Bollywood Film Bajatey Raho doesn’t meet expectations

EntertainmentBollywood Film Bajatey Raho doesn't meet expectations

MUMBAI: Bollywood new movie `Bajatey Raho Good comedy, but not very good. Bajatey Raho had a whole lot of potential but failed to realise it, writes Paloma Sharma.

Thanks to a lineup of fine actors, Shashant Singh’s new film Bajatey Raho opens to high expectations.

Starring Vinay Pathak, Dolly Ahluwalia, Ranvir Shorey and Tusshar Kapoor in lead roles, Bajatey Raho is a comedy-thriller that balances both elements quite well and is mildly reminiscent of Dibakar Banerjee’s Khosla Ka Ghosla.

The same goes for the rest of the arresting ensemble cast of very capable actors who get into the mood of the con-job without fuss and with a flair for acting funny without toppling over into parody.

I call it Fukrey-land. Welcome again to the comic world of lovable losers. The cast here is older, if not wiser than in ‘Fukrey’. Mummyji (delightfully droll Dolly Ahluwalia) and her family of sons and son-like wanderers must redeem the family honour. Hence, we encounter a series of con-jobs, which involves vicious builders, bankers, caterers and middlemen.

Delhi has been projected as a hotbed of wheelers and dealers, schemers and screamers in several recent films. This is director Sashant Shah`s ‘Challo Dilli’ all over again, though in a totally different context.

‘Bajatey Raho’ had the potential to crack the dark-comedy genre. The plot about elaborate con jobs implemented by middle-class citizens has earlier been done with tongue-in-cheek derision in Dibakar Bannerjee`s ‘Khosla Ka Ghosla’ and Neeraj Pandey`s ‘Special Chabbis’.

Here the laughter is drowned in a whole lot of unnecessary back-projection and emotional history. Why couldn`t Mummyji and her gang be up to their money-minded mischief and con antics just for the fun of it? Why the sob story to prop the impropriety?

Not that the storytelling lacks a warm self-mocking humour. When the script sets its heart in it some of the characters are positively – or do I mean negatively – brilliant in their believability.

The TV actor, who speaks in the third-person about himself, the principal of a school caught accepting a bribe in a sting operation, the foreigner mistress of the slimy tycoon who attends a ‘Mata Ki Chowki’ where a parody of ‘Subah hone na de’ from the film ‘Desi Boys’ is played as a ‘bhajan’.

This happens only in India.

The film is crammed with interesting characters played by interesting actors. But at the end of it all, you aren`t sure if all of them belong in this film.

Ravi Kishan as the slimy tycoon, who becomes putty in the pretty Vishakha Singh`s hands is outstanding. Brajesh Kala as his Man-Friday is even more so. Brajesh`s Bagga is a yes-man who is now tired of being kicked around. We catch this character at a critical transitional phase in his life. We know he will explode. And he does.

Other actors suffer from roles that are either under-written or over-performed, depending on which phase of the serio-comic narration he or she is required to sustain. There are signs of intelligent writing everywhere. But the material sags for the lack of a sincere motivation. The climax with Dolly Ahluwalia posing in a white wig as Mrs Hansal Mehta is laughably short of humour.

Nonetheless, ‘Bajatey Raho’ does give us a few chuckles even while delivering a rap on the knuckle to the `naqalchi` wannabe rich middle-class in Delhi.

This is a dig at the Gurgaon quick-rich culture. But the taunt gets lost in an aimless jaunt.

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