Ever had piping hot, homemade idli-sambar, the latter flavoured with
aromatic spices made on a heavy grinding stone, and served on a banana
leaf? Are you one of those who, inspired by that meal, tried your hand
at making a simple dosa at home? If you’re persistent, you may
eventually get a nice, round, crisp dosa. Your sambar may also be a
satisfactory. But will it be like that honest-to-Amma meal? Not really.
That
mixed feeling you get when you make an acceptable dosa and remember a
fluffy, perfect idli is exactly what you’re left with after watching
Nishikant Kamat’s Drishyam. Drishyam is the Hindi
remake of a Malayalam blockbuster by the same name, masterminded by
writer and director, Jeethu Joseph. That film was recently made in
Tamil, as the gripping Papanasam.
In Hindi, Drishyam
is about a Marathi family, set in Goa and faithful to every scene from
the original, including several shots and frames. Kamat pares down an
otherwise lengthy first half, which may not have been a good move. In
the original, this length was particularly vital to establishing the
central relationships between the lead and his family. Without that
build-up, those relationships are weak as are the performances.
Comparisons aside, Drishyam
has a terrific, killer plot (even if it is 'inspired'). Vijay
Salgaonkar (Ajay Devgn) is a “4th class fail ”, a movie buff and a
self-made man who runs a cable business in a Goan village. He loves
watching movies so much that he stays in his office all night, devouring
every scene in the films that his cable channels telecast. Then, in the
morning, when most people are going to work, Vijay comes home to his
wife, Nandini (Shriya Saran, who tries to look older by wearing saris
and instead only highlights how fresh-faced she is). The only nights
that Vijay comes home to Nandini are the ones on which there’s a Sunny
Leone film playing on TV.
However,
lest we think Vijay is a grouch who cares nothing for his family, we
see him indulging his wife and two daughters, the teenaged Anju (Ishita
Dutta) and the little pudding named Anu ( Mrinal Jhadav). These three
rule his heart and his modest wallet and all in all, it seems Vijay’s
life is well sorted.
The only fly in the cup of chai that Vijay
enjoys at a little local eatery is the corrupt and unpleasant Inspector
Gaitonde (Kamlesh Sawant). As Drishyam sleepwalks its way towards the
interval, Gaitonde – played brilliantly by Sawant – doesn’t seem to be
much more than a prickle.
But Vijay and his family’s idyllic life
grinds to a crashing halt when Anju goes on a school trip and returns
with a blackmailer in tow. Things quickly take a dramatic turn for the
worse and Vijay realizes that to protect his family, he’s going to have
to go up against a formidable foe: Inspector General Meera Deshmukh
(Tabu).
Tabu is the much needed filter coffee (or kaapi) in
Drishyam. She is the terrifying IG, faithful to the police force, whom
no one dare cross. She doesn’t shy away from ordering extreme measures
and her performance matches the fiery and magnificent Asha Sarath in the
Malayalam and Tamil versions. Whether she’s ordering a policeman to
beat the crap out of a suspect or weeping at the loss of her son, Tabu
is magnificent.
Of late, Tabu’s filmography could be called Variations Upon the Theme of Mother. If her Ghazala in Haider
had shades of an Oedipus complex, her Meera can stoop to the ultimate
cruelty for her son. This isn’t the Bollywood mother that Nirupa Roy
made famous. Watch out for her final and only silent scene — her face
becomes a map of desperate emotions, while her husband does the talking.
Opposite
her, Devgn underplays his usual-suspect-cum victim role, but to such an
extent that he underwhelms.The same is true of the adequate but
unmemorable daughters, and Saran as the south Indian version of a
Stepford wife. The two women are critical to the film and their
performances thoroughly weaken it.
It’s in the second half that Drishyam
becomes the mystery and investigation that was promised in its
trailers. Meera is certain Vijay knows something about her missing son.
Vijay and his family, however, have watertight alibis. The last scene
may be one of the best climaxes seen in an Indian thriller.
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