When form and style merge
 
Guru
Director: Mani Ratnam
Cast: Mithun Chakraborty, Abhishek Bachchan, Aishwarya Rai, R Madhavan, Vidya 
Balan
Rating: * * *
 
 
 

When watching a film that has its origin or inspiration in a personality that 
has been as much
a part of the nation’s consciousness as Dhirubhai Ambani was, it is only 
natural that one
searches for connections and parallels through the film. And since everyone has 
an opinion
about the means with which he achieved his ends and fulfilled the dreams of 
lakhs of
shareholders even as he filled his family coffers, it is also natural that his 
getting away
with it should give rise to outrage in some.
But keeping away from all that, Guru is a film that enthralls you for most of 
its running time
as it traces the life of the uncannily forward seeing bumpkin from Gujarat who 
turns every
disadvantage into an advantage. With Guru, Abhishek Bachchan has finally learnt 
the nuances of
the grammar of cinema, in what will very likely be his defining film.
Chronicling a complex life can be difficult, what to keep, what to say, what to 
highlight? Mani
Ratnam gets it just right, keeping the essentials, adding events and drama as 
needed and yet
staying within the truth enough to keep the viewer riveted. Cinematically, this 
is definitely
one of his better films and a return to form after the confused Dil Se and 
Yuva. His recent
problem of venturing into territories unknown (North East in Dil Se and Kolkata 
in Yuva) and
then making a hash of the ambience is replaced by a clearer understanding of 
language and
social niceties in the Gujarat village the film takes off from. If only it 
rained as much in
Gujarat though.
Abhishek is the visionary from Gujarat who is a failure at organised studies 
but picks up the
mechanics of business when he spends seven years in Turkey apprenticing. He has 
always dreamt
big, he comes back to India determined to get into business. He marries 
Aishwarya Rai, a
friend’s elder sister so that he can use her dowry to start his own business, 
and sets about
flouting every ethic that exists as he quickly climbs up the ladder. On the way 
he meets a
ruthless newspaper tycoon, played by Mithun Chakraborty, who is as fond of him 
as a person as
he is critical of his means.
Mithun’s ace reporter Madhavan sets out to destroy Abhishek’s carefully built 
up web of deceit
and the two are unforgiving adversaries despite the fact that Madhavan marries 
Vidya Balan,
Mithun’s grand daughter and a good friend of Abhishek.
Whenever the script pitches Abhishek against either Mithun or Madhavan there 
are sparks.
Madhavan’s scenes with Vidya though are a major letdown often bringing the 
screenplay to a
grinding halt.
Chemistry between Abhishek and Aishwarya is often sizzling a far cry from their 
thanda vibes in
their earlier Umrao Jaan. Mani Ratnam has certainly brought out the best in 
both the actors.
Holding his own wonderfully, is Mithun Chakraborty, who, a countless B grade 
films later, still
has the edge. Mallika Sherawat in an item number burns up the screen.
AR Rahman’s music keeps the film pepped up in the slow moments and adds to the 
ambience
otherwise. Not that Mani Ratnam needs too much help as he keeps the film going 
along at an even
pace.. Its appeal though is likely to be restricted to an elitist crowd.
 

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