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Tuesday 12 June 2012

Ishaqzaade Movie Review

Movie Review: 'Ishaqzaade';
Star Cast: Parineeti Chopra, Arjun Kapoor;
Writer-Director: Habib Faisal;

'Ishaqzaade' is a very boisterous film. The hero Parma (debutant Arjun Kapoor) is an uncouth animal, whose disgusting habits include kidnapping the town's nautch girl from a rival's party to dance at his grandfather's marriage. Later, his moral temperature dips to an all-time low when he takes loathsome revenge on the girl he loves to hate.
As the Muslim girl Zoya, Parineeti Chopra fills the screen with a stormy charm. Naturally spontaneous and bubbly, she reminds you of the early Jaya Bhaduri. Her character is a sharp-shooter with a tongue to match. And when she gets brutally compromised by Parma, she reacts like a wild cat raging against the promised full-cream milk that curdled when she was not looking.
Habib Faisal, who made the mellow, mild-mannered middle-class comedy 'Do Dooni Chaar' about a college professor's dream of buying a scooter, here shows a totally unpredicted side to his cinematic vision. The landscape he paints in Almora is so volatile and violent, you pray for atonement for these characters.
The lovers don't exchange chaste glances and furtive kisses. They hug passionately and smooch each other's lips off. And when they make love, it seems they are waging war on the world. Full-blooded, voluptuous and extremely earthy, 'Ishaqzaade' is a pickled, aromatic roller-coaster ride through the badlands where blazing guns mean families are at one another's throats.
The first-half of the narration builds up to an engrossing case for Parma to inflict his uncouth and aggressive wickedness on Zoya. The confrontation scenes between the two, written with the right amount of zing and sting, are first-rate. Astonishingly the adversaries-turned-lovers keep drawing attention to each other's religion without mincing words. The two religions are almost thrown at one another as taunts. Riot or wrong, who can tell?
What Faisal wants to say, and we would be better off if we pay heed, is -- it is imperative to address the Hindi-Muslim divide headlong, or else blood would continue to be spilt each time two people from different communities 'dare' to love each other.
'Ishaqzaade' is written in blood, dipped in passion, and shot in vivid colors of life, strife and other bitter embers of the communal fire. The director constantly attempts to bring alive the cluttered environment of a lawless north Indian town. Faisal succeeds to a remarkable degree.
His characters speak an easily recognizable language from Uttar Pradesh's heartland where even daughters are taught to fire a gun before they learn the alphabet. The supporting characters don't fake it even for a second.
Many scenes convey warmth and empathy without a jot of self-consciousness. The characters are all played by unknown local UP actors who are born to the milieu. The director builds a convincing arc of love and revenge. His lovers are so well-conceived on paper; it would have taken two truly idiotic actors to ruin their characters.
Luckily, Parineeti and Arjun are anything but incapable actors. They fill the violent ambience with their own peculiar chemistry.
The bloodshed never stops, and the action is relentless. Hemant Chaturvedi's cinematography creates a world that is real and at the same time, highly cinematic.
There are many reasons why 'Ishaqzaade' is an extraordinary movie. It enters the killing fields of Uttar Pradesh. It chases down our two protagonists and then watches them get into a crisis with no end. In the end, we are looking at two young vibrant people whom we love because they love one another irrespective of the differences.
This is not a movie which offers a pretty love story with gentle love songs. Even the music (by Amit Trivedi) sounds like a war cry. As for Parineeti and Arjun, never mind the destiny that lies in store for their characters in this movie. They are here to stay.
Overall, it is worthy to watch.

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