Sui Dhaga
Starring: Varun Dhawan, Anushka Sharma
Directed by: Sharat Kataria
Rating: **** (4 stars)
After I saw Sharat Kataria’s debut film Dum Lagake Haisha I hoped Kataria won’t sell out to the star system. But his second film starred a market-friendly lead star. I hoped Kataria’s second film won’t lose the charm and innocence of the first.
Providentially Sui Dhaga loses none of the delicacy and sting even while providing space to its leads to surrender of to their characters.
Varun Dhawan surrenders to his character Mauji as though the role was tailor-made for him. Never afraid to look less than heroic on screen, Varun furnishes his darji’s characters with a rugged candour. This is an actor and a character who are so sincere to their craft they don’t mind crawling on the floor if that’s what it takes to stay afloat.
Dhawan’s performance is filled with a smothered disappointment, it takes his quietly confident deceptively docile wife Mamta to bring out the suppressed ambition in her husband.
I am afraid Anushka Sharma, a fine actress in the best of times, is just not equipped to get all the intricacies of her character tightly into place. Anushka’s is a look-I-can-do-it performance filled with a kind of phoney Jaya Bhaduri angst that works well within the film’s claustrophobic working-class atmosphere.
The aspirational narrative of how Mauji finds his groove with considerable help from his street-wise wife works like a charm because all the performers are solidly sincere. But most of all Sui Dhaga wins our hearts because the director never milks the milieu for soppy sentimentality. Nor does he swing the other way to make the middle-class ambience a place to celebrate misery. The tone is constantly energetic yet poised. Kataria is neither awed by stillness nor intimidated by noise.
He listens to the heartbeat of the heartland.
We listen.
You may also like:
Manto Movie Review: Nawaz’s Manto Echoes Guru Dutt’s Pyaasa
Village Rockstars Movie Review: It Sells Indian Poverty To Festivals.
Peppermint Movie Review: It Is A Self-Justice Abomination
Kiran Rao’s Laapata Ladies was never meant to be a blockbuster. The film has completed 50… Read More
The new version of the Ramayan directed by Nitesh Tiwari, stars Ranbir Kapoor as Rama,… Read More
There is no one quite like Aamir Khan. Anything he does makes news even without… Read More
While Salman Khan seems unfazed by the risk to his life,the gunfire episode outside Salman… Read More
In Do Aur Do Pyaar, Shirsha Guha Thakurta takes on an urban marriage and breaks into… Read More
Aditya Roy Kapoor as a rock star who is rapidly slipping from the charts gives… Read More
Leave a Comment