This synthesis  of  Nature and the Universe is achieved with minimum  violence in Raam Reddy’s deeply  melancholic meditation  on the wounds that we  inflict on those who cannot talk  back.

Manoj Bajpayee is  excellent with the silences that this work of  muted  rumination demands from  him. He lets  his eyes do most of the  talking.  He is  not alone . The  rest  of  the cast, down to the  smallest character(for example,Keshav, played  by Ravi Bisht  who is  a hill-man suspected  of   arson) seems  to know the  nature of  beast  as far as  the beasts  of Nature are concerned.

It takes a while to figure  out what Raam Reddy wants to say,or rather , wants us to know .Jugnuma is not an  easy  film to watch. It does away with all the safety  zones of filmmaking, focusing on the  feelings behind the spoken words.

There is  a longish cameo by  Tillotama Shome ,playing  a  wise   hill woman,who explains  the  relation between  Nature and the universe to her young  son.

I am not too sure this has  any relevance to what Raam Reddy is  aiming to  tell us. The jigsaw pieces of existence  do not really fit in the askew nature of things  in Jugnuma. They are  not meant to.This is  a film about  the  pursuit of  the truth of human  existence rather than getting there. It has no answers to  the puzzle of  the universe. But  its relentless voice  of  probing  gradually sinks  into us in waves of sagacity.

The cogency of Jugnuma is reliant on the actors’ ability to  understand that comprehending the conundrum of  the universe  is  not possible. In other  words, understanding  that there  is  no  real understanding.The  nature of the narrative is  such that we the audience remain as much outsiders to the mystery  of the forests, and  the  fire that engulfs  the trees, as the  characters.

Jugnuma  is  an enchanting  expedition  into   mountainous mysteries, forest fires  and  burning  silences. The conversations are brief but brimming with  significances  underneath.

Manoj Bajpayee  and Priyanka Bose are brilliant in their shared silences.Their conversations seem routine but are  symptoms of breaches that  words, or their absence, cannot heal.

“Is  the tea still warm?”  Manoj’s Dev asks  Priyanka’s Nandini.

“A  bit,” she replies from  distance.

How would she know this  without touching  the tea? What other  secrets, far deeper,  does she secrete ?

At some point in the world of wordless wisdom Dev and  Priyanka’s daughter Vanya(Hiral Sidhu, impressively expressive) takes off into the jungles  for  a tryst with  a  nomadic stranger. But that is  another  forest  fire altogether.

 

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