Rating:***
It takes vision and courage to make a film about the de-escalating
valour and plummeting morale of the Indian Army. "Shaurya"
is about the army, but it isn't a war film. The battles are all
fought at the level of individual conscience. But never does it
get preachy.
It's a film about the Indian Muslim's identity. But it steers miraculously
clear of taking sides or becoming hysterically passionate on the
subject. There have been significant films on the isolation of the
Indian Muslim as seen through the eyes of a persecuted individual.
One can immediately think of John Matthew Matthan's "Sarfarosh"
and Raj Kumar Santoshi's "Khakee".
In "Shaurya", Deepak Dobriyal as Javed Khan, the Muslim
army man accused of terrorist activities, reminds you of Atul Kulkarni
in "Khakee".
There's even a predictable sequence where the mother of the accused
comes visiting the lawyer's home in the dead of the night. Seema
Biswas' cameo as Javed's mother is surprisingly lacklustre.
She demonstrates unnecessary restraint where a more dramatic pitch
for the distraught mother would have carried the theme of persecution
and isolation further.
Samar Khan seems exceptionally shy of emotional display. The relationships
that grow within Joydeep Sarkar's intricately plotted courtroom
drama seek solace in silences rather than dramatics.
Even the relationship that grows between the hero Major Siddhanth
Chowdhary (Rahul Bose) and the journalist (Minissha Lamba) resonates
with restraint rather than rhetoric. Buddies Bose and Javed Jaffrey,
we are told, are inseparable. But that level of camaraderie isn't
evident in the film.
The cloudbursts are saved up for the entire climactic interlude.
The last 45 minutes are so stunningly honest that you wonder if
the dormant spirit of the rest of the narrative was meant to mislead
us.
The wake-up call - how a certain section of the government-sponsored
agencies look upon the Indian Muslim - is hurled into our face with
a ferocity that leaves us in state of stunned incredulity.
Credit must go to the writer, director and the dialogue writer
(Aparna Malhotra) for telling it like it is about the alienation
of a community.
More than Rahul Bose, who's remarkably in-sync and uniformly vibrant
in playing his character, it's Kay Kay Menon as the biased army
officer who imbues a compelling credibility to Samar Khan's honourable
and brave intentions.
It would be no exaggeration to say that "Shaurya" and
its theme of the Indian Muslim's self-worth would not have worked
without Menon's vital presence.
In the courtroom, when he spews venom against the community for
"polluting and poisoning" the country, Menon sounds frighteningly
Hitlerian.
Again, we must stress that the director doesn't try to get fashionably
polemical in addressing the sensitive issue of communal angst. Samar
Khan mostly remains non-judgemental in his treatment of characters
and their blemishes.
The trial of the silently smouldering Muslim is punctuated by bouts
of humour between Bose and his screen-friend Javed Jaffry.
"Shaurya" reveals sparks of master storytelling and doesn't
hide away from uncomfortable truths - from its opening titles, when
on a wet, windy, and slippery night out in Srinagar, Javed Khan
pulls the trigger on his senior, to the stunning finale when Shah
Rukh Khan's voice recites poignant poetry defining valour and courage
not as we see it but as the conscience knows it.
But the director could have easily avoided the limp pockets in
the narrative, those telltale breathers when the buddies bond, lovers
sing and the fringe characters try to get a face from the edges.
Forget the humbug. Just watch "Shaurya" for its compelling
and positively gripping insight into the heart and mind of the average
Indian who hides his subconscious biases in the garb of fashionable
liberalism.
The film's army backdrop is authentically captured by Carlos Catalan's
panoramic cinematography. It captures the feelings and failings
of the characters as fluently as the cascading tranquillity of the
Srinagar backdrop.