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Kerala Story2: The Assassination Of Rahim Chacha

Rating: **

Once upon time  every  other Hindi film had its ‘Rahim Chacha’, a token benign Muslim presence who underneath the beard  , was a kind soul.

There is  not single  kind Muslim in director  Kamakhya Narayan Singh’s Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond. The ‘goes beyond’ is a significant  suffix . It sums up the persistent  attempt to  polarize the Muslim community as  the perpetrators  of  gruesome  religious conversion  and filthy ideology.

It doesn’t stop there. The screenplay written by  Amarnath Jha  and Vipul Shah builds  a horrific sinister scenario of exploitation and  abuse. One of the converted  girls  Surekha(Ulka Gupta) fights with her ‘sweet parents’  to live in with  a monster who  happens to be  Muslim…

Actually, no. The  film’s  character portraits move in reverse: the suitor  is  a monster  on account of his religious beliefs.Soon the Monster  devours  the hapless(Hindu) girl , but not before he force-feeds her beef.

Clearly the  makers have beef with  the  entire community which is portrayed as  fanatical, perverse and  barbaric.

Another  ‘sweet innocent’ Hindu girl Divya(Aditi Bhatia) who likes to make dance reels is trapped  into marriage by a habitual  baiter whose family  home is a dungeon of devilry.  Divya’s  only spot of sunshine(and perhaps the film’s too)  is  another girl   imprisoned by , shall we call him, Monster No 2?

Monster No 3 is  even more reprehensible in his  ruse to  trap a national level javlin  thrower Neha(Aishawrya Ojha) who is converted(you know what I mean) and gangraped graphically.Made me wonder why we were  made to stare  at  the girl’s brutalization with the ‘backgroin music’ pounding into our heads.

Evidently,  No 3’s mother(the brilliant Alka Amin)  runs a  brothel of converted Hindu girls. She  gets her comeuppance  in the final reel. So do  all the radical  monsters.A  bulldozers   also comes into play to remind us what  happens to disruptive elements(this film’s  makers not included).

But the chants of Har Har Mahadev  and the police thrashings of the  trio of monster suitors (Alka Amin also gets her hair pulled and a Mullah  is  shown being dragged to his doom)  seems  grossly incommensurate  with  the  trauma and  suffering of the three women who dared to follow their heart.

Don’t  do that! Says this precautionary tale of trauma and (mild) retribution.  Listen to your parents,respect your religion. This is where the other community scores big: they teach their children to know and respect their religion whereas we silly Hindus, we are just lost in a fog of pseudo-secularism .

Don’t  do that!  If you  don’t teach  your Hindu children to blow conchshells , ‘they’ will soon  take over  our country.

If  you don’t  want to buy into the film’s  urgent warning, then just  watch Kerala 2 as a pulp  affliction…fiction. The film is vividly shot, it holds  your attention. There are  no digressions from its one-point agenda. The cast does what it is told; aggarbattis for  the Hindus,scurrility for the  others.

Don’t take the  politics of  the  project to heart. They  know not what they do. Just watch this  as a  slip-in-slip-out  masala product, albeit a dangerous one. It is  deftly edited and the  storytelling’s high decibel  never flounders.  This is  a shrill soprano of  divisiveness and proud of it.

 

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