What I Do and Don’t Like About the Hindi Movie OMG
Oh My God
I
do not like the ending, the few last frames. It is so slimy, mucus like. While
the movie raises the sharp philosophical question, “Does God exist?” the final
answer leaves you fully dissatisfied. There was no answer; just as well, given
the religious ecosphere that encompasses everyone except the write of the
original, a Gujarati play.
“Fully
dissatisfied, did I say?” That is, one can never be anymore dissatisfied. Where
did the movie go terribly wrong? Only at the end.
The
hero, played superbly by Paresh Rawal, starts out an atheist. He is, after all,
a shrewd business man, perhaps more than he is an atheist. Does he come around
to get his long lost ethical mooring back? Or, did he remain an ethical
outcast? The movie is silent on that. I liked it. To be frank, I would have
liked the businessman to go back to his old ways, the power of profits having
the definitive sway! The truth.
There
are scenes I would have liked when my age was in single digits or possibly even
in the low double digits (pre-teen), now that their age cohorts are masters of
trick shot videography. So, I was left to wonder why these shots were included.
It would have been a decision based on RoI, a wrong one. The movie ostensibly
had a strong message and these intruded into the story line to leave a visible
scar. I would have been much happier without it.
“Total
waste!” This one phrase is to be weighed in gold! Universal condemnation of
religion. Wait for it, in a court scene. The event condemned is a twist (well
within story-tellers’ right to imagine) on what we saw about three decades ago.
My colleagues in my office went out during lunch time (and were delayed in
returning), each pouring at least one fifth of a litre of milk on an idol of
the elephant-God, Lord Ganesha, all based on a rumour that He is drinking milk
and it spread like wildfire). I wonder
what I would have done had I been watching in a movie hall; perhaps brought
down the ceiling! It is that good.
The
chief of the religious cabal, played superbly by the veteran and celebrated
stage and cinema actor Mithun Chakraborty in an impactful role, asks his
congregation as to what God has not given them. Has He not given earth, water,
air and all else that made their life so easy and comfortable (the dialogue
writer missed mentioning air conditioning!). I did not feel comfortable as his
questions went unanswered (of course, these were rhetorical, not to be
answered), though the actor made that scene, indeed the role come alive. What
kind of an effect could it have on impressionable minds (there are more adults
than teens, pre-teens and younger ones put together in this category)? Further
descent into Hell!
The
TV interview scene is one I would like to store indelibly in my mind. The
interviewer is asked by the interviewee−yes, upside down!−what did she do when
she wanted to have a chocolate? Did she pray with prayer beads, kneel down and
beseech her father, what, indeed, did she do? The interviewer answered that she
just asked and her father got her what she wanted (was a lucky girl whose
father did not worry how her teeth might stain and probably she would suffer
later!). Then, the coup de grs by the interviewee:
why wouldn’t you do that to God, after all he is a father figure.
At
the end of the interview, the teenage daughter pleaded allegiance to her father
when she acknowledged that who the audience sitting in a college cafeteria are
appreciating was her father. Perhaps that was the instance she burst out of her
cocoon, as I would have liked. This was a teaching-cum-learning moment, the
managementese intruding into this write-up!
Three
major religions were appeased by seating their religious heads in the
courtroom. There is also a trickier aspect to it, the way I see it. Each religion
was taken to task on its own terms. This way the three religious arrows that
could have come in the way of the atheist were blunted even before they were
lifted out of their quivers! Insult everyone and you insult none. A nice trick!
I
could possibly pick-off a few more frames but that would test my patience as I
get down to reading what I had written. So, I stop.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
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