The Asian Age

A ‘SHADOW’ OVER IT

The serial is a flawed but brave a film about coming out...

- SUBHASH K JHA

What happens to a conservati­ve tradition-bound Hindu family when the son comes out as gay?

This is a question that has been haunting our cinema for some time now. I remember Sanjoy Nag’s Memories In

March where Deepti Naval played a bereaved mother who discovers her son’s homosexual­ity after his death through his partner, played by the late and muchmissed filmmaker Rituporno Ghosh. In

Evening Shadows, the central character of the matriarch is played by Mona Ambegaonka­r, a grossly under-utilised actress who emerges from the Shadows, so to speak, with a powerful if somewhat uneven compromise­d performanc­e in a film that means well but is constantly stymied by stilted dialogues and some monstrousl­y embarrassi­ng twists in the plot that make us want to scream in protest.

Outwardly, the reach is impressive. The rural Karnataka locations are fabulously scenic and the homes look lived-in. But the situations created by the plot to underscore the domestic dynamics are far from convincing.

This could have been such a game-changing film. god knows, Ms Ambegaonka­r and newcomer Devansh Doshi as mother and son on a journey of discovery, imbue their characters with a disarming believabil­ity. Sadly the dialogues they are made to speak to each other and to the other characters in the film, sound like they are being read out from a teleprinte­r at a very poorly conceived live show.

The conversati­ons between protagonis­t Kartik and his gay partner over the phone, also sound heavily stitled and self-conscious in spite of the profusion of endearment­s the pair exchange. And some of the more sighing moments appear to be clumsy wish-fulfilment rather than reality.

A far less self-conscious self-congratula­tory approach to the subject would have gone a long way in furnishing the drama with a more authentic base.

As a film about coming out of the closet, Evening Shadows casts a fairly deepening shadow over its character’s lives as the son’s revelation­s shake the family and its time-worn values. Ananth Mahadevan as the rigid smirky patriarch sadly deficient in the quality of human compassion, is admirably apt, sometimes more so than the script allows the actors to be.

The writers (Sridhar Rangayan and Saagar Gupta) are seen to be constantly in a dilemma as to how far they should go in the exploratio­n of Kartik’s sexual identity without scaring the more conservati­ve audiences away. Consequent­ly, the narrative often comes across as half-hearted, if not entirely ludicrous, as in the way Kartik’s uncle Ramesh (Abhay Kulkrani) is revealed to have sexually abused Kartik during his childhood. However Kartik doesn’t see his uncle’s abuse as abuse. “No I enjoyed what we did together,” he tells his discernibl­y stunned mother.

The film also wants us to believe that promiscuit­y is not a rule, in the gay community. Fidelity is.

“I am not just physically attracted to my partner. We plan to spend the rest of our lives together. I love him as in any heterosexu­al partnershi­p,” Kartik tells his mother.

Frankly the film loses it credibilit­y quickly after such absurd leaps of faith. There are some very embarrassi­ng moments with Kartik’s divorced aunt who counsels Karti, “Never marry for any reason but love.” Before the film slips into a self-righteous pool of bumper sticker wisdom, it quickly regains some lost ground in the closing moments when Kartik’s mother stands up for her son and ticks off her rigidly conservati­ve husband, reminding him he has done nothing in their son’s upbringing to warrant his angered protest at the son’s sexuality.

Ambegaonka­r dazzles in her climactic tick-off. If only her dilemma as a wife and mother were not weighed against one another, as though to suggest that it is preferable to be honest than loyal in a relationsh­ip. Evening Shadows is more credible for what it tries to say about same-sex relationsh­ips than what we actually hear it saying. For, when it comes to the words, they definitely get in the way.

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