सुहाग
Manmohan Desai has a knack for satisfying masala. His movies are
packed to the gills with his choice wacky elements and overloaded
symbols - brothers separated in childhood, medically improbable
blindness, gentleman rogues, grudges held for decades by heroes and
villains alike. Suhaag ("good fortune," particularly the sort
of good fortune supposedly enjoyed by a married woman) is no exception,
and if you check your brain at the door you will be rewarded with an
amusing and goofy masala escape.
Durga (Nirupa Roy) is ruined when her husband, a gangster called Vikram (Amjad Khan), refuses to recognize their marriage and rejects their twin infant sons. Matters get worse for Durga when a rival gangster Jaggi (Kader Khan) kidnaps one of the babies and sells him to a small-time crook (Jeevan) who makes his living exploiting child beggars. Durga does her best to raise her remaining boy on her own, and he grows into Kishen (Shashi Kapoor), a devoted son and police officer of sparkling integrity. The other boy, raised among petty thieves, becomes Amit (Amitabh Bachchan), a drunk and a con-artist. Coincidence brings Amit together with Kishen and Durga, as he helps engineer a romance between Kishen and Anu (Parveen Babi), a sweet-hearted student who falls for Kishen. For his part, Amit is in love with Basanti (Rekha), a recalcitrant tawaif with a secret connection to Anu. And things become very tangled indeed when Vikram resurfaces - he hires Amit to assassinate the meddling police inspector Kishen, unaware that either young man is his son.
That plot, such as it is, is almost more trouble to describe than it is worth, something Suhaag has in common with other Manmohan Desai films like Amar Akbar Anthony and Parvarish. It's enough to hang on to while it's happening, though. After all, crazy coincidences are the bread and butter of masala - especially coincidences involving long-lost family members, which are particularly numerous here. And for all its adherence to masala formula, Suhaag does offer a few rarer treats. For instance, Rekha's Basanti is one of the most appealing characters I've ever seen her play. I am not a fan of Rekha's ephemeral, will-o-the-wisp persona, and in Basanti she offers a gutsy, earthy, worldly woman in sharp constrast to the aloof tawaif she played in Muqaddar ka sikandar - Basanti could have been a repeat performance of that character, and I was delighted that she was not.
Durga, too, is a departure from Nirupa Roy's typical "Nahin!"-screaming maa roles - at least for the first half of Suhaag. There, she is bold and forceful, taking charge and muttering snarky commentary; the sequence of scenes in which she meets Anu and tries to arrange Anu's marriage to Kishen is particularly wonderful. Unfortunately, Durga's story is bookended by simpering devotion to her singularly undeserving husband Vikram. This is Suhaag's great weakness; the movie lacks Amar Akbar Anthony's charming syncretism and paeans to Indian unity, as well as Parvarish's wry commentary on nature vs. nurture. As a fan of Manmohan Desai's hearty message-masala, I felt baited and switched when the promising Durga was in some ways more Sita than Durga.
Still Suhaag is fun when masala is on the menu - nothing else quite matches the buddy chemistry of Shashi and Amitabh ("Shashitabh," as the jodi is affectionately known in among Bollybloggers), who alone are worth watching for, and they plus the splendid songs ensure a satisfying, if silly, experience. Of these, Parveen Babi's intoxicated turn in " Main to beghar hoon" and the buddy-jodi song "Ae yaar sun" are standouts, along with the hysterical "Tere rab ne bana di jodi," in which Amitabh and Rekha dance bhangra in disguise.
This movie is one we watch over & over on random weekends with friends as nearly ever scene & song is tailor made for a group watching experience (for time sake we fast forward to only the Shashitabh & song sequences). Part of Manmohan Desai's classic masala trilogy (Suhaag, AAA & Naseeb) and one of the foundations of Bollyweed - so named because the makers must have been smoking something when they made it or you need to be on something while watching ;) While I tend to let social messages go to the wayside with movies like this I agree that Durga's blind devotion to her wretch of a husband was just infuriating at times.
This movie is just inspired madness and a must see for any Bollywood aficionado. Don't make the mistake of taking it too seriously and you will have some of the most (legal) fun EVER. *Bonus - this movie marks the first and last appearance of mini-Amitabh on film... I did a write up with a pic of that historical moment at http://tinyurl.com/llov2m
Posted by: sanket | July 27, 2009 at 11:25 PM
This is one of those posts where I will just nod a lot and say "Right on!" because that's almost exactly how I felt about it too. I do think it would be an excellent group viewing experience though - Sanket tells such good tales of watching things like this with a gaggle of giggling friends!
Posted by: Beth | July 27, 2009 at 11:54 PM
This goes on the list for the next time I haz a quorum of Bolly-friends to watch a movie with.
Meantime, who has the Ur-list of Amitabh-Shashi movies, in order of watchability and rewardingness?
Posted by: VIRGINIA | July 29, 2009 at 12:06 AM
I do! :) There are still 2 I haven't seen (of 13 total, and I don't count Shashi-directed Amitabh-starring Ajooba OR Bombay Talkie, since Amitabh doesn't actually appear), but here they are in my personal order from best Shashitabhness to least (not the same order I'd put them in for quality or watchability or rewardingness overall):
1. Do aur Do Paanch (1980)
2. TIE: Kaalaa Patthar (1979) and Imaan Dharam (1977)
4. Suhaag (1979
5. Namak Halaal (1982)
6. Roti Kapada aur Makhan (1974)
7. Deewaar (1975)
8. Trishul (1978)
9. Silsila (1981)
10. Kabhi Kabhie (1976)
11. Shaan (1980)
I'm going for a certificate in Shashitabh Studies.
Posted by: Beth | July 29, 2009 at 06:29 PM
Wow!! Thanks!! I've only seen two, and they are low-placers for you - Silsila and Kabhi Kabhie. I still looove Silsila!! and not just for the clothes.
Posted by: VIRGINIA | July 29, 2009 at 07:36 PM
You hit one of my favorite topics - I couldn't resist! :) I like Kabhi Kabhie a lot as a movie but its Shashi-Amitabh interactions are not my favorite. Kaalaa Patthar is one of my favoritest movies ever - socialist masala!
Posted by: Beth | July 29, 2009 at 09:12 PM
Oh yay for the definitive Shishitabh list! Thank you Bethy.
Posted by: carla | July 29, 2009 at 10:52 PM
Vah vah vah. This is the lord of masala movies in my book. A fab review, as ever.
Posted by: the ppcc | July 30, 2009 at 12:43 AM
This is another Shashi and Amitabh film I haven't seen - I still think Deewaar is their definitive teaming; I have to confess though that Shashi bowed out with some dignity as an actor unlike Amitabh who continues to make mediocre cinema. Shashi's greatest performance was Nur Saab in the Merchant-Ivory film, 'In Custody'.
Posted by: OMAR | August 12, 2009 at 05:52 AM
I am pleasantly surprised to see this movie reviewed. I saw it many years ago and completely forgot about it. Loved the subtitled dialogue in the screenshot. :)
Posted by: Anirban | March 01, 2010 at 08:40 PM