ENTERTAINMENT

Bandar Movie Review: Tricky, messy, but worth a conversation

Spread the love

In Animal, which effectively proved to be a major comeback role for him, Bobby Deol played Abrar, a ruthless criminal who cannot speak. However, in Bandar, there is a moment where his character almost loses his voice amidst an emotional outburst in front of his sister and lawyer. The more he speaks, the less identifiable it becomes. In that one moment alone, Anurag Kashyap captures something of Bobby that we hadn’t seen ever. His complete surrender to a character, and almost a rebirth for him as an actor. While somewhat inconsistent in his performance otherwisesome of these emotionally searing moments in the film that are a complete revelation.

In Bandar, he plays Samar Mehra, a has-been actor-singer who finds himself framed under charges of rape and blackmail. While his sister Suhani (Sanya Malhotra) and lawyer Nitin struggle to get him out, Samar slowly finds himself becoming part of a landscape that is hellbent on moulding him to its whims. 

Cast: Bobby Deol, Sapna Pabbi, Sanya Malhotra, Sukant Goel, Indrajith Sukumaran, Saba AzadDirected by: Anurag Kashyap and Sakshi Mehta Lau

Written by: Abhishek Banerjee and Sudip Sharma

Watching Bandar unfold, one realises that a prison film was only a gradual stepping stone for a filmmaker like Anurag Kashyap. The film is brimming with grit and grime. If there is one filmmaker we can trust to show the unappealing and capture the discomforting, it’s the man who made Gulaal (2009) and Ugly (2014). Kashyap refuses to mollycoddle us on a visual level. There are unsettling forms of smoking up I didn’tabout, and graphic visuals of fecal matter that would make anyone squirm. There is also a gruesome bit of dialogue of what Tihar prison inmates do to the rape accused. 

Kashyap makes space for interesting scribbling on the sidelines. There are plenty of hilarious off-handed jokes, like the ones about Subhash Ghai, and ‘achche din.’  A scene early on, built around Samar and an indifferent cop, is hilarious, while having a major hangover of the police station scene from Ugly. There is that one magistrate who is too trigger-happy to push the entire entertainment industry under one ominous cloud. Laden with dark humourKashyap manages all these little wins on the periphery, but the central ground is a little shaky. For all the visual grit, Bandar suffers from a lack of equally visceral interiority. We get a sense of Samar’s gradual decay, but we don’t get to immerse ourselves in his headspace. There is an emotional distance despite all the brutality on screen. Some of the moments that work early on — like Samar’s delusion about the three girls at the wedding, or how he looks at the many windows outside his lonely balcony — hit home because we are getting to know a broken man. That sense of psychological intimacMeanwhile, we also get glimpses of other men and their violent misogyny. At many points, Samar begins to think like one of them. In a subtly impressive touch the lawyer Nitin, after being initially standoffish towards Samar, begins to support him as Suhani gets increasingly impatient with her brother. In one way or another, a silent bro-code is always at work.

The film gets a little mired in the multiple subplots it has embarked upon. Samar’s internal struggle, his legal battle to get out, and his harsh encounters with everyone inside who threatens to change him a little, one conversation at a time — there is too much happening, and the narrative somewhat loses focus of Samar’s inner fall. 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

error: Content is protected !!