BizHat.com > Movies > Reviews
ShabdCast: Sanjay Dutt, Aishwarya Rai, Zayed Khan Language: Hindi Banner: Pritish Nandi Communications Director: Leena Yadav Producer: Pritish Nandi Communications Camera: Aseem Bajaj Story: Leena Yadav Screenplay: Leena Yadav Music: Vishal - Shekhar Year: 2005
 Sometimes an interesting premise fails to carry a film to a
luminous conclusion. "Shabd" has it all - a truly striking plot, great looking
cast, terrific locations and mesmerising cinematography. Yet it misses the bus,
stops short of delivering a genre-defying wallop in the jaded face of the
box-office.
"Shabd" proves one thing for all times. Merely packaging a
different plot in gloss cannot compensate for the absence of intrinsic
credibility in the proceedings. Debutante Leena Yadav displays a flair for
framing her shots in whispering silhouettes and hushed contours. Just what these
hushed whispers are trying to say is not fully or even partially
comprehensible.
The plot has just three characters. Unlike Aishwarya's
previous art house product "Raincoat" (also an intimate character study) here
the incidental characters don't fit into the narrative.
Caught between a critical snarl for his last book and a
writer's block, Shauqat (Sanjay Dutt) encourages his stunningly poised wife
Antara (Aishwarya Rai) to get close to a colleague on the campus, so he'd have
something to write about.
Far-fetched? Yes, for sure! The debutante
director could nonetheless have infused enigmatic electricity into the
unorthodox triangle, if only she had not made the film so heavy-handed and
wordy. Every pause in the plot is filled with words of sighing ambiguity and
every episode comes with italicised footnotes. Though relevant and insightful,
the dialogues (by Sutapa Sarkar) simply flow in a suffocating spill over, so
that you are never close to the three characters.
The words simply - or
not so simply - come in the way. Sanjay and Aishwarya try to cross the bridge of
verbosity and succeed to a point. Sanjay's lined face and anguished demeanour
lend a queasy grace to the self-absorbed and delusory world of the
writer.
But
it's Aishwarya who surprises you. Never outside Sanjay Leela Bhansali's cinema
has she looked so ethereal, fragile and confident. To her role of a wife who
becomes a casualty of a strange spousal mind-game, she brings a tight emotional
craving to lunge towards a reality check. She's all there...and yet
lost!
There is a problem with Zayed Khan's character and performance.
Considering Yash is meant to be a lecturer in the same college as the writer's
wife and considering his presence is supposedly empowered by the writer's
imagination (or, at least so we believe since Shauqat keeps pounding on his
typewriter to announce the Other Man's manoeuvre), why does Zayed have to dress
talk and behave like a camp carryover of his character in "Main Hoon
Na"?
As a performer he's fine as long as he's funny. When he tries to be
serious, he ends up being doubly funny.
 Sanjay and Aishwarya carry the film towards a mellow and mature
destination. Sanjay has a specially difficult role as a writer rapidly losing
touch with reality. He lets his character's pain show on screen without guilt or
apology.
Beyond a point, the two principal actors fail to do anything
with Leena Yadav's tangled triangle.
"Shabd" is like an intricate jigsaw
puzzle where the final picture doesn't come together because there are vital
pieces missing in the design.
Is Yash, for example, just a figment of
Shauqat's imagination? Why does Antara go along with her husband's bizarre plans
of thrusting her on to the young man? H e
suffers from a mental block. But what does she suffer from? A spouse
scare?
In the absence of definite answers, "Shabd" ends up looking
phonier than crisp currency bills packed in a game of Monopoly. Besides Sanjay
and Aishwarya, the life-saver is Aseem Bajaj's cinematography. Though a little
too showy to be fully effectual, the artwork (Omung Patel) and the photography
tend to lend a dazzling array of slick images to a film that is otherwise quite
empty at heart.
Malyalam Film News
Mohanlal honoured
Kavya returns to Mollywood
Pazhassi Raja to be censored
Kanaa Kanmani in 70 centres
Kanthasamy sets record in Kerala
Angel John to release on Oct 18
More...
Tamil Film News
Audio launch of Unnaipol Oruvan!
Kamal Hassan to direct KB
Kiran Rathod's Vasool in Telugu
Mamta not off to Bollywood!
Jyothika is ready to act?
Sun Pictures acquires ‘Vettaikaaran’
More...
Hindi Film News
Katrina Kaif's plan for New Year...
Deepika Padukone to romance...
Sanju Approached Big B
Kareena Kapoor turns down role....
Salman set to rule with Wanted
Aftab and Aamna are a couple
More...
|