Lage Raho Munnabhai - A lesson in film making

November 9th, 2006 by Kaushal Sheth

After days of frenzied traveling through Udaipur , Jaipur and Pushkar I have settled down in to the daily humdrum. And gosh!! I remember how the Italians, that I was traveling with, had chided me for not seeing Lage raho munnabhai….. Yes, that’s true. A movie buff like me and yet to see Lage raho munnabhai. I guess that is the price I have to pay during days of hectic business activity.

Anyway, here, with release of DVD of Lage raho munnabhai, I get a chance to see it finally and boy!! what a movie this Rajkumar Hirani has made!!!!. After the utter disappointment of Don and Umrao Jaan it is a relief to watch a well made film that doesn’t pander to base tastes of audience and instead levitates the audience to its high moral ground.

For all the hard work put in by Sanjay Dutt , Arshad Warsi , Boman Irani and the cast, the true hero of the film remains the director Rajkumar Hirani. Underachievement and disappointment are endemic to movie sequels and when you are trying to match up to something as well made as Munnabhai MBBS you are always climbing uphill. Yet the fact that Hirani manages to better on his previous work is truly a sign of the immense talent of this man. And why not he has come here the hard way unlike the Johars and the Chopras and this experience shows.

What had amazed me about Munnabhai MBBS was the economy of dialogue and screen time. No character received a second of screen time extra than the screenplay required and surprisingly the same holds true for Lage raho Munnabhai though here the threads are much more complex. Of course some of them look contrived but then Hirani is not God and I do not expect him to act like one. Deciding how much screen time is enough for any character is an art in itself and Hirani seems well versed in it.

That said, nothing can take the credit away from the super performances by the entire cast
especially Boman Irani. He plays a Punjabi to the boot taking care of those small idiosyncrasies and avoiding any stereotype and the same goes for Dilip Prabhvalkar who plays Mahatma Gandhi. Vidya Balan looks gorgeous and even betters her performance in Parineeta. Of course, Arshad Warsi and Sunjay Dutt deliver stellar performances especially touching is the scene after Munna slaps Circuit and then tenders an apology. Simply awesome!

And if this bounty was not enough, even the songs give you a sweet memory to ruminate on. Nothing pathbreaking but simply delicious in melody and picturisation and then there is the social message. No pushing down the throat, no preaching. Just a sweet pill of morality.

The makers could have certainly made a more hilarious movie like No Entry or the likes but instead they kept the emotional part and made it a product they could be proud of.
Hats Off to these guys.
Loads of inspiration for my business…

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Posted in Movies |

One Response

  1. FARRUKH Says:

    Truly a classic film, MBBS was a classic commedy and yes agree, a hard act to better, but “lage raho….” carries it off in aplomb. almost a perfect movie that proves a point. loved it. and will cherish my DVD for long, infact im already advocating it to my non-indian friends ;)

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