Farhan Akhtar sets your pulse racing with Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

Farhan Akhtar sets your pulse racing with Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

'Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

MUMBAI: Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is a marathon account of an Indian sprint runner, Milkha Singh, also known as the Flying Sikh, who failed to win the 1960 Olympic Bronze Medal by a whisker. It is a marathon because the film has a running time of three hours seven minutes and 48 seconds. They make two films in this kind of duration nowadays. This is bound to happen when the editor is also the director; utterly in love with all the footage he has shot.

Milkha is a young Sikh child in united India enjoying the love and affection of his family elders. Along with a friend, he travels miles and crosses a river to go to school. They are handed punishments when late. The happiness comes to an end as India is partitioned and people are slaughtered on both sides. Milkha watches his family members being killed while he manages to run. He arrives in Delhi at a refugee camp where after a few days he finds his sister, Divya Dutta, and her husband.

Milkha soon learns that to survive in this camp, he will have to become tough. There are hooligans around, ready to use muscle power and push people around. Milkha is welcomed to a gang and soon becomes a full time criminal, wielding a knife and stealing coal from train engines. His aimless life finds a purpose when he comes across Sonam Kapoor. Chasing her becomes part of his daily routine until one day he proposes to her and she taunts him about his illegal ways. Milkha promises her that he will mend his ways and requests her to wait for him till he becomes worthy of her.

Milkha succeeds in joining an army training centre in Secunderabad and qualifies for the Services. Thanks to the lure of an extra ration of milk and two eggs as well as exemption from fatigue drill, Milkha volunteers for athletic qualification. This is where his potential is gradually realised by the Services coach Pawan Malhotra and honed to perfection. Milkha has a dream of wearing the blazer with the Ashok Chakra emblem and for that he needs to qualify for the national team. As Milkha gets better with each passing day, his rivals in the field attack him and hurt him so as to end his running career. The attack only makes Milkha more determined; Milkha breaks the national record even while he is running heats with injured legs.

Milkha‘s training is now passed over to the athletics national coach, Yograj Singh, and the training becomes more rigorous. Milkha finally earns his national blazer. He is now ready to surprise his sister and Sonam; instead he is the one who is surprised. Sonam has long been married off with no forwarding address.

Milkha is on his way to Melbourne as part of the Indian contingent to participate in the 1956 Olympics. Here, he indulges in a fling which, coupled with his inexperience, costs him the race. He loses the race as well as face. He swears to shatter the world record and again the tougher routine of training starts. Milkha does manage to break the record and wins Asian Games and Commonwealth Games medals in 1958 and 1962. But when it comes to the crunch, in the 1960 Rome Olympics, Milkha disappoints.

Despite winning all heats and starting off very well, he loses out on the bronze medal in a photo finish, coming in fourth. Dramatically, in the film this is equated with his escape run from killers chasing him during the partition massacre which plays in his mind as he runs and he makes the mistake of looking behind which costs him a medal.

The film begins with Milkha losing the Rome Olympics and goes into flashback, emerging into the current event of sending a team to Pakistan on a goodwill gesture. The Pakistan part is the masterstroke of the maker as to an Indian mindset, it does not matter if Milkha has lost to anybody as long as he wins over a Pakistani rival. He outruns the Pakistani champion by lengths and earns the title ‘The Flying Sikh‘ from the then Pakistani President, Ayub Khan.

Biopics are a format that does not go well with Indian film lovers. Best of our leaders‘ stories have failed at the box office and Milkha Singh was a sports hero from the distant past with whom few can identify today. The problem with Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is that Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra has turned this biopic into a documentary; it stops being the story of his life and gets into the rigours of training, which is never-ending and tedious for the viewer. There is little of human interest (as in Paan Singh Tomar) and romance is just namesake. Richard Attenborough‘s Gandhi should be an example to follow for anyone wishing to make a biopic. It could have been a film about Milkha‘s sports life with a sprinkling of personal life that is relevant to sports. After all, sport is what he is known for.

Mehra has gone into details of the period painstakingly, no doubt. If only he knew when to stop, as a lot of stuff feels exaggerated. The space for songs has been forced in most cases as the story offers little scope. Dialogue is effective. Editing is missing. Camerawork is impressive. The film, to whatever degree it is watchable, is thanks to an outstanding performance by Farhan Akhtar. His dedication and honesty brings Milkha alive on screen. Equally impressive is Jabtej Singh as the young Milkha. Pawan Arora is excellent. Yograj Singh is good. Prakash Raj is a bit too paunchy for the army instructor. Sonam Kapoor has nothing to do and has a very brief role. Divya Dutta is cut out for the role she plays and is good as usual.

Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is a slow moving account of Milkha Singh, a sprinter, which will have limited box office as all sports and biopic films have a limited range. While the appreciation will be ample along with awards, it won‘t translate into rewards. 

 

Sixteen... Is no longer sweet

 

Producers: Shailesh R Singh, Vishwas Joshi.
Director: Raj Purohit.
Cast: Izabelle Liette, Wamiqa Gabbi, Mehak, Highphil Methew.

Being a girl in Delhi is considered a bit dicey. So Sixteen is about three girls and a boy from Delhi of the contemporary age and era who are still in school but get into all kinds of trouble adults would not dare to. The film has only negative stories that happen in the life of all four characters. Why isn‘t there a single positive story, a single beacon with a guiding example?

The girls are lead by the prettiest and boldest of the three, Izabelle Liette, who leads by example in that she does not think much of sleeping around. She keeps goading her friends, Mehak and Wamiqa, to go ahead and not make much ado about preserving their virginity. Mehak wants to but at the right time with the right guy. Wamiqa has a problem in that the boy she loves does not care for her while the one who loves her, Highphil Methews, does not excite her; she considers him as only her best friend.

Methews has a father, Zakir Husain, who drives him hard. He wants his son to become an IAS officer. The son is always on the receiving end of his violent moods. Liette has rich parents and is granted all the freedom and a credit card but not the attention and the ears of her parents. Mehak adores her father and would never do anything to let him down. He in turn trusts her totally and gives her the freedom a teenage girl would seek. Wamiqa has only an aunt as her family, her parents having been among the victims of a city cinema hall fire.

While generally the girls have a good time as and when they can, each faces a phase in which they let down not only their folks but also themselves. Liette sees her father at a disco getting intimate with a woman. On questioning, she is told that her mother too is in a relationship with someone else and that theirs is an open marriage! Liette is shocked at the revelation. Wamiqa has fallen in love with the paying guest in her house, Keith Sequiera, who is twice her age. But she soon learns that her aunt too has fallen for him. She is shattered. Mehak finally sleeps with the boy she loves from her school only to become pregnant and must have an abortion, which gets complicated. Methews comes home dejected when he is told by Wamiqa that she only considers him a friend while he loved her deeply. But he is welcomed home by his angry father who has just found nudes on his computer. It proves a wrong day for Husain to pick on his son; Methews ends up killing him. He runs away and gets into more crimes.

All four survive the turmoil in their lives to emerge more confident of themselves and caring for their peers.

Sixteen is bleak in most parts. The girls, Wamiqa, Liette, Mehak and the boy, Methews are all natural. Seqiuera and Prableen Kaur are good. Husain, as usual, is good. Music is okay.

Released at limited screens, Sixteen will, in all probability, go unnoticed.