Saturday, October 26, 2024

Laapataa Ladies

The film is a simple story, told in a somewhat preachy manner (e.g., the scene of Deepak showing the photo of his wife in the veil to a Muslim shopkeeper, even after knowing that the photo is no good, simply to drive home the message that the film wants to). However, the preachiness is somewhat hidden under the paan-smacking skills of the local police inspector, so it comes off as a breeze and probably the reason for it being popular. For breezy films have become scarce these days in Bollywood, with most films being thrillers or heavy-dose nationalism oriented ones.

The film's main fault is its inconsistency in characters and dialogues. Only Sparsh as Deepak impresses, and Chhaya Kadam as Manju Mai is excellent. But the two laapata ladies ("missing women") do not deliver very well, as they are unable to go into their characters. Nitanshi Goel as Phool is overnight too bold for her character, while Pratibha Ranta as Jaya comes across as too sneaky to let you believe that she was so docile into marrying against her wishes. In addition, Ranta looks too urbane for the character and for the kind of Hindi dialect thrown into her mouth, and this shows in her inconsistent articulation throughout the film. Phool, too, has too clean a Hindi for the kind of character she is playing. And then Geeta Sharma, playing Deepak's mother, is carrying on her role from 12th Fail, with the same drawling accent, which is completely misplaced here, with the surroundings and the rest of the family having no such accent. Some of these inconsistencies will be lost on the international audience and maybe even some Indian audiences who haven't ventured out from their plush metro living halls.

The film could have been better with a better backstory to Jaya's character and better coaching skills to both the lead actresses. Right now, it's a miss, but still it can be considered moderately good for its breeziness and attempt to drive home an important message.

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