
Producer & Director : Sanjay
Leela Bhansali
*ing: Salman Khan, Ajay Devgan, Aishwarya Rai
Music: Ismail Darbar
Released on : June 18, 1999
Reviewed by: Sunder
sunder@indolink.com
out of
Hum
Dil De Chuke Sanam (HDDCS) is perhaps the only way Bollywood could have made up
for an absolutely lacklustre first half of 1999. Sure, there were hits and some above
average movies that missed the bus too - but nothing besides Sarfarosh
really made you sit up and notice a movie. HDDCS does just that to you. And it sets a
standard that the many big movies that will hit the screens in the second half of the year
will find hard to surpass. I wouldn't be very surprised if this finishes as the best of
the best movies of 1999.
HDDCS has a number of factors going in favor of it. The film is expectedly
brilliant technically, with outstanding cinematography by Anil Mehta to bring out the best
of traditional Gujarati/Rajasthani architecture. This culture influence from
Gujarat/Rajasthan which is key to the storyline also dominates the entire first half of
the movie - and the culture goes right down to the colors of dresses that Salman Khan wears (or rather takes off as is his
wont). One could perhaps look at the movie as the most colorful movie, and this makes it a
movie that looks wonderful. Besides just looking wonderful, HDDCS also comes out being
well above average too. The brilliance from behind-the-camera crew is ably fronted up by
the performers in front, to make what is captured by the camera as good as it has come out
to be.
With arguably the best music of the year so far, the brilliance of the
music is further exaggerated by wonderful choreography, fleet footed dancing of Aishwarya Rai, and perhaps one of the best
integration of songs into the narrative of the movie in recent years. And if director
Sanjay Leela Bhansali's previous effort Khamoshi - The Musical
had to announce itself as a musical, this one is an out-and-out musical that needs no such
announcemement. Debutante music director Ismail Darbar excels with the songs for sure
suitably aided by very apt and brilliant lyrics by Mehboob. The songs bear a heavy
influence of the culture the movie portrays - and this influence makes the background
score that much more effective. Though, on some occasions, the background score does
border on being too heavy.
About the movie itself, the storyline is simple - but the
characters are not necessarily so. This makes the movie so much more human in the midst of
color and grandeur. Nandini (Aishwarya Rai) is the daughter of classical singer Darbar (Vikram Gokhale). Wonder if this is only
coincidence with the music director's name. Sameer (Salman Khan) is half-Indian settled in
Italy who comes to his homeland to learn music from Nandini's father. Games, pranks, and
light revelry mixed with marriage sequences, kite-flyring festivals, etc. make up most of
an imminently enjoyable first half. These also contribute to building each of the key
characters though there are a few stereotypes around too. All performers including the
supporting cast contribute to making this half enjoyable. Towards the end of the
first-half enters Vanraj (Ajay Devgan), a
family associate of Darbar and alliance for Nandini. Culture and complications leave the
movie poised for an interesting second half as father decides in favor of this alliance
leaving Sameer (Salman) in despair.
Ajay Devgan comes out with a brilliant cameo as the husband who on
realizing the love of his wedded wife, decides to take her to her true love who is now
back in Italy. The adamance of Aishwarya Rai and the commitment of Ajay Devgan to return
her to love make some classy sequences in the second half. The scene now is set in Italy,
which is not as colorful as the first half. Brief flashbacks and song-n-dance routines
splash some color though. In the midst of a fairly absorbing second half where Ajay and
Aishwarya hunt around Italy for Salman, there are a few cliched situations which one
wonders could have perhaps been avoided. Helen
features in a small role as Salman's Italian "Hindi-speaking" mother. The movie
draws a smooth climax, which is not quite unpredictable, but still quite effective.
Perhaps the director does deserve credit for not going overboard as it happens so often
with Hindi cinema.
Aishwarya Rai is brilliant in her dances and adequate in an author-backed
role. Salman excels when he plays a character perhaps much like himself - that of a dumb
fool in uneasy situations (Judwaa or Andaz
Apna Apna), and sure enough, he carries off the humor and light moments of his role
quite well. And unlike his other recent movies, he has also done quite well with the few
emotional scenes he has, except a couple. Ajay Devgan excels in a role of a serious,
introvert as he has often with such roles. Among the support cast, Vikram Gokhale measures
up to the role of the classical singer and head of the household, and all others chip in
with their best. |