Jail
Directed by:
Madhur Bhandarkar
Producer by: Sanjay Mehta
Starring: Neil Nitin Mukesh,
Mugdha Godse, Manoj Bajpai, Arya Babbar, Chetan
Pandit, Ghanshyam Garg, Rahul Singh, Sayali
Bhagat, Kaveri Jha, Mukesh Tyagi
Music Dir: Sharib Sabri, Toshi
Sabri, Shamir Tandon
Madhur
Bhandarkar who began his career with 'Trishakti'
has since traveled a long way in the film
industry. He has proved as one of the very few
directors whose movies sell because of them
rather than the stars. No sooner Madhur
completed his 'Chandni Bar' than he started
making movies on the themes which no other film
director dare.
His latest movie' Fashion' is immediately
followed on as dark a subject as jail. A convict
who came out of the jail and found the outside
world worse than inside inspired Madhur to do
this film, it is said.
Hence the movie tells the tales of hundreds of
thousands of such people, who are innocent but
still suffer long imprisonment.
It's significant that the director who had in
his 'Fashion' shown the glittering world of pomp
and show sooner than later decided to expose the
dark side of the lives of the "convicts"
languishing in Indian jails even after over six
decades of Independence. The director has hit on
our legal system and called for its complete
overhaul. Are those responsible for it
listening?
In
the movie's story, Parag Dixit (played by Neil
Nitin Mukesh) who has just been promoted at his
job and is poised on the threshold of a bright
future with his girlfriend Mansi (played by
Mugdha Godse), falls into the trap of his
roommate who is a drug peddler.
Parag ends up first in police custody and then
in jail, despite his bemused innocence! He
spends two years of his prime youth in jail for
no fault. Though not guilty his trauma doesn't
end as his pleaders fail in their job to get him
freed. Again, it's not his fault.
Incidentally, his girlfriend Mugdha Godse who
plays Mansi, and his loving mother also fail in
getting their love interest and son, get justice
in the courts. What a pity! Not only this, the
pitiable Parag witnesses the harrowing ordeal
behind the bars.
Madhur is excellent in portraying the true
conditions of Indian jails. He depicts chilling
shots of a barrack brimming over with body
parts; one man's torso sticking to another man's
head whose arm is crushed beneath the foot of
another.
While critically examining the movie we find
that its USP is the human face of its each
character in spite of their involvement in
heinous crimes. The movie rests on the strong
shoulders of Neil Nitin. He has excelled in his
performance.
Looks like the actor will shine in Bollywood
sooner than later. He has very truly depicted
his character while emoting well when he is
taken to the court for seeking a bail and then
returning empty-handed. He suffers to no end and
in desperation tries to cut his veins.
Similarly, Manoj Bajpayee has performed his
character of Nawab though brief very well.
He plays a meat-seller-turned-murderer who turns
everybody's godfather! Madhur's favorite actress
Mugdha Godse emerges better even in her short
duration role. Mukesh Tyagi isn't far behind. He
has been progressing in each of his film.
We
wonder if the movie could have afforded better
music than what Sameer Tandon has given in a
movie that always moves around the dark side of
the jail world.
Parag Dixit though most desperate in jail lives
on the only hope that melody queen Lata
Mangeshkar provides through her prayer. That's
why Parag doesn't abandon hope. A must watch
movie! |
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