बंटी और बबली
This adorable modern Hindi incarnation of Bonnie and Clyde features some of the hottest stars in current commercial Hindi cinema, including Abhishek Bachchan; his father, Bollywood elder statesman and GOAT favorite Amitabh Bachchan, Rani Mukherjee; and a special appearance by Aishwarya Rai, often billed as the "most beautiful woman in the world" (though GOAT respectfully begs to differ). Bunty aur Babli is sweet, funny, and lots of fun, and would be a great place to start if you're interested in diving in to a full-on Bollywood production.
Rakesh (Abhishek) and Vimmi (Rani) are two kids who, feeling bored and stifled in their respective sleepy villages, escape to the big city to make their fortunes. Rakesh has dreams of establishing himself in business, while Vimmi is after the Miss India crown. After the hopes of each are dashed, they join forces in an increasingly bold and absurd series of cons and heists, styling themselves with the playful pseudonyms Bunty and Babli. Meanwhile, they are pursued by Dashrath Singh (Amitabh), a cool and philosophical yet rough, take-no-prisoners cop who makes it his mission to bring the pair to justice.
This delightful film is well-paced and funny. It is loaded with in-jokes reflecting Amitabh and Abhishek's real-life familial relation, as well as references to Amitabh's classic film Sholay (among others). Abhishek executes Rakesh’s sweet earnestness with perfect pitch; he dreams big, but also knows his limitations. Rani's Vimmi is both plucky and a little hyperactive, straining at the bit to reach for something bigger from the world than provincial village life can offer. ("If I have to make one more mango pickle I'll die," she says at one point.) One of my favorite things about the film is its implicit feminism and egalitarianism. Vimmi and Rakesh start the film on precisely parallel footing - each is a young person fleeing from his or her parental expectations - and once they come together, neither Bunty nor Babli is the leader. They are more than the sum of their parts.
If there is one portion of Bunty aur Babli that doesn't quite keep up the stellar quality of the rest of the film - and it's really only barely so - it's the music, which (like every soundtrack I’ve ever heard by the team of Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy) was hit-and-miss. The opening song "Dhadak dhadak" is catchy and upbeat, with a wonderful, evocative picturization that leaves the viewer completely satisfied, feeling as if one has already enjoyed a full meal just ten minutes into the film. The popular club number "Kajra re," is a terrific filmi qawwali, but I have some serious issues with the picturization of that song. It Aishwarya's special appearance, and she plays a scantily clad nautch-girl singing naughty lyrics and dancing seductively for a bunch of drunken men. This bit of item-girl eye-candy is at odds with the matter-of-fact egalitarianism of the rest of the film, and detracts from the movie's light but real girl-power message. The love song "Chup chup ke" is charming, if not particularly memorable. The rest of the soundtrack is weak, such as the forgettable disco number ("Naach baaliye" in this case) that S-E-L seem compelled to cram into every soundtrack they do. Still, Bunty aur Babli is definitely a keeper, a cheerful and adorable way to while away a rainy afternoon.
You're no fun, Carla, hating on all my favourite S-E-L soundtracks. ;p
To play devil's advocate here, I think I have to disagree with you on Aishwarya's item number. It was the first item number I ever ran into - or recognized as an item number, so I have a certain fondness to it. While admittedly item numbers aren't exactly hallmarks of feminism, I found Aish's speech before the song note-worthy. It seemed like she was saying "Men are useless - now it's even a woman's job to seduce" - not exactly girl-power, but neither did it smell of patriarchal sexual cravings forcing her to dance suggestively. I know a lot of people are allergic to large age differences in BW couples but oddly enough I found myself thinking, "Aww, that girl and Big B would make a cute pair!". When the character disappeared as the song ended, I was actually quite let down somehow.
I've personally grown tired of the song but I still love the picturization, it's fun and racy.
Posted by: Sanni | January 22, 2007 at 07:09 AM
sanni, everybody and her aunties disagrees with me about S-E-L generally and "Kajra re" in particular, so I'm getting used to it. :-)
The "Kajra re" picturization rubs me completely the wrong way; the feminism issue is only a part of it, and it's hard for me to articulate all the other parts. At bottom I wonder if the problem is just that "Kajra re" stands as Exhibit A in "Why I think Aishwarya is overrated." She just doesn't look that good to me; the dance isn't all that and a bag of chips; and it's not that hot.
When I try to *explain* why I don't think it's hot - always a treacherous undertaking - I end up discoursing about feminism and nautch girls, but it's all a little over-analyzed and beside the point. The truth is that I just don't think it's hot.
I don't hate the picturization - I actually like the Bachchans big and little in it very much. But I just can't get into Aishwarya. It's like the SRK thing - reacting coolly to something that makes so many other people squeal drives to obsessive over-analysis to figure out why I feel the way I do. :-)
By the way, just so you are warned, the only S-E-L soundtrack on which I really like every song is *Dil chahta hai*.
Posted by: carla | January 22, 2007 at 08:00 AM
I'd recommend "Chhoker Bali". I'm not a big fan of Aishwarya Rai either, but she showed in this movie that she *can* act.
Maybe it's the director that made a difference, or possibly this was a one-off movie.
~Amit
Posted by: Amit | February 26, 2007 at 07:05 PM