Just when you thought, the past was dead, it comes alive in the opening scene of Delhi Belly. A plane lands and we see a man striding to the tune of an RD Burman track from Hum Kissi Se Kam Nahin. We remember the way we were once. But then the man walking to the groovy beat turns out to be not the hero who once made a grand entry in films. He is a secondary character and the RD song is just an aside playing on the airport television. But wait, there is a subtext here. The man is carrying diamonds and as we will figure out, the whole film is a chase against time to find lost diamonds. Just as Hum Kissi Se Kam Nahin was. Smart, eh? Very.
There are many such moments in the film like when the three protagonists are dealing with a conniving diamond dealer in his office, the song playing in the background is, “Duniya mein logon ko dhokha kabhi ho jata hai.” What fun! You are also reminded of the three friends in Sai Paranjpay’s Chashme Badoor when the film first shows us how Imran Khan, Vir Das, Kunaal Roy Kapoor live in a room together. Only there is no Mehndi Hassan playing in the background. No one is a Ghalib fan here. There are no pictures of Vivekananda and Gandhi. The three live in an unspeakably dirty room, with a butt crack showing along with some cracks on the ceiling. They live here maybe because they are too lazy to move just as they are too lazy to fill the bathroom bucket during the two hour water supply in the morning.
A cockroach makes a meal of the remains of a half-eaten pizza and even though a tongue-in-cheek voice mimics KL Saigal in the background, you know the past is just a reference here, not the mainstay. For those who watched Rakesh Bedi speak in refined Urdu in Chashme Baddoor, more internal tremors are in store as Imran Khan’s Taashi gets up to open the door amid a rain of expletives you would hear either from Delhi police or during a road rage induced fight between two truckers on a high way. But the burst of laughter in the hall when the first expletive is spoken, proves that another Aamir Khan production is on its way to becoming a cult hit. If mainstreaming questionable fringe impulses is what it takes, than director Abhinay Deo has got it.
The argument the Delhi Belly team has put forth during the publicity of the film is that this is how the young speak. Well, but where? In schools, colleges, offices, canteens, their homes? In certain episodes of Emosanal Attyachar? The three boys in question are media professionals but they talk as if they have been bred on cuss words pertaining to mothers, sisters, private parts and sexual acts. Would the film have been as entertaining and smart as it is now, even without the language that almost everyone in the film speaks right from the urban young to the gangsters? Yes, but maybe it would have challenged the dialogue writer to actually write some dialogue but then as Anurag Kashyap says in a national newspaper today, the era of dialogues is over.
So RIP Salim Javed and lets get on with the new glorious chapter in the evolution of Hindi films, shall we? But before we get on with it, lets get past the stomach rumbles of our boy Nitin (Kunal Roy Kapoor) who spends a large part of the film defecating in different loos, some revoltingly dirty and even without water. There are fart sounds and explosions that don’t let you reach out for your popcorn during the film. The sample of his stools (we will refrain from using the Hindi word that is used liberally in the film) is a character in the film almost and actually makes an appearance when a gangster (Vijay Raaz, his absolutely brilliant self as always) expecting a consignment of diamonds, empties a bottle. Yes, very funny. Everyone in the hall thought so. They did something similar in Kamal Hassan’s Pushpak but they did not show you any excreta. But then ofcourse shit happens and our filmmakers have every right to show us just how. I spent a few long minutes looking away from Roy Kapoor’s adventures in the toilet but am just being a spoil-sport.
But now for the parts that really are funny without the indigestion and the casually spoken gaalis. The Jaane Bhi Do Yaron reference when the three boys, on the run from the gangsters wear a burqa and take to the crowded gullies of old Delhi. Or when the roof falls because someone is dancing on it and someone is hanging from a fan below it. The film has real humour and moments where you laugh your misgivings out. Like a bullet that leaves a ring of smoke around a gun on a poster. A cow making eye contact with a harried driver. And many more that the Double Dhamaal franchise would never think of.
The actors hit the right keys and Poorna Jagannathan is a real find not just because she looks really intelligent and sassy but because her character lets her show us her smarts.
The songs are famous now (take a bow Ram Sampath) for not just their tunes but their insinuations. And if I can’t shake off the sunlit innocence of Miss Chamko and her romance with an Economics topper in Chashme Baddoor, it is my fault. I just happen to be from a generation, filmmakers do not make films for, anymore.
Reema Moudgil is the author of Perfect Eight (http://www.flipkart.com/b/books/perfect-eight-reema-moudgil-book-9380032870?affid=unboxedwri )
brilliant review…..(:
don’t know abt u but i actually felt gratefull 2ward’s people running the show at pvr naraina for not having
an interval lest i would have been subjected 2 the horror of hearing the EXPLOSION’S on screen sincronized with the munching of popcorn by my next seat neighbour…
enjoyed reading this review.
hmm. i have heard language as is spoken by the three boys in the film very, very often. and in delhi, ek line ke saath you get ek gaali free. and it is not always about cussing. it is like a natural extension to a sentence.
the horrible place the boys live in, it is as i remember some of my friends used to live, and i have come to think that many bachelor pads resemble a sty.
and third, but not the least, thank you for mentioning poorna jagannathan, because i thought she rocked completely. most other reviews have barely spoken of her.
Hmm, well uma, what happens in delhi does not really qualify as a pan indian reality of the young and to project it as an blanket portrait of today’s generation is a bit heavyhanded. My son is a teenager and is not aware of what DK Bose sounds like in a loop and I hope he never does. I have no issue with bachelor pads..I have an issue with lingering shots of toilets and butt cracks. And just because shit happens, does not mean we should be all subjected to just how it happens. And yes, Poorna is a find:)
thanks simar and nadi ji, will get down to reading your review now:)
And i thot i was the only one who did not like the movie.. i was ready to be clobbered after my review.. thank you for this!!!
u r welcome 🙂
I can’t agree with you on this one. I absolutely LOVED Delhi Belly. Saw it last night and still can’t stop laughing. Enjoyed the bread stick and paper bag scene the most! It’s an incredibly witty caper.
I have not said its a bad film. It is smart, it is funny but did it need the amount of bad language it has and the fart noises/potty humour to be funnier? Don’t think so..:)
Once again, I disagree. It was a movie about young men living together. I know people like that, perhaps you don’t – so let’s leave it at that.
ofcourse rupa, disagreement is part of the creative process..that is why I disagree not so much with the content but with the intent..that somehow the reference to a woman’s body part mentioned in a loop in a song is cool, to pun upon ‘behan..ch..d” in another song is the sign of great creative freedom. I have lived in a lower middle class mohalla in Punjab and i grew up swearing at eve teasers and wannabe molesters as a reflex action..but even I did not know what DK Bose means in a loop or if there was a word like that. Now I do,so will my son one day..is that something am going to be thankful for? No.
haha reema! just read your comment. you are going for literal meanings. Now if I ask after DHOOM there was a sharp rise in incidents of chain snaching or in 3 IDIOTS when boys turned around, took off their pants and duck n say TOHFA KABUL KARO (take my ass) a gay gesture, OR psycho SK in DARR , Are they something we all are gonna be thankful for? I think this is a wrong question.
If u check on youtube, toilet scene of Dumb n Dumber is the most viewed one. I think amir khan must have inspired from it.
And yes without all that bad language the movie wd nt have done as it is doing now. Bad language earned Amir Khan all the free advertisement on internet, fm radio, fb. Weeks before its release, it was on everybody’s mind and tounge.
Though i havn’t seen this movie yet. Only its bad language is tempting me to buy a ticket.
Mr Arora,
Everyone is free to ask questions..and to offer an opinion about what they like or not, that is my job as a writer and my right as a ticket buying viewer..you are free to have your own take on it, warm regards
Certainly Reema, everyone has this freedom. And with utter respect I take your views.
I was trying to see things from a contrary stand point.(film maker’s) and trying to figure out reasons amir khan, a maker of TARE ZAMI PAR, wd have given to himself for making a movie full of bad language..