DT
PT
Subscribe To Print Edition About The Tribune Code Of Ethics Download App Advertise with us Classifieds
search-icon-img
search-icon-img
Advertisement

Movie Review - Section 375: It comes with a cerebral tone

Rape as saleable masala was often a norm in mainstream Bollywood of yore to rouse perverse male titillation as well as give the hero a valid reason to unleash violent revenge
  • fb
  • twitter
  • whatsapp
  • whatsapp
featured-img featured-img
A still from Section 375
Advertisement

Rape as saleable masala was often a norm in mainstream Bollywood of yore, to rouse perverse male titillation as well as give the hero a valid reason to unleash violent revenge. Few films utilised the heinous act to say something substantial - the odd Insaaf Ka Tarazu or Ghar comes to mind.

Section 375 brings back the subject of rape on the Bollywood screen, quite unlike it has ever been done before, and with rare profundity. The film tries understanding law and justice as detached entities through the tale of a rape, and how these two notions are rarely ever fated to meet.

Advertisement

Writer Manish Gupta establishes a taut premise within the first quarter. A rookie costume designer arrives at the apartment of a big-shot filmmaker to discuss designs. They end up alone, he tries raping her and, within hours, is arrested. The rape itself is not shown to begin with, so we are left with scope to draw inferences. It's an open-and-shut case, declares the media and public alike. The sessions court gives the filmmaker a 10-year rigorous imprisonment verdict.

Except, all is not over yet. The filmmaker, Rohan Khurana (Rahul Bhat), hires a top lawyer, Tarun Saluja (Akshaye Khanna) to clear his name in High Court. Pitted against the mighty Saluja is the young public prosecutor Hiral Gandhi (Richa Chadha), who was incidentally his assistant at one time. As the narrative unfolds, Saluja starts ripping open the case, exposing anomalies at every step -- from police probe to forensic reports that were earlier used to nail Khurana. His arguments are foolproof and, suddenly, the case is no longer as simple as it had seemed.

Advertisement

Director Ajay Bahl never loses focus on what he wants to state: When it comes to a crime as sensitive as rape, simply following the law is not necessarily enough to ensure justice is served.

In content and execution, Section 375 is not a film for all -- for the reason that it makes no attempt to dilute its complex text in order to reach out to a larger audience. Rather, it reserves a cerebral tone all through, unfolding at a languid pace and asserting its opinion with quiet assurance.

The objective of the film was never to establish who is guilty and who is not, you realise as the story draws to its end. In life there are never clear victims and villains, Section 375 reminds.

Section 375 finds its trump card in Akshaye Khanna's performance. Surprisingly, it is Richa Chadha who suffers - struggling in most parts to come to terms with a character that seems inadequate all through. She comes alive in individual scenes, though, thanks to her proven screen presence.

Rahul Bhat is impressive for the way he balances Rohan Khurana's arrogance and vulnerability. Meera Chopra, cast as the young costume designer Anjali, who acts as the trigger for the tale, sadly gets very little to do. Sandhya Mridul is a delight to watch in a cameo.

"Section 375" makes you do serious thinking about an important contemporary issue without getting preachy about it, and yet never slipping into the flippant mode. --IANS

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
tlbr_img1 Home tlbr_img2 Opinion tlbr_img3 Classifieds tlbr_img4 Videos tlbr_img5 E-Paper