Film Review: Delhi-6 An Indian drama with music, rather than a typical
Bollywood musical, this ambitious story of a first-generation
Indian-American discovering his roots in Delhi loses focus amid plots about
patronizing Yanks, Muslim/Hindu relations and a media-fed legend of a local
Bigfoot.

Feb 20, 2009

-By Frank Lovece



For movie details, please click
here<http://directories.vnuemedia.com/fjiguides/bluesheets/film_display.aspx?mid=10290>
.
An Indian film opening on a relatively expansive 90 North American screens,
according to distributor UTV (which had bequeathed it a rare U.S. premiere
event at New York's Museum of Modern Art), this drama with music by A.R.
Rahman, composer of the *Slumdog
Millionaire<http://www.filmjournal.com/filmjournal/content_display/esearch/e3ie4d7c4b405f7c5fc07d6d17d171819eb>
* score, scores points for ambition and serious intent. Yet this tale of a *
desi*—a first-generation Indian-American—in Delhi reconnecting with his
roots meanders through too many subplots and ideas, giving short shrift to
each without adequately developing a unifying theme. It may, however, find
favor among an American "travelogue" audiences, who might not cotton to the
usual big, brash Bollywood musical experience (and more fools they—Indian
musicals are the most amazing in the world right now), but who might
otherwise like to spend a couple of hours living vicariously, and
authentically, in India.

Major Indian star Abhishek Bachchan—who proved equally hilarious and
touching in both the musical romance *Jhoom Barabar
Jhoom<http://www.filmjournal.com/filmjournal/esearch/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003601560>
* (2007) and the gay-pretender comedy
*Dostana<http://www.filmjournal.com/filmjournal/content_display/esearch/e3i7124fdcad626339af96bbdddfa563620>
* (2008)—plays Roshan, a thirty-something Indian-American in New York City.
When his grandmother (Waheeda Rahman) learns she has a terminal disease,
Roshan accompanies her back to the old family home in Delhi, where the
stoically cheerful woman wants to die. Home turns out to be in the ancient,
walled part of Delhi—a neighborhood known by its postal code as Delhi-6.

Roshan, who's half-Muslim, half-Hindu and all American, is at first
thoroughly enchanted by the colorful natives, who treat his *dadi* like a
revered extended family member—none more so than his father's brother, Ali
(Rishi Kapoor), a jolly sort who'd fallen in love with her first before
letting her get away. Understandably, Uncle Ali takes Roshan under his wing
when he sees meet-cute sparks between the young man and a pretty neighbor
girl, Bittu (Sonam Kapoor, wooden in her second movie after Sony Pictures'
disappointing, 2007 U.S.-India co-production
*Saawariya<http://www.filmjournal.com/filmjournal/esearch/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003670895>
*). More importantly, he bails Roshan out when his American notions of
police brutality collide with a bullying inspector (Vijay Raaz), who goes so
far as to try to force himself on a low-caste street sweeper (Divya Dutta).

The well-meaning American has also arrived in time for a media sensation
called the "Black Monkey"—a newly imagined mythic creature like an urban
Bigfoot who, in a plot turn recalling Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue,"
gets new and different attributes with each supposed sighting. The media has
fun with it at first, with an "Unsolved Mysteries"-type show covering every
burglary and goat disappearance, and Black Monkey merchandise hitting the
stores, but soon the neighborhood's Muslim community notices it's being
targeted more than the Hindus and, well, the monsters are due on Maple
Street even when Maple Street's in Delhi. This stripping away of the thin
veneer of tolerance between two religious groups—daringly portrayed as both
devout and ridiculously backward and superstitious—resonates far more
effectively than the rote romance.

The musical numbers play under montages or silent vignettes, except for one
utterly lovely fantasy sequence set in Times Square, where East meets West
in green-screen splendor. Bachchan's father, longtime Indian superstar
Amitabh Bachchan, has a cameo as Roshan's own dead dad.

http://www.filmjournal.com/filmjournal/content_display/reviews/specialty-releases/e3iab3b217aa919c5efe812a37d793a67c9?imw=Y
-- 
regards,
Vithur

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