DELHI-6    *Cast:* Abhishek Bachchan, Sonam Kapoor, Rishi Kapoor, Waheeda
Rahman *Director:* Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra *Music:* AR Rahman Anupama
Chopra, Consulting Editor, Films, NDTV

At one point in *Delhi 6*, Bittu, played by Sonam Kapoor, tells a
photographer – "*Life black aur white mein hi samajh aati hai*".

But *Delhi 6* shows us that life, especially in India, is an intricate
tapestry of people, their faiths, their temperaments and narratives that
weave together to make our many splendoured nation.

The diversity that both makes and breaks India is seen through the eyes of
the ultimate outsider – Roshan, played by Abhishek Bachchan, who is
half-Muslim and half-Hindu, or as another character calls him 50-50, and a
non-resident.

An Indian-American, Roshan brings his dying grandmother from America back to
her house in old Delhi. This is presumably his first trip to his ancestral
city.

Roshan has an awkward accent and a tendency to describe things as cool but
other than that he blends in quite easily into this colourful, crowded world
of Ram Leelas, roadside *jalebi* stalls, narrow lanes and cows who stop
traffic by giving birth on the street. There is little culture shock,
bewilderment or impatience.

In director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's vision of Chandni Chowk, which
incidentally was recreated on a set in Rajasthan, there aren't any flies,
heat or grime either. There aren't even any crows. Instead, Old Delhi is
inhabited by beautiful white doves, including Massakali, who inspires a
lovely song.

The first half is a loose, impressionistic portrait of this world. There is
very little plot. In between vignettes establishing characters, we have
repeated references to a Monkey Man who is terrorising Delhi.

This is taken from actual incidents in 2001 when Delhi was afflicted by a
monkey man menace, which the police later dismissed as public hysteria.

In the second half, these various threads come together climaxing in a
Hindu-Muslim confrontation, which turns violent. Ultimately the residents
see the light only because of the not so subtly named Roshan.

This lack of subtlety is what ultimately undoes *Delhi 6*. Mehra is an
astute and passionate filmmaker who has never been afraid of big themes. But
while in *Rang De Basanti*, he weaved the narrative beautifully with the
message, *Delhi 6* has the finesse of a sledge-hammer.

The film asks you to look within so there is an actual character, a sort of
Shakespearean fool, who walks around carrying a mirror, asking people to
literally look within.

In the climatic violence, the mirror is shattered. The climax itself feels
unearned. The script barely hints at the tensions simmering below the
bonhomie on the streets. There are some beautifully done moments – one that
brought tears to my eyes has the grandmother asking her grandson to take her
home because after a communal confrontation, she says, she doesn't even feel
like dying there.

But there are just as many moments that feel so laboured and sanctimonious
that you just want to groan.

Mehra's heart is in the right place but he is hobbled by his own script and
platitudinous dialogue like – "India works, the people make it work".

The film brims with talented actors but they don't have enough meat to bite
into. Roshan, the prime mover of events, is under-written so Abhishek comes
off as an earnest NRI with a bad accent and little sub-text.

Bittu has more flesh on her and the lovely Sonam imbues her with grace and
attitude. There are flashes of fire in some scenes with Rishi Kapoor and
Waheeda Rahman but not enough to light up *Delhi 6*.

Ultimately then, the film is a noble failure. *Delhi 6* is ambitious and
well-intentioned, but good intentions don't always translate into good
cinema.

See it if you must.

http://movies.ndtv.com/reviews.asp?lang=hindi&id=379&moviename=Delhi-6
-- 
regards,
Vithur

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