Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Caravan (1971) (Spoiler Alerts!)

Two movies on the To-Do list over one weekend! What a grand way to ring in the new year, I say :-)

To be frank, I have always liked almost all the songs from this movie - from the lusty 'अब जो मिले है' , 'चढ़ती जवानी' & 'पिया तू अब तो आ जा' to the soulful 'दिलबर दिलसे प्यारे' to the cheery  'कितना प्यारा वादा है' & 'गोरिया कहा तेरा देस रे' to the downright funny 'दैया ये मै'. The sight of a long line of bullock carts forming the caravan (hence the movie name!) has always intrigued me about the possible plot - is it a romantic movie or a murder mystery? I decided to find my answers by parking myself in front of the TV at 6pm on 31st December.

When the movie begins we see a car that has gone totally out of control, careening across dangerous bends on a winding road with a steep ravine on the other side. At the wheel is a young woman called Sunita who is desperately trying to control the car with failed brakes. She loses the battle and the car plunges into the depths of the ravine, bouncing and rolling till it comes to a dead stop at the bottom. In the very next shot we see the cops investigating the accident and a young man in shock and grief. Sunita's voice-over informs us that he is Rajan, the man she had got married to only the day before. She is the only daughter of a wealthy mill owner, Mohandas, of Mumbai. Rajan is Mohandas's dead friend's son. He convinces Mohandas  that the General Manager - Karamachand - who had served him faithfully for many years, and thus also become his trusted friend, has betrayed him. Mohandas falls for Rajan's tricks, sacks his friend and appoints Rajan in his place. But Rajan soon shows his true colors by taking 3 Lakhs from the 10 Lakhs that Mohandas had kept in the safe. When Mohandas confronts him with the truth Rajan throws him off the balcony before pocketing the letter that Mohandas had written to Karamchand. Sunita goes into shock upon learning of her father's death. When Karamchand comes to meet her she drives him away. Rajan lies to her saying that Mohandas wanted to marry her to him. Grief-stricken Sunita agrees to fulfill  her father's last wish and also appoints Rajan as the beneficiary of all her wealth should something happen to her.

On the night of the marriage, Rajan takes Sunita to a hotel in Khandala to spend their wedding night. But when they enter the room, they see Monica who informs Sunita that Rajan has had a relationship with her over the years and has married Sunita only for her money. She also shows Sunita her father's letter to Karamchand and tells her that it was Rajan who had killed her dad and he won't hesitate to kill her too to get at her wealth. Terrified Sunita locks herself in a room and in the night, believing that Rajan is too drunk to notice, tries to flee in the car. It is quite later that she notices that Rajan has made the car's brakes useless. She manages to fling herself out of the car just before it plunges into the ravine. But the absence of her dead body convinced Rajan that she is alive.

Sunita knows that she has to reach Mumbai to get the letter from Monica. She chances upon a beaten-down van driven by Mohan, who is employed by the owner of a caravan to drive their stuff from one place to another. She pretends to be a village girl, Soni, and concocts a story that her uncle wants to marry her off to an old man and she needs to reach Mumbai to seek help from a relative. Mohan agrees to help her. But when Sunita goes to meet Monica she realizes that Monica is hand in glove with Rajan, the plot to confront her at Khandala had been hatched by both of them and that Rajan will marry Monica when Sunita is finished off. What's worse, Rajan spots her and knows for sure that she is alive.

Fleeing from Rajan and his henchmen, Sunita chances upon Mohan and his van again. She knows that Karamchand is staying in Bangalore and is due to return from Europe in 2 months. So she pleads with Mohan to take her along with the gypsy caravan that is headed for Bangalore anyways. And that's what starts her (and viewer's!) delightful journey with the caravan.

The story doesn't have much by way of twists and turns. It is made clear right at the start that Rajan is a bad guy. Anyone who has watched enough Hindi movies will guess the end, along with the fate of gypsy girl Nisha - who is in love with Mohan though he doesn't reciprocate it - with 100% accuracy. But it's the little incidents - be it Mohan's kid brother Montu swapping sumptuous food cooked by the wife of the caravan's boss with the burnt food that Mohan's friend prepared to help Soni or Soni and Mohan ending up on stage for an impromptu performance when Nisha refuses to dance or Soni getting drunk to prove her love for Mohan - that make this journey interesting.

Of course, you wonder why Mohandas has a photo of his friend Karamchand on his desk (I don't know anyone who has a photo of his or her friend on a desk, no matter how close the friendship!), why well-educated Sunita wills away all her wealth to Rajan, why she doesn't make a clean breast of things to Mohan sooner rather than waiting till the day of their marriage & how the cops end up (with all the gypsies!) at the precise spot where Rajan has taken Sunita and Mohan when Rajan has earlier claimed it to be a very remote one. The last shot of Sunita deciding to go with the caravan, all dressed up as a village girl, left me scratching my head and wondering about the fate of the mill and its workers ☺

Asha Parekh has essayed both roles - rich girl Sunita & village belle Soni - with aplomb. She really lets herself go in the goofy song 'दैया  ये मै' with such gusto that even the famous Jumping Jack of Hindi movies pales in comparison. :-) Jeetendra is likeable as Mohan. Junior Mehmood looks adorable as the mischievous loving Montu. Aruna Irani sizzles as the gutsy fiery Nisha. Helen has portrayed the dancing vamp in far too many movies to get it wrong. Madan Puri surprises in his role of kind-hearted caravan chief Meethalal Tota.

All in all, I was glad to have been a part of this caravan journey. Perhaps you will like it as well!

The Train (1970) (Spoiler Alert!)

It has happened on countless occasions in the past that upon noticing the title 'The Train' in the TV guide I have tuned in to the channel concerned only to find that the movie being aired is the 2007 one starring Emraan Hashmi. So when I noticed the title again on Saturday evening, I knew that the probability of it being the new movie was more than 90%. But hey, sometimes events with less than 10% chance of happening do happen. This was one such instance :-)

It looked like I had missed out on about half an hour's worth of movie. So there was no knowing if the murder had already happened or not. Generally I am not very enthusiastic about watching a movie unless it is from the start. But I was not sure about when this one will be aired again so I decided to stick around and watch it this time.

The protagonists are Shyam - a Police Inspector, and his fiancee Neeta. They appear to be very much in love. Shyam proposes to her but she tells him that she has certain responsibilities and cannot get married until they are fulfilled. Shyam convinces her that, henceforth, all her responsibilities are his as well so she agrees to tie the knot. At home she joyfully gets ready to introduce him to her mom. Her mom, however, is far from sharing her daughter's enthusiasm. The reason is that Neeta's dad is in prison on charges of murdering his employer. Though she and Neeta are convinced that he is innocent, she suspects that Shyam won't take such a lenient view of the situation. Just to make matters worse, Neeta's dad escapes from prison and comes home to persuade his family to be on the run with him. As they are preparing to do that Shyam shows up. He makes sure Neeta's dad is dispatched to the prison again and in the process ends up being despised by both - Neeta and her mom.

Neeta tries to look for a job but is turned away every time when the prospective employer learns about her dad. A friend of her dad's turns up at their home and offers to help the family. At her mom's request he secures a job for Neeta as a receptionist at a hotel. A diamond trader comes to stay there. He sells his diamonds and leaves for Calcutta by an evening train. Their is only one other occupant - Pyarelal - in the compartment in which the trader is traveling. But just as the train is about to depart a woman gets in. She tells Pyarelal that her name is Geeta and that she teaches dance at a dance academy in Nasik. When the train halts at Igatpuri, Geeta persuades Pyarelal to have dinner with her at the station hotel. He complies but while they are eating the train departs. Pyarelal is stranded at Igatpuri while Geeta is nowhere to be seen. Pyarelal convinces the station master to get his luggage out at the next station but when the station master of the next station boards the compartment he finds the trader murdered. The police, of course, take Pyarelal into custody. The investigation is handed over to inspector Shyam who, with the help of Pyarelal, starts looking for Geeta. They find that the woman teaching dance at the academy is indeed named Geeta but she is not the woman who met Pyarelal in the train compartment. Shyam suspects that Geeta is somehow involved in this murder but every time they look for her she manages to slip away. When things start looking hopeless Pyarelal chances upon Neeta's photo in Shyam's wallet and tells him that she is the woman from the train compartment.

So, is Neeta mixed up in this whole murder business? Is her dad really innocent? Are both murders connected? If so, who is the mastermind behind all this looting and murdering? The rest of the movie, though predictable at times, is a good watch to find answers to these questions.

As far as casting goes, Rajesh Khanna is a bit unconvincing as a cop - after all you aren't used to seeing inspectors trotting about in plain clothes garish enough to give neighborhood thugs a complex and pulling out wads of cash to hand out to suspects - though he looks absolutely yummy as a hero. Nanda looks older to Rajesh Khanna but essays convincing roles as straight-forward Neeta and charming Geeta. Rajendra Nath is upto his usual tricks as Pyarelal. Other usual suspects are Helen (Lily), Madan Puri (Neeta's dad's friend) and Ifteqar (Shyam's boss). The movie boasts of such melodious songs as गुलाबी  आंखे, किस लिए मैंने प्यार किया,  नी  सोणिये and सैया रे  सैया.

The movie doesn't answer all questions convincingly in the end. e.g. are Lily and Shyam romantically involved? (God forbid! we prefer our leading pairs to be committed only to each other!) Why is Lily masquerading as Neeta? Is Shyam naive enough not to realize, until Neeta points it out to him, that the person present at the crime scene with the murder weapon could have been framed?

That said, if you are fond of old times whodunits, it is a definite watch, if only for a lot of things that are no more seen in today's Hindi movies - such as henchmen referring to their boss as, er, 'Boss', thugs with red hankies tied around their necks, the gang's headquarters with big boxes lying around everywhere, the seductive vamp performing a cabaret in the night club, glimpses of empty streets of old Mumbai, people successfully disguising themselves with just a cap, a pair of sunglasses & a mole, heroes decked out in every garish shade of red, green, yellow & khaki, the ease of securing a train ticket by asking the hotel manage to arrange for it and of course, the good old fighting sound of 'ढिशुम '! :-)

Sunday, December 31, 2017

As 2017 is drawing to a close, I have realized that I didn’t write about a lot of things – the heritage walk with Sahapedia in Khotachi Wadi, the 70s movie ‘The Train’ that I watched yesterday evening or the Marathi play ‘पती गेले ग काठेवाडी' that I watched last month.

What that also means is that I won’t have a dearth of subjects to write about during the first few days of 2018. :-)

So for this last post of this year, I am borrowing the words from a post a friend forwarded on Whatsapp:

We're all stories in the end
Just make it a good one

I hope to make mine....


Kulfi + Falooda + Rabdi @ Himalaya @ Gandhi Market!

In the words of Ameer Khusro (and with all due apologies):

Agar firdaus bar roo-e zameen ast
Hameen ast-o hameen ast-o hameen ast

(If there is paradise on earth, it is this, it is this, it is this :-)
You Can Write A Cookbook - Kevin Wolfe
An Invitation To Indian Cooking - Madhur Jaffrey
स्वाद संवाद: भाग १ आणि २ - वसुंधरा पर्वते
पार्टी पार्टी - निर्मला टिळक
खमंग - दुर्गा भागवत

भोजनकुतूहलम - इंग्लिश भाषांतर Institute Of Ayurved And Integrated Medicine, Bengalore इथे उपलब्ध
मांसपाकनिष्पत्ती (पार्वतीबाई), उपोषण पाकशास्त्र (दुर्गाबाई भट), गृहिणी-मित्र (लक्ष्मीबाई धुरंधर) - संदर्भ विभाग, मुंबई मराठी ग्रंथसंग्रहालय, नायगाव इथे उपलब्ध
सूपशास्त्र – रा. स. गुप्ते  - करवीर नगर वाचन मंदिर, कोल्हापूर इथे उपलब्ध


While going through 'Beginning Database Design' by Clare Churcher I came across the following gem:

"One of the sweetest ways to sum up the normal forms we have discussed is from Bill Kent. He summarizes the normal forms this way:

A table is based on
the key,
the whole key,
and nothing but the key (so help me Codd)"

Well Said!