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I Am Hindi Movie Review

I Am is a resonant chamber piece for its talented actors and possibly the finest cinematic study of modern Indian relationships to come along in quite some time. The film's gratifying, unaffected handling of drama is incendiary. Director Onir weaves a haunting relevance to the current political climate surrounding gay relationships — a news bit within the film reminds us that those not in support of gay rights predicted the end of the world in the event of gay marriages being legalised. Mind you, the stories don't end in ideal scenarios — I Am is critical and merciless at every turn. And the film’s searching, agonised characters feel very real.

 

I AM Afia: A choice mother's (Nandita Das) insistence to be acquainted with her donor, a young medical student (Purab Kohli), even though it's against the rules, builds up into a brief but tender, understated moment of timely compassion. 

 

It's one of the lightest, slice-of-life segments in the quartet that resembles the naiveté if not the finesse of say, a Dhobi Ghat. Das (although she looks exhausted) and Kohli's good-natured, real-person aura makes both -- the initial awkwardness as well as the efforts to break the ice credible, very credible.  

 

I AM Megha: The second episode recounts a Kashmiri Pandit Megha's (Juhi Chawla) short trip to her Srinagar home, which she was forced to flee owing to the communal tension in the early 90s. Resentful and unforgiving about this involuntary loss of identity, Megha has hardened with time.  Still, whether it's buying a box of saffron or quietly rummaging for unblemished nostalgia in a pile of wounded memories, Megha hasn't quite let go of her uprooted past. Her childhood friend, Rubina (Manisha Koirala) represents the other side of the coin, as the one paying the price for staying back in a supposed paradise.    

 

Barring a rather ill-fitted background score that's more Braveheart than I AM, this track is engaging and heartfelt with a lot of subtext to read in between the lines. It's nice to see Juhi tackle a role that doesn't rely on her giggles. The actress conveys a picture of long-harboured melancholy and suppressed vulnerability even if her dialogue delivery in Kashmiri is a bit bumpy. Unlike Chawla, Manisha Koirala's role is underwritten and relegated to the sidelines. 

 

I AM Abhimanyu: In his dreams, he's a girl. In reality, he's a shadow of himself. Sanjay Suri's Abhimanyu demonstrates how unnatural circumstances affect the psyche of an individual. Having been a victim of his step-father's lust (Anurag Kashyap), Abhimanyu is bottled up about the ugliness of his problematic childhood.    

 

Onir treats this piece with suitable discretion cutting down the heaviness of its theme with passing references to Breakfast at Tiffany's. Not a particularly harmonious blend, that. 

Also, while, Sanjay Suri is a fairly decent actor for all occasions, he's played the sufferer so many times in Onir films alone that he's unable to lend something more to Abhimanyu. Moreover, his scruffy hairstyle and persistent usage of 'Bengaluru' doesn't improve his case.  On the other hand, Kashyap's casual manner and probing eyes translate into a creepy, plausible paedophile. 

 

I AM Omar: Every story progresses into an ascending degree of intensity. The final one involves the hostile attitude faced by homosexuals in the country. Here, a well-to-do corporate guy (Rahul Bose) becomes bait to a sex hustler (Arjun Mathur) and sadistic cop (Abhimanyu Singh) looking to make a quick buck and more.

The unsettling tone of this sequence strives to throw light on the tough state of the LGBT community but never goes beyond skimming past its sensational surface – a passionate make-out session between Bose and Mathur following some Bollywood-inspired flirtations or Singh's offensive aggression.  Nevertheless, compelling performances by the troika, especially Singh.

 

Overall, I Am has changed the course of Hindi cinema. Must watch

Rating: 3/5
Cast:Anurag Kashyap, Sanjay Suri, Radhika Apte, Shernaz Patel, Pooja Gandhi, Rahul Bose, Arjun Mathur, Abhimanyu Shekhar Singh, Kalki Koechlin, Juhi Chawla, Manisha Koirala
Producer: Onir, Sanjay Suri
Director: Onir

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