| Cast: |
Jas
Arora, Tara Deshpande, Ashutosh Rana, |
| Director: |
Govind Menon |
| Producer: |
Vasant
Chedda |
Noir
film is a style of filmmaking that shows t
he
dark side of human nature. It lends itself to cinema
that is gripping and reflective of the society's evils
in terms of violence, greed and lust with a strong
undercurrent of moral conflict.
Its
tone is characterised by three elements. First, the
narrative is a flashback or a series of flashbacks
by one of the principle characters. Two, greed and
lust are the triggers to the events that unfold. And
three, the woman is the cause of the downfall of the
characters.
Danger,
which stars Ashutosh Rana, Tara Deshpande and Jas
Arora as its protagonists, is touted as India's first
noir film, conveniently overlooking Ketan Mehta's
Aar Ya Paar.
The
faux pas would have been forgiven if Danger had lived
up to its promise of being a 'Hamlet-Hitchcock cocktail'.
Instead, it ends up as a badly mixed-up drink -- which
though has a set recipe, manages to mess it up thoroughly.
Danger
opens with Nainesh (Ashutosh Rana) being chased down
the alleys and other nondescript location in an unmentioned
city. He successfully evades his chasers in true cinematic
style -- sliding down the pipes, jumping over rooftops
and plunging into a river. That's when we discover
that he is the accountant of a mafia don, Bhai.
Though
a 'bania' as the various characters through the film
keep reminding you, Nainesh does have the trappings
of a man associated with the underworld. He has a
moll, Unnati (Tara Deshpande) who -- though he refers
to as his wife -- is actually his mistress. He also
has a flair for tolerating violence and when
necessary,
using the same to achieve his ends.
Completing
the trio of protagonists, is Saurav (Jas Arora), the
couple's new neighbour who is having an affair with
Unnati.
Unnati
convinces Saurav that he must steal the Rs 20 million
that Nainesh would be holding for a few hours, before
he hands it over to Bhai.
Saurav
agrees and steals the money, even as Unnati lies to
Nainesh that she saw the Bhai's nephew (Gautam Kapoor)
hanging around their apartment a few minutes ago.
She tries to coax Nainesh into running away to escape
the Bhai's wrath but he changes his mind and stays
on.
In
a confrontation with the Bhai, Nainesh ends up shooting
him, his nephew and their henchman, setting in motion
in the events for his own downfall. The rest of the
story is about how Nainesh discovers Unnati's infidelity
and who finally gets the money.
Pro
duced
by Vasant Chheda, who had earlier financed Split Wide
Open and directed by Govind Menon, Danger had been
mired in controversies due to a fallout between the
two.
The
film was also stuck at the censors for three years
because of a few explicit kissing scenes.
After
having seen the film, it is incomprehensible why either
of the two issues should have created such a fracas.
Irrespective of whoever has directed it, the film
is eminently forgettable and so are its kissing scenes
between Unnati and Saurav.
Though
explicit, the scenes neither establish the affair
between the two convincingly nor do they look erotic.
Instead, every time they kiss, you want to cringe
-- the pair of lips and tongues with the fine lines
and the bottom of the tongue, showing in extreme close
up on the big screen, is more like a class for anatomy
students.
The
controversy with the censors could have been easily
avoided by chopping off those scenes with littledamage
to the story.
Ashutosh
Rana, without doubt, is an extremely competent actor.
Yet, in this film, he tends to go overboard. Rather
than let the audiences exult in the play of emotions
across his face, he enunciates every word, every thought
through his mind. For instance, just after he's unexpectedly
shot the Bhai, he goes it to a fit of dialogues which
start right from 'Oh my god, what am I doing to do
now,' to 'I must get a grip on myself.' Watching him
enact these lines would definetly be more interesting
than hearing
him say it.
As
his mistress, Tara Desphande turns in an inconsistent
performance, starting with the bad tending to go to
the awful. Her cause is not helped by her bad make-up
or costumes or even the poor lighting that shows every
pore of her skin in close-ups.
Jas
Arora is good, though he is forced to deliver imagined
Mumbai tapori style dialogues, which ring false at
times. Yet he does manage to bring a certain amount
of conviction to his part. His counterpart from the
modelling world, Gautam Kapoor is cast in a blink-and-you
will-miss-him role.
What
does redeem the film to a certain extent is its thankfully
short length (about two hours), it's pulsating background
score by deejay Whosane?, slick camerwork and a plot
with twists and turns.
Yet
these score on technicalities. Danger lacks the soul
or the thrill to keep it together. It's poor direction,
screenplay and acting pull it down so bad that even
the few bright spots can't keep the viewer's interest
going.
Danger
tries hard to break away from the usual Bollywood
format -- a little too hard -- offering neither gratification
to the discerning audience nor joy to patrons of the
conventional Hindi cinema who would stray into the
theatres to watch it.