'Sarkar Raj'- a chaotic, dissapointing sequel
Ratings: **
Dark, sinister, sinewy and rugged - "Sarkar Raj" is Shakespeare
on cocaine. Or the lacerated life of a Thackeray-like family with
the concept of spatial harmony becoming meaningless because of the
disembodied camera movements.
Ram Gopal Varma just doesn't let the characters be. In "Sarkar",
he observed, studied and pondered on the compelling contexts of
political powerplay in the Nagare family.
Here he drags the uneasy relationship between patriarch Subhash
Nagare (Amitabh Bachchan) and his son (Abhishek) into an arena of
exacerbated emotions. You just can't get away from the noise.
Amar Mohile's background score doesn't help the cause. Every discernible
space in the soundtrack is saturated with tempestuous sounds straight
out of a B-grade horror movie.
In contrast, the three main characters maintain a poise and serenity
that defiantly move in a direction opposed to the one Varma has
chosen to take this time.
"Sarkar" was a film screaming silences. "Sarkar
Raj" can easily be rechristened 'Sarkar Rage'. Characters bark
orders, scream grievances and rave about a socio-political system
that fosters inequalities. This is an angry film about an angry
young man and his uneasily-calm father who define and demonstrate
power in different ways.
Varma cuts across the life and times of the Nagare family, slicing
their emotions into messy portions of writhing anguish. The camera
seems as restless as the characters, stopping only long enough to
capture one of the three protagonists in evocative close-ups.
The Nagares seem determined to bring prosperity to Maharashtra
by allowing an NRI entrepreneur (Aishwarya) and her ruthlessly acquisitive
father (Victor Banerjee - who is wasted completely) to build a dam
that threatens to destroy a cluster of villages.
The film's frames scream for attention and the plot is tense, tactile
and non-derivative. The narrative displays a rugged grit, though
not much grip. What it tragically lacks are those introspective
moments that would have made these wounded, betrayed characters
more dense and believable.
Don't blame the actors if the characters just don't connect with
the plot - it's not their fault. Blame it on Varma's characteristic
uneasiness with emotions. The women are either on silent mode or
bumped off quickly. Or in Aishwarya's case, 'the only man in the
cabinet'.
"Sarkar" and its sequel are essentially emotional father-son
stories.
The emotions in "Sarkar Raj" converge entirely on Aishwarya's
divine face as she becomes the recipient and beacon of all the pent-up
resentment, anger and misery that the Nagare family has nurtured.
Aishwarya weeps for the Nagares and for all those dynasties of
the world whose heirs have been brutal casualties of power-play
and politics. She weeps perhaps for the film's lost cause too.
"Sarkar Raj" could have been what Coppola's "Godfather
2" was to "The Godfather". Instead, Varma shrouds
the characters' grief and angst in a cryptic chaos.
What compounds the sense of claustrophobia is that every frame
looks cramped.
In two hours of playing time there is not one light moment that
one can recall. The two turning points in the plot - the vicious
slaying of the characters played by Tanisha and Abhishek jolt us
although the movie prepares us for anarchy from the first frame.
The actors do make some interludes very special. Amitabh's sequence
with his dying son or the hesitant father-son embrace in the study
just couldn't go wrong. They don't.
But you wonder what sort of a mind would script such abject tragedy
for a man who lost his first son in "Sarkar" and his only
surviving son in the sequel.
Dilip Prabhawalkar, who played Gandhi in "Lage Raho Munnabhai",
is a machiavellan rural icon here.
Amit Roy's cinematography and Sunil Nigevekar's art consist of
rusty browns and crusty, crumbling visuals.
The three principal players are in splendid form - the senior Bachchan
rightfully towering over the rest. Abhishek's preparedness for the
part comes from his pensive far-away looks.
Aishwarya, as the chic industrialist coming to grips with a soio-political
order where corruption is a given, could well be seen trying to
come to terms with a disembodied world of perverse politics and
fragmented family values that Varma has built.
At the end we see Subhash Nagare's sighing wife (Surpriya Pathak)
going towards the phone to call their grandson to join the family
business - another sequel in the offing?