Apart from the jingoistic emotions
and vigorous political projection attached to it, India has advanced another
reason to not lose its possession over Kashmir. Bollywood loves to shake down
this heavenly geographical part & pride of India to its maximum, sometimes by
planting a great Shakespearean saga of love, power and betrayal under the grime
of its atrocious past [Read: Vishal Bhardwaj’s HAIDER] or sometimes just by
using its picturesque postcard locations as a canvas to paint someone’s
cinematic dream. Abhishek Kapoor’s FITOOR fits the bill for the latter. Along
with his man behind the lenses Anay Goswami, Abhishek stuns you with magnetic
visuals capturing icy lakes, snow-clad wooden foot-over bridges, crimson-red
mansions and some equally wooden-evenly frosty faces in and around too, in identical
respect.
Official adaptation of Charles
Dickens’ GREAT EXPECTATIONS, FITOOR is a tale of two star-crossed childhood lovers.
They look nothing more than puppets in evil hands of fate dancing on someone
else’s tune. Impoverished Noor [Aditya Roy Kapoor] finds a manipulative curator
in Begum Hazrat [Tabu] and a susceptibly shifting lover in her daughter Firdaus
[Katrina Kaif]. Their ways go apart to meet again but destined to demand more
from their lives. The obsession fueled by the love and longing is ready to self-destruct
all the dreams and hopes one is always lived for.
FITOOR is very much like the actors
playing parts in it. It looks as ravishing, radiant and exquisite as Katrina
Kaif on any given day. You can look breathlessly at both until they try to communicate
with you. Ms Kaif’s weird diction and pronunciation force you to look out for a
‘never there’ remote control that could either fast-forward the scene or just
mute her to make you switch to the ‘beauty-admiration’ mode again. Film also
starts behaving like Ms Kaif, at times. It speaks, and a lot but expressions do
get lost while being translated on screen. Guess what? Ms Kaif goes to London
in this film too. Why? To get her admired accent. How many more times Bollywood
will bless her with that added explanatory mention for her accent??
It is also on the likes of Aditya
Roy Kapoor. He makes his presence felt on screen but does it at such a lifeless
pace and with such a static force that you can never call it ‘a moving
experience’. A self-destructive youth caught in the ill-fated love; haven’t we
seen him before in such pitiable state? But the one where the film never ceases
to hold the power to impress and ignite emotions on many levels is the
performance of Tabu. This role earlier had the never-aging, ever-young Rekha in
it but Tabu owns it now. From the sharp and shrewd lonesome soul to the
hysterically remorseful aging beauty, she looked never so exposed. In other,
the casting does have some surprising names from Lara Dutta and Aditi Rao
Hyderi to ghazal singer Talat Aziz, mostly in favor of the film.
FITOOR doesn’t often satisfy you as a great drama or a gorgeous love-story but with the controlled direction, some amazing musical renditions by Amit Trivedi and a totally outstanding cinematography, it remains one of those unfortunate cinematic efforts that doesn’t get a full support from its lead pair and dies in a tough fight to survive its killing pace. [2.5/5]
FITOOR doesn’t often satisfy you as a great drama or a gorgeous love-story but with the controlled direction, some amazing musical renditions by Amit Trivedi and a totally outstanding cinematography, it remains one of those unfortunate cinematic efforts that doesn’t get a full support from its lead pair and dies in a tough fight to survive its killing pace. [2.5/5]
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