Love, Sex aur Dhokha
Waited a while on this one for the rough, edgy-ness to wear off. Wanted the lingering flavour to come through rather than the tang of it.
I think what strikes the most about this storytelling format is the bluntness with which the punch is imparted. No drapes flowing in the wind, no oomphs and aahs, no picturesque-ness about anything…nothing larger than life, but life itself in it’s dwarfed, abnormal and commendable format. It’s like looking at oneself in the mirror, without the make-up, sans the look good angle…just the plain you…stripped down to your naked-ness. Thin, without layers, weak, vulnerable, open…you. But surprisingly, for me, what established the connect with LSD was not the ugliness or the grim, sordid reality. It was the ray of hope, the blossoming of something real in every un-really real, un-glamorous, no-options-but-survival options in life (and not life-like situations). In spite of the gore of truth and the ‘it is like it is’ intention to showcase murkiness of our capitalism which has replaced almost everything, there was a faintly blinking, now here and then gone, but still very much there emotional blip of human-ness in every character’s graph. The pure hearted and naive romance of Rahul and his Simran – Shruti, the faith and courage of Rashmi, the realism of Adarsh and the compromised but not unavailable morals of Pradhan…make them more real for me than the selfishness of the world at large. It is this honest tenet of the protagonists that make the cinema real for me rather than the perspective of the camera (the sutradhar, in this case). And that’s why LSD is a difficult film to make, as the story walks a very thin line of just sitting there in judgment with a sarcastic grin and a ‘dekh tere sansaar ki haalat kya ho gayi bhagwaan’ expression and on the other side is the ‘we still bleed and love’ vulnerability and for me, the latter triumphs. Just like in The Dark Knight…and just like in Spiderman….or just like in any good versus evil epic….that’s life.
Maybe it’s just the idealist in me…or then, maybe issi umeed pe duniya kaayam hai…
I think what strikes the most about this storytelling format is the bluntness with which the punch is imparted. No drapes flowing in the wind, no oomphs and aahs, no picturesque-ness about anything…nothing larger than life, but life itself in it’s dwarfed, abnormal and commendable format. It’s like looking at oneself in the mirror, without the make-up, sans the look good angle…just the plain you…stripped down to your naked-ness. Thin, without layers, weak, vulnerable, open…you. But surprisingly, for me, what established the connect with LSD was not the ugliness or the grim, sordid reality. It was the ray of hope, the blossoming of something real in every un-really real, un-glamorous, no-options-but-survival options in life (and not life-like situations). In spite of the gore of truth and the ‘it is like it is’ intention to showcase murkiness of our capitalism which has replaced almost everything, there was a faintly blinking, now here and then gone, but still very much there emotional blip of human-ness in every character’s graph. The pure hearted and naive romance of Rahul and his Simran – Shruti, the faith and courage of Rashmi, the realism of Adarsh and the compromised but not unavailable morals of Pradhan…make them more real for me than the selfishness of the world at large. It is this honest tenet of the protagonists that make the cinema real for me rather than the perspective of the camera (the sutradhar, in this case). And that’s why LSD is a difficult film to make, as the story walks a very thin line of just sitting there in judgment with a sarcastic grin and a ‘dekh tere sansaar ki haalat kya ho gayi bhagwaan’ expression and on the other side is the ‘we still bleed and love’ vulnerability and for me, the latter triumphs. Just like in The Dark Knight…and just like in Spiderman….or just like in any good versus evil epic….that’s life.
Maybe it’s just the idealist in me…or then, maybe issi umeed pe duniya kaayam hai…