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DARLING
Producer : Bhushan Kumar, Kishan Kumar
Director : Ram Gopal Varma
Cast : Fardeen Khan, Esha Deol, Isha Koppikar, Zakir Hussain,
Mukesh Bhatt, Shishir Sharma
UK Release Date : 7 September 2007 |
When much married Aditya Soman embarks on a passionate affair
with his colleague Gita Menon, its just an interlude for
him. But for her, its much more than that. She truly believes
that Aditya will divorce his wife Ashvini and marry her. Aditya
too strings her around, as long as it suits him. But suddenly
things take a deadly turn. Gita dies. And haunted by guilt and
Gitas ghost, Aditya turns into a nervous wreek. 'Darling'
is the love story of a man, his wife and his dead lover.
Esha
brightens up dull 'Darling'
Review By Subhash K. Jha
Rating: **
One
extra star goes to this poor ghost film only for Esha Deol's startling
presence and sterling account of a woman whom love turns into
a roaming spirit. So let's raise a toast to the ghost. As the
devilishly impish 'Darling', Esha flies high with her performance
that has a kite-like velocity to it. Esha has never pulled so
many strings from her histrionic kitty. She brings depth, despair,
pathos and humour into her rather hazily-written role.
Esha
comes across hazily for more than one reason. Like in 'Aag', Ram
Gopal Varma gets together with his over-experimental director
of photography Amit Roy to shoot 'Darling' in a bluish lens-tinted
light that covers the ghostly goings-on in a pall of gloom.
But
Esha brightens up even the dullest frame. Not since Arjun Sablok's
'Na Tum Jano Na Hum' have we seen her seek such sensitive alcoves
in her personality. Taking long, restless romps between frightful
bouts of misadventures in cafes and cinema halls, Varma still
manages to give Esha the camera space to convey the restless anguish
of a woman scorned.
Restless,
edgy and melancholic, Esha's eyes penetrate with unblinking pathos
into Fardeen Khan's guilt-laden conscience. She whacks him on
his shoulders and thighs, teases and torments him and turns her
tortured personality into a treatise on jilted love.
It's
hard to feel any sympathy for Fardeen's husbandly betrayals, especially
since the actor is unable to come to grips with the more emotional
moments. When he whines, cringes and sobs in front of his wife,
it's Esha silhouetted in the background, often with her head buried
in her face, who catches your attention.
Esha
apart, it's perhaps time for Varma to stop filling up the background
of his frames with the same set of character actors, like Zakir
Husain who plays the annoying hero's sidekick-friend. As for Upayendra
Limaye as the investigating officer, he does a cross between Chiranjeevi
in 'Pratibandh' and Shakti Kapoor in 'Insaaf'. It's also time
the characters stopped looking so scruffy and casual in Varma's
scheme of things.
And
poor Esha! She wears a white kaftan throughout. The wardrobe lady
never had it easier.
The
first half has its bouts of genuine humour, especially in the
casual way Fardeen frolics and flirts as though Sanjeev Kumar
in 'Pato Patni Aur Woh' was his role model. Varma has a keen eye
for domestic details, such as the breakfast babble or the bedroom
backchat. But Fardeen bonding with his little son is nil.
The
film also gets a surprising quotient of romantic overtures hitherto
unknown in Varma's dark, dry and dispassionate domain. Watch Esha's
pleading anguished eyes when at the end she tells her errant lover,
'would you have married me if you were single?'
Love
never stood a ghost of a chance in Ramu's cinema.
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