"Ramchand Pakistani" Print E-mail
Written by Alissa Simon   
Thursday, 08 May 2008
Story Categories: Film, Film review, India, Pakistan, reviews,

"Ramchand Pakistani"

 (Pakistan)

A Pakistani boy and his father accidentally cross the border and land in a packed Indian prison in the earnest drama "Ramchand Pakistani." Although director Mehreen Jabbar's feature debut boasts numerous assets, including beautiful cinematography, a splendid score and a compelling, near-wordless perf from gifted Indian actress Nandita Das as the woman who stubbornly waits for her men folk, these fail to compensate for problems of tone. Pic's curiosity value (the first from a female Pakistani helmer, possibly the first in which central characters are Pakistani Hindus) should earn it further fest play, with best bets for viewing in ancillary.

Pic opens in 2002, a time of increased tensions between Pakistan and neighbor India. Lyrical camerawork establishes a thatched-hut village in the Thar desert, where obnoxiously willful 8-year-old Ramchand (Syed Fazal Hussain) lives with his beautiful, illiterate mother Champa (Das), farmer father Shankar (Rashid Rarooqui) and other tenant workers of their "untouchable" Dalit caste. In a fit of temper, the disobedient lad carelessly crosses the invisible line of control between nations and is nabbed by Indian soldiers. Searching for his son, Shankar is taken into custody as a Pakistani spy.

In Pakistan, where 97% of the population is Muslim, Ramchand's family falls at the bottom of the social, religious and economic hierarchies. When Shankar's brother (Farooq Pario) tries to file a missing-persons report, the Pakistani officials are less than helpful.

Tonal problems increase as the narrative alternates between prison, where father and son languish for some five years, and Champa's backbreaking servitude to their landlord in order to pay off the family's debts. Seen from Ramchand's p.o.v., the depiction of prison life starts as brutal cliche but winds up sanitized sitcom, not helped by mostly affectless playing from Hussain and Rarooqui.

Meanwhile, Das, clad in colorful peasant costumes, manages to look fetching throughout her hardships. Helmer Jabbar, an experienced Pakistani TV director, floods Das' scenes with gorgeous camerawork, elaborate art direction and soaring score.

Although the plot deals with the hostilities of old enemies Pakistan and India, pic's realization involved considerable cooperation between the two nations, ranging from talent to technicians to government offices. Like lead actress Das, editor Aseem Sinha, composer Debajyoti Mishra and singer Shubha Mudgal (whose haunting vocals are featured on the score) are also vets of the Indian industry.

Camera (color, HD), Sofian Kha

Comments (0)add comment

Write comment

busy
 
© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
< Prev
Powered By Page_Cache by Ircmaxell