Padmaavat Movie Review: Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Boring Film Doesn't Do Justice To Deepika Padukone
Cast: Deepika Padukone, Shahid Kapoor, Ranveer
Singh, Aditi Rao Hydari, Jim Sarbh
Director: Sanjay Leela Bhansali
Rating: 1.5 Stars (Out of 5)
Much ado about much ado.
The creation and eventual release of Padmaavat may well make for a more
dramatic and impassioned tale than the film itself. The offscreen narrative is
complete with death threats, bounties on noses, altered spelling, digitally clothed
bellies, and, as I've written about before, politically
shielded psychopaths encouraged by the media. What spectacle dare compete
with a country gone bonkers?
Not that this film doesn't try. Director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, a man well
versed with excess, lays it on thick to the point of being tiresome. This is an
all-out assault on the senses, a circuitous take on an old legend that is now
being flogged to breaking point. Based rather loosely on the epic poem of the
same name by Malik Muhammad Jayasi, here we have a king and his lovely queen,
interrupted by a barbarian who, on hearing that the queen is pretty, lays siege
to their city. As you may probably be aware, all of this ends in a climax that,
as the kids now say, is lit.
Padmaavat Movie Review: A still from the film.
(Image courtesy: bhansaliproductionsfc)
Alas, Bhansali takes an unbearable length of time to spark
the flame. Things go on and on and on, with characters it is impossible to care
about. They may appear attractive from time to time, certainly, but these
protagonists are inconsistent, infuriating and test the patience. There is only
that much of a damn that can be given about window dressing, and about people
who dress like windows. (I'd accuse the film of navel-gazing, except visible
midriffs have since been cloaked by our censor board.) The word 'Nayaab' -
meaning 'invaluable' - is used several times over in the film, for different
objects: a priceless gem, a priceless ostrich, a priceless princess. As a
result, nothing seems to hold true value. This is an epic bore.
The film's cardboard nature is exemplified by Shahid Kapoor, who plays Rajput
king Ratan Singh, meant to be the unyielding moral core of the story. Kapoor
struts around with that particular stiffness of a man sucking his stomach in,
with his mouth forever in a soured pucker, lips seemingly sucking at invisible
coconuts through imaginary straws. A man who believes pigheadedly in archaic
codes of honour, this character holds no appeal.
Yet he lands a Sinhalese warrior queen. Padmavati, played by Deepika Padukone,
doesn't need cupid to shoot down her lover. She does this herself, and then
chooses to confront him, hostile and coquettish in turns. For some reason, this
striking woman takes a fancy to the insipid Ratan Singh, but so be it. She
knows her mind. She also steps up when her kingdom needs someone at the helm.
This striking woman, in fact, shows us strength and fortitude throughout this
slow-moving film, right up until the end when she makes a demand of her king:
she asks for his permission to kill herself.
Padmaavat Movie Review: A still from the film.
(Image courtesy: bhansaliproductionsfc)
The reason she must do this is because she fears contact with Alauddin Khilji,
the wily king from the history books who is depicted here as a merciless
savage. In the name of extreme villainy, Ranveer Singh plays him without
consistency or caution: he giggles, he grunts, he breaks into Amitabh
Bachchan's dastardly laugh from Aks, he wrestles with men not
allowed to beat him, and he dances like a goblin. He wins at chess and also, at
one point, snuffs out a man's life using his formidable armpit. It is a loud
and overblown performance, only occasionally rescued by Singh's natural screen
presence. This Khilji amuses - primarily because he jolts the film out of its
stupor - but he makes little sense. He is The Great Unwashed. He stinks but he
knows things.
Padmaavat Movie Review: A still from the film.
(Image courtesy: bhansaliproductionsfc )
What I would like to know is why Padmaavat isn't
a better looking film. Bhansali is all about scale and there is indeed pomp to
the proceedings, but this time the sets always look like sets - sometimes with
the 'carvings' on pillars in the background visibly looking drawn on.
Cinematographer Sudeep Chatterjee doesn't get to show off his work, dulled and
hindered by an entirely unnecessary 3D conversion, and unlike Bhansali's other
films, there is no truly memorable imagery, save for the final sequence. It
would, however, be unfair to credit the imperiousness of Ms Padukone's eyes to
the film's production design, and the lesser said about the slow-motion
glorification of self-immolation the better.
Still, there are some lovely touches in Padmaavat. The fluttering
fabric of the palanquin the queen is carried in when her king brings her home,
the way the villain's shoulderplates bounce as he runs with feverish urgency,
the sight of an imposing crown being used to weigh down and blind a fragile
princess. There are even hints at Khilji being bisexual, limited to verbal digs
in what is otherwise a highly visual film. These deft asides are tragically
dwarfed by the rest of this exhausting and bombastic affair, where captive
princesses are made to stand in wading pools while being pelted by pearls.
Bhansali's last film, Bajirao Mastani, was an undeniably compelling
one - here's
my review - and while that, too, felt overlong, it was a dramatic film
with a heavily plotted storyline that featured many a conflict.
The problem lies not in Padmaavat being a
costume drama, but in the fact that there is too much costume, too little
drama. In the film's opening scene, we see a king chewing roughly on a piece of
poultry. This is a surprisingly small, tandoori-sized handful of bird, nothing
compared to the way we have, in international film and television, watched
vikings gnaw at giant animal legs the size of motorcycles. Therein lies the
problem. There's not nearly enough meat.
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