Ek lo ek muft (“Buy one get one free”) appears to be the lot of Gurukant Desai 
(Abhishek
Bachchan), that is to say the law of, not unintended consequences, but 
unintended benefits.
When as a boy he fails his exams he is able to wrangle permission from his 
schoolmaster father
to go to Turkey and sell petrol cans, permission that would not have been 
forthcoming had he
passed his school exams. When he wants a business partner (Jignesh, played by 
Arya Babbar) he
gets a wife too, none other than Jignesh’s sister Sujatha (Aishwariya Rai). And 
when he gets
his wife’s dowry – the initial capital for his business – he also gets a 
devoted spouse who
radiates quiet strength. When they want a child they get twins. Heck, by film’s 
end we see that
in amassing wealth and success Guru gets to wear – muft – the mantle of 
corporate populist,
bringing capitalism and its benefits to the masses. In fact, when Guru arrives 
in Bombay he
gets a surrogate father in “Nanaji” Manikdas Gupta (Mithun Chakraborty), and – 
also muft – a
crusader adversary (egged on by newspaper baron Gupta) in Shyam Saxena 
(Madhavan), a journalist
determined to bring Guru down. Oh well: five out of six ain’t bad.

Mani Ratnam’s Guru is the story of Gurukant Desai, a villager from Idhar, 
Gujarat, convinced of
his lucky star and determined to succeed in bijness at all costs, no matter the 
attempts of the
corporate establishment to keep him out, and the zeal of a leftist newspaper 
baron and his
editor in bringing him down. His destiny is already written, Gurukant informs a 
skeptic early
on in the film, and there is never any doubt that he is going to end up a 
business titan,
second to none. But Guru is also the story (as Ratnam sees it) of an India in 
transition, from
colonialism through license raj to free enterprise. As Ratnam concludes the 
tale the journey is
a heroic one indeed, from an India where outsized ambition – in particular, the 
ambition of
amassing great wealth – was frowned upon, to an India where the acquisition of 
wealth is seen
as the great leveler, representing the best hope of the ordinary man for 
prosperity and
happiness.

Ratnam is not blind to the warts inherent in an ambition that will stop at 
nothing to achieve
its aim, and over the course of the film we see the affable, irrepressibly 
optimistic Guru
become less and less accessible, “available” only in private settings or in 
orchestrated public
spectacles before the shareholders of his company, Shakti Trading. Guru’s 
actions too become
ever more obscure, available to the audience only through the prism of Nanaji 
and Shyam. The
wide-eyed youth who turned down a coveted job in Turkey to return to India in 
order to start
his own business seems like a distant memory indeed.

But in order to shoehorn his own vision into an overarching narrative of Guru 
triumphant,
Ratnam has to cut some corners: when the journalistic crusade against Guru 
leads to a
government crackdown and a commission of inquiry, Ratnam simply hands over the 
film to its
title character, who proceeds to hold forth as the public incarnate, not 
bothering to deny any
of the allegations of corruption and fraud leveled against him but justifying 
his
transgressions by appealing to a higher law, not God but the public. “I am the 
public,” Guru
rasps in the film’s memorable (and troubling) penultimate sequence, and it is 
clear that he
feels his actions are justified because he has empowered the middle classes, 
and given them a
stake in Indian industry. (He has done so by means of Shakti Trading’s various 
public
offerings, the polar opposite of the family-run and closed corporation that, 
Guru suggests,
held sway prior to his rise). While the film has hitherto led us to view such 
claims a bit
askance, there is no trace of directorial irony in this sequence, carefully 
constructed to give
Gurukant Desai the last word and to leave him the winner. It’s unclear whether 
Ratnam buys into
this, but he certainly wants the audience to buy whatever Guru is selling.

None of this detracts from the fact that Ratnam remains arguably the least 
judgmental of
popular directors in either Hindi or Tamil, and the cinematic magnanimity – 
able to take in a
rather wide range of activity of without malice or moralizing – that we have 
come to expect
from films like Mouna Raagam, Nayakan, Iruvar, Dil Se, Alai Payuthey, Kannathil 
Muthamittal,
and Aayitha Ezhuthu/Yuva is very much a hallmark of Guru. Thus we see that 
Gurukant marries
Sujatha because of her dowry, and we see that he is not above smearing his 
corporate rivals via
the media, or even of whipping up a little class hatred by resorting a little 
too easily to an
“us” versus “them” rhetoric – yet we do not judge him. And nor is he the only 
one: we see
Nanaji insulting Sujatha after she has come to his house to show him her 
babies; we see that
Shyam Saxena is not above a little skullduggery himself if it makes for a 
racier story; and we
see that the upright leftist Nanaji’s daughter Meenu (Vidya Balan) appears to 
be thrilled that
Guru manages to get away with everything – thrilled just because – and we do 
not judge any of
them either.

So too with the wider questions raised by Guru. It is surely a fact that, as 
Guru caustically
observes, the license raj regime made it incredibly hard for entrepreneurs to 
succeed, thereby
enabling the rich to get richer and to keep newcomers out of the market, or at 
least to deny
them a seat at the “main” table (though Ratnam should have done more with the 
point that the
same entrepreneurs who complained about the license raj also used it to 
entrench and enrich
themselves). I can certainly agree with Guru’s complaint at film’s end that he 
is a creature of
the license raj system, and that the latter incentivizes corruption. But it is 
also equally a
fact that a bureaucrat-heavy system criminalizing ordinary entreprenurial 
activity is one
thing, but – as Shyam Saxena points out – at least some of what Guru does 
cannot be classified
as ordinary entrepreneurial activity. A case in point is when his company 
commits fraud by
getting something for nothing, that is, by sending empty cartons abroad and 
reporting those as
polyester exports. Shakti Trading would then use the export credits thereby 
received to secure
licenses for importing machinery and goods that it could then resell at great 
profit.

There is something more than a little self-serving about Guru’s 
self-righteousness, and to his
credit Ratnam sees that too. That Guru gets to win by film’s end is not because 
he is right but
because the public accepts his position to be right. One might see this as a 
shamelessly
commercial decision on Ratnam’s part, well aware that the mood of the 
moviegoing public – or at
least that portion of the public that may be expected to patronize Ratnam films 
in multiplexes
– is unabashedly gung ho about entrepreneurship at present. Iindeed it is 
difficult to imagine
a figure more calculated to revolt contemporary India’s urban well-heeled than 
the manifestly
leftie, ultra-smug journalist Shyam Saxena.

On the other hand, one might also read Guru’s vindication by film’s end as 
logically following
from past Ratnam films, an instance of Ratnam’s refusal to pass final judgment. 
Thus, in
Iruvar, Anandam (Mohanlal) bests his one-time mentor and friend Tamilchelvam 
(Prakashraj) in
politics not because he is better than the latter, but because that’s what “the 
people” want.
So too in Guru: the public wants what Gurukant Desai sells, and as in Iruvar, 
Ratnam bows to
the press of history. Iruvar’s Tamilchelvam was left with the memory of a 
friendship and of a
historical moment; to the Gurukant Desais of the world belongs the future.

No discussion of a Ratnam film since Roja can be complete without mention of 
A.R. Rahman’s
music. I have already spoken at length of the album, but the background score 
is – even by
Rahman’s lofty standards – impressive. The impact of the songs is greatly 
heightened by their
use in the film, in particular the ones – Ae Hairat-e-Aashiqui being the most 
significant of
these – that recur in the background at various points over the course of the 
film, binding
together and juxtaposing different stages in the lives of Guru (and Sujatha). 
That being said,
Ratnam’s visuals in the songs do not match the peaks of Pachchai Nirame (from 
Alai Payuthey),
Kannathil Muthamittal (from the film of the same name), Narumugaiye (from 
Iruvar), Goodbye
Nenba/Khuda Hafiz (from Aayitha Ezhuthu/Yuva), or Satrangi Re (from Dil Se), 
although there are
some spectacular visuals in Barso Re, and striking ones in Ek Lo Ek Muft, and 
Mayya Mayya.

Rajeev Menon’s cinematography is consistently of very high quality -- in 
particular, the film
features several jawdropping landscape and monument shots. While this viewer 
did find himself
missing the virtuosity of Kannathil Muthamittal, it is clear that Ratnam has 
rather
deliberately gone in a for a far more accessible visual aesthetic, one 
reflecting his ambitions
for Guru as an all-India film. In a similar vein, the set of Bombay in the 
1950s is a landmark
in Indian cinema, and worthy of the man who directed Thotta Tharani’s Dharavi 
in Nayakan.

Returning to the film’s penultimate scene, if Guru’s harangue jars because it 
does not really
follow from what has preceded it – Guru has always been in the game to make 
money, not to
benefit the middle classes by giving them a stake in his company; indeed Shakti 
Trading’s first
public offering is simply a consequence of the banks’ unwillingness to lend to 
the new kid on
the block – the film does not really suffer from it. The reason is Abhishek 
Bachchan, who
carries the scene (and the rest of the film) off with a bravura performance 
that is surely one
for the ages.
Abhishek exhibits great range in this role, and is convincing and compelling – 
in a word,
superb – in all his character’s hues, from the wide-eyed youngster to the 
determined
businessman to the unctuous, self-satisfied middle-aged tycoon, and finally as 
a stroke-riddled
icon, a prophet of the future. Perhaps the finest compliment one can pay his 
work here is to
say that Ratnam puts him on terrain previously inhabited by Kamal Haasan in 
Nayakan, and
Mohanlal in Iruvar, and Abhishek does not let his director’s faith down. While 
Iruvar’s Anandam
remains a class apart for Mohanlal’s freakishly natural yet ineffably 
mysterious act, I
consider it no exaggeration to put Abhishek’s Gurukant on at least the same 
level as Kamal’s
Velu Naicker – not to mention that Abhishek’s screen presence and charisma 
comfortably outdo
that of his illustrious forebear. On more than one occasion one discerns traces 
of Amitabh
Bachchan’s own legendary turn as Vijay Deenanath Chauhan in Agneepath, yet the 
intersection of
these two trajectories – Amitabh’s legacy and Ratnam’s Tamil cinema – results 
in a performance
that while owing many debts, is at the same time very much Abhishek’s own.

It is fortunate – for Guru, which could not otherwise “work” at any level – 
that Abhishek is in
such good form, for he needed to be given the presence of Mithun Chakraborty 
and Madhavan in
the cast. The former’s is the more obvious performance, solid and effective at 
all times but
not especially nuanced. In a relative sense, and despite being abruptly written 
out of the
film, it is Madhavan who tests Abhishek’s dominance the most in this film, with 
a quietly
strong performance bordering on the sinister: contempt for Guru and everything 
he represents
shines in Madhavan’s eyes virtually every time he is on screen. In particular, 
Madhavan’s entry
scene, featuring Mithun and Abhishek as well, is a masala fan’s delight. So is 
the only other
meeting between Shyam Saxena and Guru, where Madhavan’s understated naturalness 
serves as a
great foil to Abhisek’s anger.

Aishwariya Rai had a lot more to do in this film than I had initially expected, 
and after
Iruvar and Guru it is now clear that Ratnam is able to get more from her than 
just about anyone
else. At no point is she less than convincing, first as the spunky village girl 
and then as
Guru’s wife. Especially welcome is Ratnam’s characterization of Sujatha as an 
equal partner in
her marriage, a relief given the rampant sexism of so much of our cinema. 
Aishwariya’s Sujatha
inspires confidence, even when she isn’t saying anything.

Vidya Balan’s Meenu is an intriguing character, afflicted by multiple sclerosis 
and clearly
fascinated by Guru’s audacity. While Ratnam does not explore her psychology as 
much as I would
have liked, one is left with the distinct impression that to this young woman 
who lives with
constant pain and the thought of impending death, there is something immensely 
compelling about
Guru’s vitality, his hunger for more of everything. Meenu keeps joking that she 
wants to marry
Guru, offering a glimpse of her psyche and of the position Guru holds within 
it: outsider,
rebel, and possessed of great appetite. In a word: life.

Mani Ratnam is one of my favorite directors when it comes to capturing “little” 
scenes of the
sort that other directors either pass over or can only conceptualize in 
overwrought terms. Guru
is no exception, and there are a host of private moments that make the 
characters human (indeed
Guru far surpasses Nayakan in terms of the number of memorable characters it 
features).
Gurukant and Sujatha have several of these (mostly in the film’s first half; 
one of the
casualties of the second half’s focus on Guru’s struggles against Nanaji and 
Shyam Saxena is
the endearing relationship between husband and wife), including a playful 
bedroom scene.
Towards the end the couple re-visit their first home in Bombay to reminisce, 
and although
Ratnam inserts this scene somewhat abruptly, the cocktail of affection and 
nostalgia – and an
Abhishek-Aishwariya pairing that is very comfortable and effective – is too 
strong to resist.

I conclude by noting that Madhavan and Vidya Balan form a strange counterpoint 
to the
Abhishek-Aishwariya pair in the film’s second half, and I was especially struck 
by the charming
romantic scene where Shyam asks Meenu to marry him. The scene is the only 
indication we have
that Shyam is more than just a relentless activist, and goes a long way toward 
humanizing him.
More significantly, Shyam’s response to Meenu’s claim that there would be 
little purpose to
marriage as she only has four hundred-odd days to live – Shyam says he wants 
every single one
of those days – highlights the difference between Gurukant’s calculus – he 
decides to marry
Sujatha upon hearing of her dowry – and Shyam’s own worldview. The four hundred 
days Shyam
wants is not a question of calculation, but of incalculable joy. Ratnam’s irony 
here is dark
indeed: the latter couple is oriented towards death – Meenu will die, and die 
childless – while
Guru and Sujatha are oriented towards life – Gurukant will live, and live to 
see his children
grow up. The future, that is to say, is Guru's

http://www.pkblogs.com/qalandari/2007/01/guru-hindi-2006.html

Reply via email to