Firaaq
Film-makers across the globe have
often told stories of calamities/riots/disasters --
natural and unnatural -- and the aftermath. FIRAAQ,
which marks the directorial debut of actress Nandita Das,
also looks at the lives of common men after the riots in
Gujarat.
More
of a docu-drama, FIRAAQ narrates six different stories
that are not connected with one another. Nor are they
similar, nor do they meet towards the culmination. Told
with utmost sensitivity, the film pricks your conscience
at several points of the narrative and when you make it
to the Exit after the film has ended, you carry the
burden of a lot of questions on your mind.
Write your own movie review of Firaaq
FIRAAQ is disturbing. It makes you remove those blinkers
and experience the truth. FIRAAQ is purposeful and
powerful and drives home the message in the most
convincing manner, without taking sides.
A
middle class housewife [Deepti Naval] closes the door on
a woman desperately seeking refuge and then struggles to
overcome her guilt... The loyalty of two best friends [Shahana
Goswami] is challenged in times rife with fear and
suspicion... A group of victimized young men seek
revenge as a way out of their helplessness and anger...
A modern-day Hindu-Muslim couple [Sanjay Suri, Tisca
Chopra] struggle between the survival instinct to hide
their true identities and the desire to assert them... A
boy having lost most of his family in the riots wanders
through the streets searching for his missing father...
A saintly musician [Naseeruddin Shah] clings on to his
idealism until an evidence of civil strife shakes his
faith.
The opening sequence of FIRAAQ says it all, when a truck
empties dead bodies as if it were emptying debris or
rubble. It hits you more sharply than any weapon.
Subsequently, you are introduced to the assorted
characters that have been affected, directly or
indirectly, to the riots. The six stories run
concurrently, raising so many questions all through.
Nandita
Das gets it right, except for the open end which doesn't
really have a culmination like most Hindi movies. One
aspect that could go against the film!
Nandita is a competent storyteller and her choice of
stories as also the actors is just right. The actors
only carry the film to dizzy heights with splendid
portrayals. Ravi K. Chandran's cinematography captures
the mood brilliantly.
FIRAAQ has an ensemble cast and each of them sparkle in
their respective roles. But the faces that continue to
haunt you even after the film has ended are that of the
child actor, Deepti Naval and Shahana Goswami.
On the whole, FIRAAQ is one of the finest docu-dramas
made in India. It's disturbing. It's powerful. It's
thought-provoking. A film for the discerning viewer who
likes to go beyond the stereotype.
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