Rating :**1/2
Can form, no matter how glorious, be a substitute for content? In
"Eklavya", lack of content isn't a problem. It's the tense
and dark nature of the content that proves to be a dismaying impediment
to enjoying the virility of Vidhu Vinod Chopra's storytelling.
How do we define the plot of "Eklavya"? It partly borrows
the dark, indefinable pathos of Shakespeare's tragedy and partly reverts
to the palatial pathos of the Mughal Empire where patricide frequently
collided with complex Oedipal equations. "Eklavya" takes us
into a territory totally unexplored and designed to create an ethos
of infinite resonances.
"Eklavya" is a film of many virtues. Screenwriter Abhijat
Joshi and Chopra aim for a sense of heightened tragedy that underlines
the cinema of Kurosawa and the music of Mozart. The quality of the sound
design (Biswajit Chatterjee), background score (Shantanu Moitra) and
cinematography (N. Natarajan Subramaniam) elevates the bizarre tale
of a dysfunctional royal family to heights of lyricism.
Some stories are better left unsaid. "Eklavya" tragically
seems to belong to that rare genre of stories that lose their relevance
in their rendering. The characters, all ruefully rooted to a decadent
and dying aristocracy, are either neurotic, manic or self-destructive.
All the people who crowd the tightly cordoned stratosphere of "Eklavya"
are grandly wedded to destructive forces. Unwittingly they end up looking
preposterous in their self-conscious postures of assumed dignity.
In their inability to see beyond their own hefty hunger for self-assertion,
the characters often mimic, rather than replicate, the Shakespearean
tragedy.
Chopra is undoubtedly a master craftsman. At times he becomes self-indulgent
in his visual panache. In the sequence where "Eklavya" slaughters
Jimmy Shergil, the recurrent pigeons-leitmotif (seen earlier in "Parinda")
are classic Chopra embellishments best left behind in a film that in
many ways crosses the boundaries of mainstream conventions.
Indeed,
if Vishal Bhardwaj's Omkara was more Ram Gopal Varma than Shakespeare,
Eklavya is more Virginia Woolf than Shakespeare.
Chopra is brilliant at capturing neurosis through the lens of the camera.
At times he makes room for tenderness. Watch Bachchan's expression of
tender nostalgia as Vidya Balan sings the ancestral lullaby.
You often see the characters framed frantically as wounded, scarred
mortals hurtling towards their ruin - they do not connect with us in
any significant way.
Reciting Shakespearean sonnets on death-beds, sobbing into the night,
stabbing each other in their aristocratic backs, playing mind games
that echo the travesties of titular existence, Chopra's people come
alive more through their externalities rather than his efforts to internalise
their angst.
Chopra spares no efforts to penetrate the steely wily hearts of these
bereft souls. Rajasthan is captured in telltale silhouettes as the stately
royal guard Eklavya (Bachchan) forms a fertile bond with a family of
doomed aristocrats.
The narration begins as a mother-son story and builds with magical
volition into a father-son tale of clenched trauma. By the time Eklavya
points a gun at his own heir-apparent, we are left looking at a family
that doesn't need redemption. It just needs to be buried in the slinky
sand dunes of time.
The performances by Bachchan and Saif Ali Khan - the royal heir who
finds out that the family guard is actually his father - lift the tale
to luminous heights. Boman Irani, as the infertile royal patriarch,
plays his character with just that shadowy hint of mischief that puts
him a cut above the routine slime-ball.
"Eklavya" is a chronicle of defeat. People who belong to
no specific time zone seem to be manoeuvring their lives beyond the
rhythms of the rationale.
There's poetry in the soul of the movie. But the lines do not represent
any significant symbiosis of form and content. With its unforgettable
images of elemental forces, "Eklavya" is a film that was probably
as hard to make as it is to profile and define.
At the end, it remains an honourable failure, lifted to distinction
by Bachchan's stately performance.