Number 4: Himmatwala (2013)
A moment please: this will be the last trip to Bollywood on
this journey but please, no tears.
I don’t proclaim to be an expert on Bollywood cinema but
there is something that draws you to it: colour! Hollywood is awash with grey,
brown and moody blue tints but over in India they have bright greens, pinks and
yellows. There are some who think Bollywood should be darker and more gritty, I
disagree. It’s reassuring to know in these bleak times that there is still
somewhere in the world where brightness still prevails and it’s what gives
Bollywood its’ identity. Never change.
That said, it doesn’t stop Bollywood from churning out its
fair share of shit. And Himmatwala is
shit. An ‘Entertainer’ from director Sajid Khan, who brought us Hummshakals (see number 16), it’s a
remake of a film from the 80’s and it’s reassuring to know Indian audiences are
just as disdainful toward remakes as Western audiences. And from what I can
gather, the original isn’t particularly well loved either.
It promises to ‘take us back to the eighties’ and that at
least is true. The first scene is in a nightclub and you can tell it’s the 80’s
because there’s a giant Rubik’s cube hanging from the ceiling. It’s 1983 to be
exact, which makes the Ghostbuster’s (1984) logo and Top Gun (1986) poster a
little pre-mature. There’s a female singer performing what I think might be an
Indian-Disco version of The Cure’s Friday
I’m in Love. Then it turns into fight club. I’m no expert but I’m sure this
didn’t happen in 1980’s nightclubs in India. That’s all just to introduce us to
superhero Ravi. Not literally a superhero but he may as well be he is so
ridiculously tough.
The main story is in a village outside Mumbai, where Ravi “returns”
(why the quotation marks? Wait and see) to see his mother and sister and to
take revenge on the cruel landlord who controls the area and had framed his
father for murder, Sher Singh. As a young boy Ravi had attempted to murder
Singh but had been forced to flee for his life, now he puts the scares on him
by beating up some of his goons.
Singh has a daughter, Rekha, who starts as a cruel, spoilt
brat and after being humiliated by Ravi, tries to take revenge by releasing a
tiger into the village (yes, really). But her plan goes wrong when it looks
like the tiger might attack her but Ravi makes the save and wrestles the tiger
(it’s as stupid as it sounds). The tiger wrestling is fun when you play the ‘real
tiger/man in suit’ game. Ravi then befriends the tiger and sends it on its’
merry way. From this point, Rekha does a 180 and becomes the romantic interest
in the film.
There is another sub-plot with Ravi’s sister Padma who wishes
to marry Singh’s son-in-law, Shakti. This is all a ruse by Singh to get back at
Ravi, as when they are married they treat Padma like dirt, beating her and
making her sleep with the cattle. Ravi plots with Rekha to get back at him by
having her pretend to be pregnant with his baby so she will have to marry him. India
is a more liberal culture than some may think but very conservative in other
ways, an unmarried mother for a daughter would bring great shame to Sher Singh.
Ravi uses this fake pregnancy to blackmail Singh into giving up his power and
returning the land to the villagers.
There is a twist though, because Ravi is not Ravi. The real
Ravi died when he was run over by a car, the fake Ravi was a friend from the
orphanage they grew up in and was fulfilling the last wish of his dead friend
to look after his family. When Singh learns of this falsehood and the false
pregnancy, he makes a last attempt to regain power bringing in a team of cage
fighters to destroy him.
Lots of awkward wire-fighting later and they finally have
Ravi on the ropes when the tiger from earlier makes the save! With his new
found feline ally, Ravi finally conquers the meathead army and is about to kill
Singh when his ‘mother’ begs him to spare his life. Singh is indebted to Ravi
and begs his forgiveness.
Much of the above sounds quite serious stuff but that’s the
problem, it’s not. 80% of the movie is played for laughs but the bizarre tonal
shifts really jar. For example, there is a scene with Ravi’s sister Padma when
she is in the back of a truck with a group of Sher Singh’s goons and it is
implied they are about to gang-rape her until Ravi makes the save. The next
scene is Singh and his brother-in-law having comedy japes with cartoon sound
effects. And that happens ALL THE TIME. Make a choice, you are either a revenge
thriller or a light-hearted comedy with characters breaking the fourth wall at
random intervals. You can’t be both.
Ravi is ridiculously over the top, he’s not a man, he’s Thor.
He can lift and swing a wagon with ease, knives have no effect on him, he can
bust a steel lock with a swipe of his hand. His 'mother' is a little too quick to
forgive his deception, though.
Rekha also changes a little too fast. She is a really
horrible person at the start and , granted Ravi does save her life but to have
changed so completely in an instant stretches credibility.
Then there’s Sher Singh’s brother-in-law, Narayan Das. He’s
supposed to be comic relief which is probably why he’s in 75% of the movie. With a
silly wig and fake moustache, he’s your typical bungling sort. I suppose he’s
amusing in his way but he grates a bit seeing him in nearly every scene.
And an outtake reel over the end credits, don’t you just love
those?
I know Bollywood has its tendency to melodrama but man, there
are limits. I’m also worried director Sajid Khan has an s&m fetish. There
is a LOT of whipping that takes place here.
So it’s bye-bye to Bollywood but I know you’re better than
this.


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