Thursday, January 3, 2008

Taare Zameen Par: Review

It Matters coz its Black or White
It often happens that when you have low expectations of a film, you end up enjoying it because it has something that you didn’t expect it to have. When I read the tagline of this film – Every Child is Special – every cynical bone in my body had low expectations of the film. Unfortunately, even that could not redeem the painful experience that was Taare Zameen Par. For a person hailed as a perfectionist, Aamir Khan sure didn’t deliver in his directorial debut.

Some may think that this is the view of a cynic, who doesn’t appreciate the moving journey of a little boy’s struggle with dyslexia. And I would like to set the record straight by saying I was moved by the boy, but not because his story was depicted with any complexity, but only because Darsheel Safary (who plays Ishaan, the dyslexic child) gave a memorable performance. In fact, the emotional quotient is the root of the problem of this film. Aamir Khan is a thinking, responsible individual of the film community and he has proved this more than once by joining hands with social causes that need support. And one appreciates that. However, in this film, in his attempt to bring this issue into mainstream cinema, he seems to have lost his grip. The film is a long, trite and preachy classroom lecture on dyslexia. The humour in the first forty minutes of the film, that showed some promise in terms of treatment of a serious social-medical issue, soon gave way to a good two hours of constant weeping. I'll begin with the mother, a character that held immense potential for the depth of the film, was brutally limited since her response to any of Ishaan’s or her husband’s activities or decisions was to cry. I can’t recall a single scene in which she didn’t have tears in her eyes. This is not to be insensitive to the struggle and frustration of a parent who can’t understand her child’s disability, but really, I feel that the insensitivity isn’t mine, but that of the filmmaker who has created such a formulaic mother - who will be read as the archetypal woman who has no opinions at all, and if she does (considering she is an educated woman who cares a lot for her son) she doesn’t feel the need to voice them.

Continuing with the poor characterisation, there is the father. Even if I am to be extremely kind and say that perhaps the father stands for the competitive, straitjacketed world, he falls miserably short. A trained actor, Vipin Sharma, is one of the weakest presences in the film. His responses as an actor are extremely contrived, as if out of a very dated Acting for Dummies kind of manual. He has three major conversations with Mr Nikumbh (Aamir Khan) in the film, and the graph of each is strikingly similar. It starts with him on the offensive about his son’s weaknesses, about his role as a father and Nikumbh’s place as a teacher. This is followed by an inspirational (read extremely trite) speech by Nikumbh about how every child has his strengths and how parents don’t understand this and pressure the child. And this is followed by the previously mentioned predictable facial responses of the father who looks down to show understanding and shame. The question to ask is, if this tempo was followed in the first conversation where there was a sense of understanding and shame in the father, why does he come back to repeat the pattern? It is a real waste of effort and not to mention our time, if the father is back to a tabula rasa state by the second conversation.
This brings us to Nikumbh, the character who makes this film the painful diatribe that it is. He enters the scene as a clown with big ears and a funny moustache, dressed in bright colors, uttering gibberish and basically establishing himself as the anti-thesis of the teachers we witnessed before (images of a whistling Robin Williams in Dead Poets Society haunted me). The greatest problem of Taare Zameen Par is that polar opposites define the film. There isn’t any scope of layers, or of shades of grey of any character, particularly the teachers, who therefore become caricatures rather than characters. That the cartoons of the three teachers at the art mela captured their entire essence should have been a clue to Aamir Khan. Ishaan and his brother, the mother and the father are the other polar opposites that exist in the film. Coming back to Nikumbh, quite predictably he is an art teacher. Predictable not just because a dozen films have used it before (Mona Lisa Smile and Notes on a Scandal to name a few recent ones) but because it is an easy way out to make art the polar opposite of any ‘actual subjects’ that are taught by the other teachers. I certainly expected Aamir Khan to think a little more out of the box. There is almost nothing believable about Khan’s character (and here I am willfully ignoring the fact of a singing and dancing teacher). He legally teaches in two schools, he addresses little eight-year-olds as ‘doston’, and comes up with the most didactic, unreal dialogues about how a table is too small to handle the weight of a child’s imagination etc. The listing of famous and successful dyslexic people was accompanied by technical sounding descriptions of their achievements that were out-of-place to say the least. Somewhere in the film, it seems, as if Khan got confused about how to treat these eight-year-olds, like adults or to become a child along with them.
Moving on to the theme of the film. I am in two minds about the ethical question behind the treatment of dyslexic people and in effect people suffering from any misunderstood mental disorders who have to struggle harder than others to survive in society. I strongly agree that there need to be more avenues for creating awareness and sensitivity about neurological disorders. At the same time, I feel that we do the sufferers a great injustice by pitying them. Perhaps the greatest oversight (in some ways an oversight is the opposite of perfection) is that dyslexia is equated with physical and mental challenges. That is completely incorrect. "Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that manifests primarily as a difficulty with written language, particularly with reading and spelling. It is separate and distinct from reading difficulties resulting from other causes, such as deficiencies in intelligence...Evidence suggests that dyslexia results from differences in how the brain processes written and/or verbal language. Although dyslexia is the result of a neurological difference, it is not an intellectual disability." [1] So, all the connections made with the school for mentally and physically challenged children and the documentary footage used with the closing credits only succeeds in evoking pity which is a response that results from a sense of superiority. And in the simplistic treatment of the life of Ishaan in the film, I believe the film hasn’t achieved any real sensitization, rather only a long weeping trip that wears off soon after we leave the cinema-hall because apart from anything else, all was well at the end of the film and it seemed to take precious little to cure the boy. Three quarters of the film was about Ishaan’s struggle with dyslexia, while it took just the duration of a song to fix it all. It seems to reduce the pain and the effort it must take to even begin to make some progress in cases of dyslexic children.
Besides by the end of the film, he has 'won' in the traditional, somewhat conservative sense - his report card has moved his parents to tears (sadly that is their response to a good and a bad report card)...he has achieved it all - he is on the front and the back cover of the yearbook. The feel-good factor ruins the aim of the film. Let me justify this, while interpreting Walter Benjamin’s stance on television, Alan Meek says, “TV positions us as subjects of a technological imaginary and…virtual participants in what modernist theorists once called ‘mass culture’.”[2] We can extend this argument to the experience of a film in the cinema hall as well, in fact it perhaps works better that way because with television we are still aware of other people and things around us to bring us back to our reality, but in the cinema hall, the attempt is at building an intimate relation between us and the film. Another form of mimicry, this leads to viewers responding as characters in the film. As a result, what remains at the end of the experience is not the hard part, but the warm feeling inside of having done something good. If we are so satisfied with the way things turned out the process of sensitization is over with the film.
But one must end on a positive note – Darsheel Safary is a treat because he is the only actor who has a character that goes through a journey in the film and he does great justice to the role. We see him transforming from a wonderfully spirited child to one who seems to have given up on the world. He cries and makes you cry, but that is not his defining feature – he has captured the frustrations, joys and the life of Ishaan in a way that makes him the only believable character in the entire film. The flip-book was a great device but its greatness is slammed in your face till you are tired of it and its sentimental implications.

So I guess while every child may be special, every film might not be, and this one certainly isn’t.

13 comments:

Arnab said...

I am never watching this movie,it sounds terrible. I would have probably had the same critiques as you if I had seen it. Also, you should probably insert additional lines breaks at the beginning of the latter paragraphs so it's clear when the new paragraphs start. Also, in the last paragraph, you mention "misunderstood diseases", I think disorder and disability are more appropriate terms. Just a suggestion.

Maaz bin Bilal said...

sorry am commenting without having read your complete post. read till the part where u r talking of the formulaic mother.

I think the film is great precisely because of the formulaic scenario that is most probable of happening in the average life of a psychologically disabled (specifically dyslexic)child in India. Where in absence of genuine comprehension of the disorder tha father is likely to beat up the child, and an ignorant, even if 'literate' but not very educated or enlightened mother, as still most women in Indai remain the situation is highly unlikely to be different. It is in exposing the trite of a mostly neglected and even intetnionally ignored space that i think lies Amir's greatness. India Society has cried at its own calousness.It is not sheer melodrama.

Arnab said...

I am not sure I agree with your comment, Maaz, because however true/realistic the scenario may be; firstly, it is probably important to note the dyslexia is a challenging but not debilitating disability and most people with dyslexia are developmentally not really aberrational at all, from what I know about dyslexia (which may be limited but I'm by no means ignorant on this front) and those I know with this disability; secondly, I think movies like this are meant to raise awareness about issues but also portray progress and understanding, divulge information and break sociocultural stigmata. The movie is evidently not doing so.

Maaz bin Bilal said...

Well I am surprised that you don't see it as doin so, but since you havent seent he movie at all, if i grasp your meaing correctly from your first post its understandable that you dont!
What would you see Amir's role if not as progressive in the movie?his is an appeal towards parents towards all people to rationally deal with dyslexia, or any such ailment, while the orthodox and narrowmnded parents provide the perfect foil that is real society!

Arnab said...

Agreed, I haven't seen the movie. What I meant is though I'm sure that Amir Khan's portrayal of the teacher is progressive and inspiring, it is probably not enough. It is important to show supportive and inspiring parents. Parents fitting into cliches, however realistic is not done. It probably what propagates and sustains pervasive stigmata and sociocultural disservices.

cat in the hat said...

OK I enter the debate a little late it seems, but Maaz, i would like to clarify a few things. I haven's said too much about the characterisation of the parents. i think the mother is too cliche and regressive but the main problem with the father is that he is an awful actor. if amir khan was that great he wouldn't have taken the easier way out by using a predictable, stereotyped mother, but one who has some character and can add something to the film's growth. All this is apart from the fact that i completely disagree with ur reading of women in india, she was a middel-class educated woman and being one myself, i strongly disagree with that character.
the main characterisation problem is with the teachers...all of them are all formulaic and useless. Amir Khan has hardly moved beyond what was achieved in terms of a great teacher from Dead Poet's Society. That is what makes the film ordinary. What is special abt the touch of the 'great director'?

Piyush Aggarwal said...

Overall..pretty ok review...i think you were pretty hard on aamir considering that this was fairly good effort as a directorial debut. India is a different kind of market when it comes to cinema...we as a movie critic tend to get too much into the subtext of the script which i believe is not that important. Sometimes it is important to appreciate the effort than to read between the lines.

Ishaan's chracter is surely a national award material. Jury will probably give the best child actor award hands down, having said that i still feel that there were many loose ends in the script. Aamir's interaction with Ishaan was shown through a song...perhaps he should have given it more screen time.

Audience would have loved it had there was a short speech by Ishaan in the end.

Presence of a narrator(in the form of a voice-over) could have given the script a punch...someone like Vidhu Vinod chopra would have surely done it. It is important that when your protagonist is a dyslexic kid then you need someone to handhold you during vacuum period.

An advice for the reviewer...watch this movie again...this time not as a film student but an ordinary person. hope you will like it a bit more.

cat in the hat said...

piyush, i'm not a film student (as much as i would like to be) so i watched the movie as a normal person...and there is nothing in the world that would make me watch that film again...
I don't agree with you on a few accounts: the subtext is not what i spoke of, it is the issue at hand. and i can't appreciate an effort where the work is poor. and i also disagree with u that context and subtext are irrelevant.
I think a speech by ishaan would have only made the film worse, so i thank god that there wasn't any such thing.
And I get the feeling that dyslexia is very misunderstood by the audience (thanks to the film that equates it with physical and mental handicaps). dyslexic ppl are more than comfortable with talking to ppl, 'telling their story' is required.
but where i do agree is that darsheel safary is a good actor.

Maaz bin Bilal said...

Though this debate seems to be getting qite pointless with none willing to relent...
but nonetheless...
i would still push a little more...
The point I make about middle class women, not having enough of an authority/agency/voice in our society may not be obvious to you since you may belong to a household where it may be otherwise, (All the women in my family for that mater happen to be much more mobile/active/outgoing than me)but i feel such families still remain greatly outnumbered by the not so equal households if yo get what i mean. Even most middle class households till today as is very rightly shown in the movie are using education as means to big bucks(the reason for a whole generation wanting to be engineer MBAs), it is not a means to wisening up, to emancipation to intellectul growth, removal of prejudices and least of all gender equality... All that Amir has shown does not seem to be regressive but seems to show the picture to you. Your disgust and agitation is valid, and possibly what he has wanted the audience to feel. Your reaction is slightly different since i presume you do not feel as constrained as the mother in the movie is, but look around. most mothers are still like this. The very fact that people have wept in face of their own short comings towards a child such as ishan i think is modern/progressive enough within the given contraints. Even if we are having a dead poet's society kind of teacher now why do u lament it? one shouldn't and cannot expect all societies to experience the same levels of emancipation at the same time. The west took its own course, we too shall take ours. And then again what the west does may seem the best and most modern but may not truly be so?

cat in the hat said...

maaz, i repeat that i agree that such owmen exist in greater nos than are close to us. All I am trying to say is that had the mother's character been diff from the usual (she is ultimately a character right, like the father, who stands for something) the film would have been different and refreshing. It gets lost in the same mundane responses like any ordinary film. I know that the film is not about gender issues, but I don't think that any forum in which the woman looks more than just a usual housewife is tackling a polemic gender issue.

Anonymous said...

hi,

just thought i'd add my two cents worth. i quite agree with you, kuhu, on most accounts. my first two thoughts while and after watching the movie (which i did several months ago) were that 1) the parents are really essentialised. i really can't imagine middle class parents reacting so extremely and being so totally stubborn to the point of unkindness. secondly, i felt that the depiction of dyslexia (even if it was an extreme type of dyslexia that was being represented) missed the mark...so that it seemed that the boy suffered from autism rather than dyslexia.

i didn't think the movie was as bad as you did, but i do think that the characters, of the parents, and aamir khan were, as i said, way too essentialised.

have you seen that (fairly) old movie called 'anjali'? i watched it when i was quite young, when it came out, and i really loved it then...it too is about a child who doesn't fit in. i wonder if it too suffers from stereotyped characters - here's a link to the summary etc in case you're interested: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anjali_(film).

- guess who

cat in the hat said...

it is a relief to hear these words from someone who has watched the film...the hype around this film is overwhelming.
i think, in retrospect that i was responding not just to the film but to the people loving it and that made me a bit hyper. there is definitely scope for calming this piece down!
i have seen Anjali actually...but like you, many many years ago...so i don't remember much about it. Maybe i should go back to it...but where to find that generation of films!!
who is this by the way...i'm curious

Anonymous said...

aliya.