If Rang De Basanti was an external question and ended on a melancholic note, 
Guru seeks the
inner path and strikes a nightingale's chord with us. The Mozart of films, 
Maniratnam, gets to
business again.

Brilliance. Sheer brilliance on screen. Maniratnam raises the stakes of Indian 
cinema. Evertime
this man crafts a film, it comes out a more colourful,stronger and more fresh 
than the last
augustine attempt. "Guru" traces the life of a man, Gurukant Desai, from the 
20's to the 50's.
The man has a vision and he translates his dreams into reality. Hold it. Not 
your
run-of-the-mill feature. This is where Maniratnam gets into exploring and 
examining a human
side to an otherwise astute and brave businessman. It is about the 
relationships, the mistakes,
the failures, the odds,the challenges, the triumphs.....The very phases that we 
pass through
and fall, and yet come out stronger.It is about the growth and triumph of the 
human spirit over
human spirit.
Gurukant Desai(Abhishek Bachchan), an ambitious young man, gets to fly to 
Turkey for work.
Apart from his work, Guru discovers an instinctive business knack. This propels 
him to turn
down a job offer and fly to India. He dreams of initiating a business venture. 
And there starts
our journey.
A journey that we all travel with and identify with.So many instances in the 
film remind us of
ourselves. Anything more is going to ruin your chances of being swept by the 
film. I
deliberately choose to refrain my words.
Abhishek Bachchan carries the film well enough,though not much convincing. The 
first half of
the film blitzkriegs at a fast pace. The second half might seem to be a bit 
sagging, but it is
slowed down to metaphorize the sudden cut in pace. The varying paces themselves 
don an
important role. Reminds me of Akira's films. The screen play is suave,retro and 
well paced. I
personally think that a more impressive narrative could have spiced up the 
film. Mithun
Chakraborthy shot at an 60/70 year old is convincing.
Shyam (Madhavan) and Minu (Vidya Balan) are simply stunning on screen. The 
silent resoluteness
of a young journalist to take down Guru is well essayed by Madhavan. The 
conforntations between
Abhishek and Madhavan are excellent.Vidya Balan simply holds you in awe with 
her child like
demeanour and glistens in every frame she wheels into. The other protagonist, 
Sujata(Aishwarya
Rai) has crafted a typical strong Indian woman with her roots grounded. Not 
easy, I should
remark. Because you get the feeling that your mother is on screen. That's 
because all the
characters in this film are self identifiable. This is a story of anyone who 
dreams, who lives,
who marries, who has friends, who does business, who fails,who 
wins...absolutely anyone. That's
the magic of this film. The BGM of the film is classic and a wanted retro feel 
is added by A R
Rehman. Art direction is also appreciable and Samir Chanda has worked 
meticulously on the sets.
The cinematography is par excellence.The camera angles when Madhavan and Vidya 
Balan share the
screen space are noteworthy. Slight camera shakes and movements are deliberate 
as we whizz past
through Guru's life.
Anyone who sees this film might be inclined to term this a Biopic,as I do, but 
it is to be
understood that this Biopic is very identifiable with us, a self 
retrospective......
Not that it is guaranteed to set the cash registers on fire, but the art of 
cinema is taken
above mere commercial purposes.
On the whole, its brilliance coupled with business.
Do watch it......

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