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Film: "Loins Of Punjab Presents"; Cast: Shabana Azmi, Ayesha
Dharker, Jameel Khan, Darshan Jariwala, Manish Acharya, Seema
Rahmani; Director: Manish Acharya; Rating: *** 1/2 "Are you ashamed
to be seen with me?" the only white-American contestant in the
all-desi US-based music contest asks his strictly brown girlfriend
Ayesha Dharker. And you wonder, not for the first time during the
nimble narration, at the fistful of farce that first-time filmmaker
Manish Acharya facilitates into this 'funny-on-the-top,
tragic-at-the-bottom' film.
It provides a glimpse into the quirks, quibbles, eccentricities
and other cultural excesses of a bunch of Indians in the US trying
hard to keep the Bollywood spirit alive in the land of
opportunities and, yes, dreams.
First things first. Writer-director Manish Acharya's 90-minute
film leaves you with enough characters to populate two big-budget
Karan Johar spectacles. Broadly assertive Indians swarm the posh
hotel that hosts the music contestants.
Yes, there's plenty of anger underlining the film's utterly
blithe and amusing subtext. On the surface, the eccentric and
isolated NRI community seem to represent the most apparent fall-out
of cultural displacement.
Within half-an-hour you warm up to these naively ambitious
characters as people whom you've probably bumped into during your
last visit to the US at the neighbourhood curry canteen.
These include the chic socialite, played by Shabana Azmi who sports
a dazzling smile and a new haircut, whose raga-rich guru teaches
her to sing "Chura liya hai tumne" sexily, the 17-year old singing
prodigy (Ishitta Sharrma) of a stifling Gujarati family and the
earnest but talent-less Bollywood-fixated bimbo (Seema Rahmani).
Also present are the Bollywood-Bachchan fanatic (played by director
Acharya) and the belligerent gay Bhangra-rap duo who walk
hand-in-hand with aggressive amorousness across the hotel lobby.
They all gather together in a hilarious huddle of NRI
eccentricities, Bollywood norms and Hindi songs belted out in
voices that often belong to the bathroom.
Given the time limitations, every character still brings to his or
her role a delectable participative spirit.
"Loins..." could not have worked without the same cast and its
tough to single out any one performance. But Jameel Khan's
evil-eyed, boorish and vulgar performance as the show's organiser
stands out. As for Shabana, in her 10-minute appearance she brings
fire, ice and a bit of wicked sunshine to the table.
Watch her in the sequence while addressing a press conference in
the hotel lobby where she's interrupted by the only non-Brown
contestant Josh for a wrong reference to a Bachchan flick.
The steely glance she throws at the poor chap could de-freeze an
igloo. To play people who are parodic and silly in their
self-importance with such warmth and understanding isn't easy.
But on the surface, the actors and the gifted director make it look
easy.
"Loins Of Punjab Presents" is all about scratching the surface to
discover the painfully embarrassing dreams and ambitions of a
generation that has moved as far away from 'home' as India has
moved in the world of globalisation.
See the film for the layers of sadness it secretes while telling a
tale of preposterous self-promotion by people who can't look
beyond their own voices. Or watch the film for its unstoppable flow
of brilliantly witty one-liners and for bringing into play
Bollywood's film-song culture without being a musical.
By Subhash K. Jha
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