Movie Review: Shikhar ...
By Subhash K. Jha, Indo-Asian News Service
alt="image" />Film: "Shikhar"; Starring Ajay Devgan, Shahid Kapoor, Bipasha Basu, Amrita
Rao, Jawed Shaikh, Sushant Singh, Farah; Directed by John Matthew Matthan; Rating:***
It's the easiest thing in the world to get cynical about a film that embraces idealism
and a vision of corruption-less India.
Like Ashutosh Gowariker's "Swades", which came exactly a year ago, "Shikhar" attempts to
look at life in the rural hinterland as idealistic, unspoilt and desirable. The city folks
represented by an utterly materialistic Ajay Devgan air-drop into this world of looming
idealism to bung a spanner in the works.
Still the film works...and how! It peels away layers of our saturated sensibilities to
give us the glimpse of a world where principles of beauty and innocence still reign
supreme.
Into this ecological arcadia comes the ruthless builder with his obscene designs and
vulgar vision. GG (Ajay Devgan) wants to turn Guruji's (Jawed Shaikh) utopia into a concrete
jungle. "Just like Las Vegas," he dreams away, with his girl Natasha (Bipasha Basu) being a
nubile spectator.
The two set off to seduce Guruji's impressionable son Jai (Shahid Kapoor). And herein
lies Matthan's main masterstroke in this film about the end of innocence. Shahid as the
boy-man lured into a world of decadent materialism strikes such rich chords of believability
into his character that you are one with the director's vision of corrupted idealism.
Matthan's screenplay, co-written with Abbas Tyrewallah, has enough sustenance and force
to make the spirit of idealism shorn of wide-eyed innocence. Portions of the film (for
example the distraught Jai looking for his father in the forest or the contrived,
crowd-fuelled climax) are almost mythological in their melodramatic velocity.
But the narration holds together, thanks to the lucid sub-text and a high level of
professionalism applied to the telling of the idealistic story.
The characters are plot-driven all the way, so that it becomes easier for the director to
manoeuvre them through a limpid labyrinth of pulls and pushes effectively worked into the
narration.
The director doesn't delve into too many moral or physical details of the two worlds that
the protagonists inhabit. Shahid's character goes swiftly and fluently from innocence to
worldly wisdom. The speech patterns change and so does the slur of his sensitivities as his
orphaned companion (Amrita Rao, sweet and competent) helplessly watches her sweetheart turn
into a sweat-heart.
The scenes between Jai and his machiavellian mentor Devgan lack a certain dynamism. But
Matthan makes up for that loss by focusing on the dynamics of degeneration that drive Jai
away from his father.
The sharply drawn interludes in Singapore where Shahid busies himself with his new,
trendy friends (Devgan and Bipasha), neglecting and belittling his old friends from his
Utopian universe, and the morality-defining scenes where Jai tries to question GG's values
(for example his mild objection to the word 'sexy') qualify the film's ambitious vision,
using an economy of expression and an intuitive understanding of the mechanics of modern
morality.
Most of all, Matthan's film is a well-pitched morality tale. Its ramrod-straight
ideological underbelly comes alive in sharp strokes of leisurely expressions, which do not
preclude a celebration of cinematic values from its principled purview.
Like Guru Dutt's "Pyasa", Hrishikesh Mukherjee's "Satyakam", Goldie Behl's "Bas Itna Sa
Khwab Hai" and Gowariker's "Swades", "Shikhar" is a valid cinematic documentation of
ideological annihilation.
A.K. Bir's cinematography enhances the tonal textures of the mutating mores. But this
guileless film isn't about technique. It's about the heart, and how to open it to feelings
and moods that we thought were gone with the morality-driven filmmakers like Guru Dutt and
Hrishikesh Mukherjee.
It's no coincidence that Shahid often reminds us of Raj Kapoor in "Shree 420". He gets
surprisingly strong support from one of Bollywood's most powerful character actors, Sushant
Singh.
The film marks a notable return to grassroots morality. Matthan's idealism is
predominantly Nehruvian. The builders and politicians of independent India have had a field
day at our expense. Is it payback time now? Shikhar suggests it might be.
Naïve or conscientious? The choice is entirely ours.
Bollywood.com Rating: 2

























