The Asian Age

A sweet film ruined by filmy cliches

- SUPARNA SHARMA

Now, though their paths cross daily, it’s only for communicat­ing chores completed or the ones that need to be completed.

Mamta ( Anushka Sharma) is busy all day filling buckets of water, serving meals, tea, covering her head with her pallu, while Mauji ( Varun Dhawan), who sleeps alone on the terrace at night, gets up to rush off to work at an Usha sewing machine showroom.

They live with Mauji’s Bauji ( Raghubir Yadav) and mother ( Yasmin Dass). Bauji, now retired, sits in the small veranda disapprovi­ng of Mauji, seeing in him nothing to encourage or appreciate, while his mother is too busy worrying about the erratic water pump.

There’s a sweet- sad warmth to the daily beats of domesticit­y where the basic, crucial needs of two men are taken care of by two women from their dingy kitchen. All other desires are annoyingly superfluou­s in this low- income group house.

Soon, a rather farfetched scene is inserted to make Mamta weep tears of embarrassm­ent as she watches the depths to which her husband will stoop to make a living, and this give the film its first twist, setting off Mamta- Mauji on their journey of self- discovery, saath- saath mein. Then, immediatel­y, to make things very tough and scary for all involved and us, a parent has to take a fall.

This dip leads to a joyful rise thanks to the wits and wagers of Mamta and Mauji.

This uplifting walk of coupledom rests on the magic of Usha sewing machine and Mauji’s skills with it.

Mamta and Mauji are now a team, one encouragin­g the other, and the other doing his damnedest not to disappoint.

But matlabi duniya and the unscrupulo­us brotherin- law of Mauji’s real chhota bhai ensure that their efforts and creations are owned by and benefit another.

Here too extreme hardships are inserted thanks to people so stupendous­ly evil and hateful that, even as we weep on the command of Yash Raj Films, it feel filmy, fraudulent and exploitati­ve.

As does the very fake and faltu climax with some Made in India nonsense. It’s not just annoyingly stupid, but in its high lies the depressing­ly low ambition of Bollywood.

Sharat Katariya has a very fine sense of small- town Hindu homes, and outside.

Like he did in Dum Laga Ke Haisha, here too he is able to create a functional­dysfunctio­nal household which is animated and believable. The characters of mother, Bauji, Mamta, Mauji and his brother and the sister- in- law come together quite nicely to create a family we can connect with.

The language they speak, and the stuff they speak of, has a nice, real ring to it. And whenever the film sits down to work the Usha sewing machine, dipping into the nostalgia of many households across the country that at one point survived on the whirr of its handle and foot pedal, and the diligence of its needle that I found myself back in my Maasi’s house in Jalandhar where all the women took turns to quickly complete a sweater, a kids’ hooded jacket with pompoms on the fancy, new woolen knitting machine.

But the attack of the house of YSR, which simply can’t stomach a film with Acategory stars without big tears and bigger victory moments, is

like a the rhythms of the cosmos commercial vomit on a screenplay that would otherwise been able to breathe.

Sui Dhaga has some very fine moments, but overall it’s just one more film ruined by the limited vision of a few who, sadly, decide what works and what doesn’t in Bollywood based on their balance sheet and a worldview too limited to see beyond their hits and those of their chubby pals.

This is sad because Anushka Sharma is quite good. Though in scenes where she has to propel the film forward with her emotions, she dips into her repository of big drama for big commercial films, she’s better when she’s simmering while quietly going about her chores.

Varun Dhawan is a limited actor and there’s a very small, tight circle within which he is good. Give him a scene with high emotion and he either pulls strange faces or dips into memories of his childhood tantrums to get the job done. His uncanny ability to infantalis­e a character whose growth trajectory is upwards is very irritating and makes the film crawl when it’s meant to soar.

Raghubir Yadav is good.

Dass ( Namit Das’ real- life mother) is exceptiona­l. But Yasmin

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