Dasvidaniya

Dasvidaniya
Monday, November 17, 2008 11:01 IST
By Subhash K Jha, Santa Banta News Network
/> Starring Vinay Pathak & Friends
Directed by Shashant Singh
Rating: ***

There's something to be said about this sensitive slice-of-life cinema. And it's this. You really can't keep a good man down.

Returning to the ambit of the dull workingclass protagonist that he almost patented in Bheja Fry Vinay Pathak delivers yet another bravura performance as a man who learns to live only when he learns he has to die.

The premise done to death (pun intended) in films as disparate as Akira Kurosawa's Ikuru and Hrishikesh Mukherjee's Anand, gets its power and glory from the simple yet never simplistic narrative that grows on you... piece by piece....just as the lessons of life creep up belatedly on our hero Amar Kaul.

With every dying day he lives a little more of that life he leaves behind. Though the film's leisurely pace doesn't quite capture the urgency of the moment, Dusvidaniya scores high point for its sincerity of performance reflected in every performance.

The narrative has been patterned prettily as a pastiche of ten episodes each dealing with a facet of Amar Kaul's life that he would like to retrieve from the archives of angst and claim as his own before he's gone.

The pace often drops to a willowy whisper. The tone gets predominantly stifled. The narration is constantly hushed, never rushed even as the shuffling, procrastinating hero speeds through things in his pending file that he needs done before he's through with life.

The beauty and harmony of life's essential core is obtained in passages of relaxed rumination and casual conversations that show us where we often go wrong in our daily dealings. This is done without wagging a dispproving finger at the audience.

Vinay Pathak gets the sur of the tragic hero's comic escapades just right. He's partly Charlie Chaplin, and partly Robert Benigni. But finally this is an actor who does his own thing. Make no mistake about that.

Helping him in his endeavour are like-minded friends like Rajit Kapur, Neha Dhupia, Ranvir Shorey, Sarita Joshi and Gaurav Gera all pitching in with transparently- sincere performances.

There is not one faked moment in Dasvidaniya. You may feel portions of the film (like the Kailesh Kher number Mumma) are manipulative in their intentions. But that's life. You win some. You lose most of it.

Kudos to Pathak for making another winner out of another incorrigible loser's story.
Movie:
Dasvidaniya
Reviewed by:
Subhash K Jha
on
and Rated:
0/5
Emergency Movie Review: A Dramatic Retelling of India’s Political Turmoil!

The political drama Emergency takes audiences back to one of the most controversial periods in Indian

Friday, January 17, 2025
Azaad Movie Review: A Tale of Rebellion, Bond, And Spectacle Falls Short of Its Full Potential!

Govind finds himself drawn to Azaad, a majestic stallion owned by rebel leader Vikram Singh. After

Friday, January 17, 2025
Fateh Movie Review: The Action Thriller That Redefines Bollywood Cinema!

Directed by and starring the versatile Sonu Sood, this two-hour, ten-minute spectacle is not your average

Friday, January 10, 2025
Pushpa 2: The Rule - A Riveting Sequel That Pushes Boundaries!

worker to a powerful smuggler, Pushpa's journey is fraught with challenges and calculated moves. Now, he has his eyes set on a bigger prize: the role of a kingpin in the red

Thursday, December 05, 2024
I Want To Talk Movie Review - A Bittersweet Tale of Grief, Hope, and Resilience!

Shoojit Sircar's films often delve deep into themes of grief, death, and the enduring hope that arises from life's darkest moments. His latest film, I Want To Talk, follows in the footsteps of his previous works like Piku and October, exploring loneliness, the

Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT