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Dhadak 2 Strikes All The Right Notes

dhadak 2

Rating: **** ½

  Neeraj Ghaywan’s incendiary Masaan  has finally met its match. Debutant  director  Shazia  Iqbal hits the  ball out of the park in this towering remake . She  polishes up and edifies the Tamil  film  Pariyerum Perumal  to the extent that even the  makers of the original would be  awed  and grateful.

 There is  not a moment to spare for humbug in Iqbal  and  her co-writer Rahul Badwelkar’s writing . Wringing out  the  essence  of the  original—a  star-crossed love  story about a Dalit boy and an upperclass girl—Dhadak 2  gives us  film that opens up  chapter after chapter of ostensibly unrehearsed  ingenuity.

The film is slick and smart  without overdoing it, wise  beyond what  the original could have ever imagined, and relevant to the point  of  making practically every recent film look like  an over-musicalized  fairytale.

 The  debutant  director knows her chops  and  can handle the theme’s inherent  violence without  choreographing  casteism. The  film  exudes a unique  aura of  spontaneity even in its most rehearsed interludes. Doing away with the rawness  of the original, the film replaces  it with a polished  surface and on-the-ball editing(Charu Shree Roy,Omkar Uttam Sakpal,Sangeeth Varghese) which repudiate  any trace of exploitation.

Many  a  times cinema about exploitation transmutes into an exploitative object.

Not this  time.  Oh no!  The  love  story of  a boy from the village  Neelesh(Siddhant  Chaturvedi, remarkably in  character)  and  the  citybred privileged princess  in wailing,Vidhi(Tripti Dimri, struggling to express her character unvoiced anguish)  illuminates  every frame, scatters the  taut narration with a sense  of unexplored resplendence.

 Yes, the love story works swimmingly. Chaturvedi in  spite of his fake tan, confers  a genuineness to his  character construction  from timidity to rebellion to  beyond. He should get every award  this year. Dimri is okay in parts. But she  lets  down  the screenplay(and herself) in two  crucial sequences. That scream at  the end feels unearned.

  I truly loved  Shazia Iqbal’s handling of two crucial episodes  from the original: the hero Neelesh’s  assault  and humiliation  by his girlfriend’s relatives at a wedding,  and the  humiliation of Neelesh’s crossdressing father(Vipin Sharma, brilliant) at  Neelesh’s college.

Anubha Fatehpuria as Neelesh’s mother gives us  goosebumps every time  she is on screen

These shocking examples  of  the  empowered  brutalizing  the disempowered will shake the  audiences’ conscience.

 Vipin Sachdeva  as the honour- killer on the prowl(nor  a criminal, he says,but a  social reformist) is  chilling. His track too has been refurbished  beyond recognition.

The real love story , if you ask me, is the one between Neelesh and the Dalit activist  Shekhar Manji(played by  a brilliant  actor  Priyank Tiwari). Shekhar’s character is  evidently based  on Rohith  Vermula, the Dalit activist who  wasn’t. The  entire Neelesh-Shekhar arc in the plot is not  a  part of  the  original  Tamil film. It is what furnishes this film with a tenable throbbing emotional quality.

 For me, Dhadak 2 is an experience far beyond  the original. This  is  not a remake. It is  an  intelligent  emotional recreation which irons out the rough  edges, makes the original  characters sharper and more  authentic, adds new ones, imbuing the  endproduct with a  vigorous glow. Don’t  think about it, just go for it.

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