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Laalo Shree Krishna Sada Sahayate: All Heart & Soul, No Artifice

Rating: ****

 There is not one insincere  note struck in the length and breadth of director  Ankit Sakhiya’s  elegant pristine  and guileless Laalo Shree Krishna  Sada Sahayate,a  film that has the rare distinction and  the power to  change lives.

Provided you are open to listening carefully to what the  film has to say under all the drama  about a   missing person being “rescued” in unexpected ways  by Lord Krishna. On  paper this sounds like  a tough  gambit to pull  off.

  Director  Sakhiya  and his  extremely  impassioned  team compel us  to believe  in their belief.Ironically, the Hindi version of the Gujarati film which comes to us after  creating a historic  boxoffice record in Gujarat(it was budgeted at  Rs 50 lakhs and earned  Rs 120 crores making it the most successful Gujarati film  of all  times) arrived  during the same week as The RajaSaab which reportedly budgeted at Rs 550 crores, is  geared up to become  one  of  the costliest duds of all times.

   Laalo’s skimpy budget(even one of the songs of RajaSaab cost more to  shoot) which  could have been a glaring impediment actually  proves to be  a boon in  disguise, as the serene screenplay( Krushansh Vaja, Vicky Poornima and Ankit Sakhiya) demands the protagonist to trespass into a home  to be locked away from civilization  for most  of  the time.

 In this quaint and endearing  fusion of a survival  drama and a spiritual awakening, the  protagonist Laalo(a  fiercely dedicated  performance  by debutant Karan Joshi) a hand-to-mouth autorickshaw driver with a demanding wife and a mounting  debt,barges  into an empty home  and gets locked in.

  Home Alone, anyone?

From here begins what seems to be Rajkumar Rao’s Trapped caught in a spiritual whirligig. It is  an enormously  tricky coalescence to pull off. The merger  of  a survival drama with mythology  works   swimmingly  for two  reasons: it comes  from a place of  absolutely integrity, and also the actors keep the faith alive right till the  very end.

 Not  all of it works, though. The  smuggling of statues seems  a  clumsy  theatrical touch ,ill suited in a work of seamless splendour supported and  buoyed  by some excellent  Krishna Bhajans which  know exactly where  to play  and where to not be playful.

   The  Junagadh locations help  tremendously in giving a nod of  gravitas to the  mood of mischievous  mythologization. The  conversations   between  the trapped  protagonist  and ‘God’ are a weightless blend of  banter and philosophy.

 The  greatness of  Laalo Sree Krishna  Sadaa Sahaayte  is not in its cinematic  qualities,  but in sublimating ‘cinema’ to  serve us  with an artless and, dare I say, timeless treatise on greed and  God, and everything that comes in-between.

 If you watch only  only one film  a  year, then Laalo… is the one for you. If you  watch two films  a year , then Laalo and Dhurandhar. They are the two sides of the coin conveying the conundrum of  existence.

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