Rating :***
Dereliction isn't just a state of mind. It's also a condition of
being and feeling that determines the quality of human existence
beyond the transient needs and urges of the individual trapped in
the monstrous mundaneness of the moment.
The best thing about debutant director Navdeep Singh's oddly entitled
"Manorama Six Feet Under" is the sand-swept Rajasthani
ambience. Once, there was the grandiloquent Rajasthan of J.P. Dutta's
cinema and now there's the telltale, accusing, culpable and guilt-laden
Rajasthan of Singh's cinema where crime coalesces into grime to
create a kind of brackish brittle but sturdy concoction that Quentin
Tarantino would approve of and Alfred Hitchcock would find hard
to recognise.
Moving away from the stylised cinematic symposium of the noire-thriller
genre, "Manorama" plays it by the ear. The heat of the
desert is coolly questioning. The narrative is propelled forward,
if propelled is the right word for what the director does with his
outwardly-disembodied material with the brutal inevitability of
those small-town machinations generated by an evil or just a plainly-bored
design.
The characters are familiar small town people, not as continually
menacing as they were in Vishal Bharadwaj's brutal and merciless
"Omkara", but funnier and more lethargic, more prone to
be insensitive and outright silly than they were in the hands of
the other noire-makers in the past.
The brutality, when it comes, is swift, sudden and violent. The
goons quickly bring the protagonist down to his knees and break
his fingers. It reminded me of Jack Nicholson's broken nose in Roman
Polanski's "Chinatown".
Abhay Deol plays the splintered protagonist, failed writer, semi-successful
spouse, indifferent father and an aspiring sleuth - with a mixture
of sloth and spirit.
He looks bulkier, less lean but as mean as he did in his earlier
films. His portrait of dereliction is purposely unfinished.
A very fine performance comes from Gul Panag as Abhay's wife. She
fills up the screen with her casual elegance bringing to the land
of the awry a sense of calm charm and obfuscated order.
Another winner is Vinay Pathak. Portraying the mindless and honest
corruptibility of a small-town cop, Pathak furnishes the dusty environment
with a wry almost invisible humour.
The comic element is generated from that sly synthesis of awkwardness
and brutality that governs life in the backwaters of north India
where existence is more of a matter for the accounts-book than philosophy.
The technicians behind the film work in an unselfconscious spirit,
as though they were part of a reality that goes beyond cinema. Arvind
Kannabiran shoots Rajasthan as a mute but never dumb witness to
the protagonist's ironic persecution.
Editor Jabeen Merchant jumps ahead of the narration to formulate
visual evidence of thoughts before the characters express them.
And the director knows he is looking for a strain of cinematic experience
that has no specific target or relevance.
"Manorama Six Feet Under" is a brave, if somewhat dry,
representation of avant-garde cinema where the characters look more
into themselves than into each other's eyes for answers to questions
that leave a lot to the imagination.