Sonchiriya Review: A dacoit drama with excellent performances!

Sonchiriya Review: A dacoit drama with excellent performances!
Friday, March 01, 2019 10:45 IST
By Santa Banta News Network
Cast: Sushant Singh Rajput, Bhumi Pednekar, Manoj Bajpayee, Ranvir Shorey and Ashutosh Rana

Director: Abhishek Chaubey

Raring: ****

Chambal. Of the harsh ravines and the eponymous river that runs through it. The legend goes that the river carries a curse upon itself - whoever drinks from those dark waters is changed forever, becoming absorbed in the spirit of seeking blood-thirsty revenge. If there's one place in India where you pay back with two eyes for every eye you take, it's this.

They also say that the ravines of Chambal must be 'offered' children every year - children who will turn 'Baaghis' (rebels) and will spend the rest of their lives wandering through the jungles and ravines of its ten thousand square kilometers area.

Lakhna (Sushant Singh Rajput) was one such child 'Baaghi'. The 'Thakur' boy grew up listening to the stories of his father's killing at the hands of his uncle. The year was 1962, and Lakhna was seventeen when he avenged it by killing his uncle and his two sons. And as is the norm with such Avengers, he ran off to the ravines to escape the law. There, he got picked up by the most famous of the 'Thakur' dacoit gangs - the gang of the legendary Man Singh (Manoj Bajpayee). Man Singh, a larger than life dacoit with a strict ethical code, took a liking for Lakhna. For the next thirteen years, Lakhna walked the ravines with Man Singh and steadily rose through the ranks to become one of his two most trusted lieutenants - the other being the volatile Vakil Singh (Ranvir Shorey).


The year is 1975 and Lakhna is now thirty. And thirteen years of this tough criminal life has left him a jaded, hardened soul. What's still keeping him going is his devotion of Man Singh and the strict principles by which the man runs the gang - which makes it all seem like there's a higher purpose to it.

And then one day something happens that shatters Lakhna's illusions. Circumstances lead Man Singh, Lakhna and the gang to commit a crime that shakes their belief to the core. They know what they've done goes far beyond their usual crimes. And as the famed curse of Chambal goes, the gang must pay for it.


Enter cop Virender Singh Gujjar (Ashutosh Rana)- who now has a personal grudge to bear with the gang following what transpired. He makes it his mission to annihilate the gang, which is anyways finding it hard to come to terms with the weight of the 'sin' on their collective soul.

The gang tries to lie low for a bit. But Man Singh knows that to keep the gang going, you've to keep feeding the monster. On a tip-off from a trusted informer, they decide to loot a big wedding. As it turns out, the informer sells them out to the cops and the hapless gang gets ambushed by Gujjar and his team. Along with half of the forty-odd members and the rest only somehow manage to escape.

It's too big a hit for the surviving men to take and it threatens to tear the remaining gang apart. Lakhna is now sure in his belief that the curse is going to consume them all, and the only way out is to surrender to the cops and choose a life in prison. That's the 'penance' they have to pay for their sin, Lakhna argues. Vakil Singh opposes the idea tooth and nail - for according to him, a Baaghi's dharma is not to surrender but to die to fight. As things turn out, Lakhna gets badly outnumbered by Vakil Singh's supporters, who appointed him the new leader.


Lakhna and two of his trusted aide - Natthi and Khalifa - secretly decide to break off from the gang and surrender, but they know they've to do it quietly - for the situation in the gang is just too volatile at this point. Their plan is almost ready. But as luck would have it, it is just then that they run into Indu (Bhumi Pednekar) and Sonchidiya. They beg for protection from the gang, with Indu reminding them that the two of them belong to the same caste as that of the most gang members - 'Thakur'.

Vakil Singh is reluctant to help and argues that there is too much heat from the cops at this moment and they cannot take any more liability. But something about that poor little bleeding girl Sonchidiya makes it impossible for Lakhna to ignore her pleas. He fights with the gang and invokes Man Singh's principle of always helping a fellow cast-member - and a woman - to force the gang to take them along. The plan is to head to a nearby town where the injured gang members and the bleeding girl can be treated by the gang's trusted doctor.

However, as it turns out, there is more to Indu and Sonchidiya than meets the eye.

All the performances are top-notch but Sushant Singh Rajput and Ranvir Shorey stole the show.

Director Abhishek Chaubey has brilliantly presented a rooted tale set in Chambal. Though it's a simple story still the film has managed to keep you hooked. The detailing by the director shows his vision.

The cinematography by Anuj Rakesh Dhawan is one of the key elements of the film. He has done a commendable job and deserves applause.

Overall, 'Sonchiriya', despite blood and violence, has impressed all with some great performances.
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