| Index | 7 reviews in total |
12 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Why this excellent social drama has received a low rating, 29 September 2004
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Author:
Jez Humble from London, England
Shyam Benegal has a well-deserved reputation for making hard-hitting
social dramas which tell true Indian stories in a realistic manner, so
you'll find no concessions to Bollywood here. The plot is brutal and
compelling, and the film features an all-star cast who give uniformly
excellent performances.
Vishvam (Naseeruddin Shah) is one of four brothers who rule their
feudal village in pre-independence India with an iron grip. They
execute various criminal schemes to increase their own wealth at the
expense of the villagers, with the village priest and constable
powerless to stop them. However unlike his brothers he tries to lead a
relatively restrained life, and at the start of the film we see him
married and refraining from drinking and smoking.
His brothers regularly exercise their droit de seigneur, ordering
villagers to send their wives and daughters to the haveli so that they
can be raped at leisure. At first Vishvam, restrained by his wife
(played by beautiful and brilliant but tragically short-lived Smita
Patil), refuses to join them. However when the new school teacher
arrives with his young child and lovely wife he finds himself tempted,
and the brothers abduct her.
The rest of the film concerns the resolution of the abduction, with the
villagers forced to make tough ethical decisions. The film ends in a
shocking way which will leave audiences deeply disturbed, which is no
doubt the cause of the low score that this film has received. However
upon reflection the ending is thoroughly realistic, and provides a deep
and unsettling insight into the human condition.
Shyam Benegal grew up in rural India and so this film, which is based
upon a true story, draws closely upon his own perceptions of village
India and the people that inhabit it. However the story has universal
appeal, and reveals how people's lives play out in the many parts of
the world where civilization is still primitive and brutal.
I am sad but unsurprised to see this film receive such low ratings. No
doubt the viewers who rated it will have been expecting light Bollywood
style entertainment, or at least some kind of feelgood resolution.
This is an excellent social drama in the tradition of Ankur and Mandi,
and should be seen by anyone interested in compelling stories,
excellent acting and the realities of village life in the developing
world.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Disturbing bureaucracy, uplifting revolution and empowerment, 5 April 2010
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Author:
Peter Young from Australia
Vishwam is the youngest brother of the powerful and cruel landowner
Zamindar (Amrish Puri). He is married to Rukmani and, unlike his
brothers, does not indulge in alcohol or women. But one day the village
gets a new school teacher, whose wife Sushila (Shabana Azmi) instantly
catches Vishwam's eye. Noticing this, his brothers come one night and
kidnap Sushila for all to see, including her husband who tries to stop
them but fails. He is shocked that no one of the so many present people
dared to even raise a voice to stop this abduction. He turns to every
possible authority, including the police, the court, the press, but is
shocked to see a complete rejection resulting from the fear to face off
the Zamindar.
This is the story of Shyam Benegal's Nishaant, a well-made film which
portrays the state of those times' rural India. The film depicts a
reality which is a bit difficult to see. The proceedings are very
serious and the film is dark and dim. Benegal's direction is excellent,
with a serene narrative style that easily conveys the raw atmosphere of
the village as well as the film's own mood. It is realistic and
authentic, without any overt dramatisation. I did expect more from the
ending though. The light at the end of the tunnel does finally seem to
appear, but sadly the story itself remains somewhat incomplete and
doleful. I think the ending did give the viewer an opportunity to
interpret it the way he wants to, which is great, but one would expect
to see some brightness in it.
The film shows us the power of human nature. While Sushila terribly
misses her son and goes through emotionally destructive experiences of
gang-rape and humiliation, she later accepts the cruel reality, finds
comfort in the house and ultimately starts getting attracted to the
quiet Vishwam. Her absence tortures her husband and his helplessness
makes his life miserable. One of the film's best scenes is when they
finally meet in a local temple. She preaches him for his cowardice,
ironically, in the same way he himself did with the people who did not
stop her kidnappers. This makes him realise that a change must happen
within the simple people and not the landowners.
The film is very well acted. Girish Karnad is excellent as the
tormented teacher who loses his wife and is unable to get her back.
Shabana Azmi is outstanding as Sushila in a restrained and deep act. I
particularly liked her outburst at her husband. Her anger was so easy
to relate to. Smita Patil makes her acting debut with this very film
and though her part is small, she makes the best of every scene she
appears in. Amrish Puri is successfully frightening as the merciless
Zamindar. Naseeruddin Shah is as always wonderful and his character is
very sympathetic despite the conflict it creates. The boy who plays
Sushila's son is extremely cute.
Nishaant is a good film, a disturbing, real and engaging piece. What I
particularly liked about the film is its unpredictability right until
the very final scenes. My main complaint is that it was a tad too slow
for my liking. While in the second half it gets far more enjoyable, and
the film is thoroughly engaging thanks to its story and fantastic
execution, the pace was still somewhat dragged, and at times made me
like squirming in my seat. Nonetheless, it's a worthy effort. To those
who expect to be purely entertained, this may not be the right film,
but those who appreciate artistic excellence will definitely enjoy
watching this picture.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
All time great, 25 June 2007
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Author:
kramachandran from United States
This movie is a timeless classic. One more feather to the cap of the
director Shyam Benegal. This movie was nominated for Cannes film
festival and unfortunately did not win any award. Again Benegal takes
us on a tour of rural Andhra and he does it with his characteristic
grace and élan. The camera work is as usual good which can be expected
of a Benegal movie. The music is good and above all , all the actors
have turned in performances of their life time. Smita Patil, though in
a not so significant role, excels. Shabana as usual shines. The fall of
the feudal system because of it's excesses is very ably painted on the
celluloid screen. Again this movie was a commercial failure, and the
time of it's release was witnessing a birth of a phenomenon of
Bollywood , Amitabh. Maybe that was the reason for this movie's failure
at the box office. But again the movie going masses in India have
always treated the alternative cinema in a not so fair manner, so this
movie was no exception.
The only small defect that anyone can point out in such movies, is the
facial makeup of the main characters. Always the heroes and heroines
are a stand out from the general crowds. But again one may condone them
as a matter of artistic or artiste's liberty.
Any collector of movies should cherish this movie.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Absolutely brilliant, 19 September 2006
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Author:
Cera from Canada
I saw this film when it was released in the 70's, I was about 15 or so.
I watched it again yesterday on DVD and once again was blown away by it
brilliant acting, story, dialogue and subject matter.
I love Indian mainstream cinema, it has a big place in Indian culture,
which very unfortunately and sadly is dismissed by many as kitch, but
popular culture is popular culture and it has it's importance in
society.
This movie on the other hand, is a perfect example of the other side of
Indian cinema. I really wish movies by such great Indian directors
(contemporary), can be shown in the West in regular cinemas (not small
little places in remote parts of cities). To balance the mainstream of
songs, dance, melodrama etc., we have this other cinema, which is so
amazing, intelligent and brilliant, and very unfortunately has not been
exposed to the NA market. It's just too sad!
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Amazing end to Benegal's first trilogy, 25 July 2005
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Author:
shahkaal from San Francisco
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Nishant is a film that I first saw when I was about 12 years old and it
had such a strong impact on me that I have felt the urge to view it
again every 3-4 years. Nishant is the most dramatic and episodic of the
three films that comprise Benegal's first trilogy - "Ankur", "Manthan"
and "Nishant". The trilogy speaks to the coming of age of democracy and
the last throes of the dying feudal system in India.
In the early 70's, director Shyam Benegal harnessed some formidable
talents in this set of films and the cast and crew is a who's who of
modern Indian cinema. All the films were made on low budgets and are
technically very spartan but this actually helps set the mood for the
on-screen proceedings - making everything seem very real. The rural
Indian locations, the performances of the extras, the weaving of local
art and dance into the stories, the local dialects - all help make this
film feel very real.
In a nutshell, it is the story of a powerful local landlord (Amrish
Puri before he became a caricature) who has two decadent alcoholic
brothers (brilliantly wicked Mohan Agashe and Anant Nag), and one naive
sibling (a very young Naseeruddin Shah), and who rules his village with
an iron fist. He has inherited feudal power which is in slow decay.
While he metaphorically rapes the people's land and crops, his brothers
more literally prey on the women of the town - while their pet police
patel (amazingly good Kubhushan Kharbanda in his pre-Shahkaal days) and
village priest (writer Satyadev Dubey) collaborate in silence.
In this time of discontent, a schoolteacher and his young wife (Girish
Karnad & Shabana Azmi) arrive in town. Shortly thereafter, she is
abducted by the two brothers as a gift for their youngest brother. The
rest of the story deals with the schoolteacher's quest for justice -
first through apathetic official channels and finally through
revolution - leading to some very unpredictable and tragic
consequences. The film starts slow, seethes and simmers and finally
climaxes, set to a beautiful song by Priti Sagar, in a horrifying
sequence that is among the best in Indian films - although it is very
unlike Benegal.
This is one of the best Indian films ever and as politically as
relevant today as it was in the 1970s - especially given the many
parallels that still exist in the world today. I give it a 9/10 -
deducting one point because it fades when compared to the later films
of my idol - Dev Anand.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
explosive cinema, 14 July 2007
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Author:
activecell from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
by far, nishaant is the best of Hindi language cinema i have yet seen. this film provoked powerful emotional responses, a sense of dread and tension. the impossible situation that befalls schoolmaster and his wife is so terrible and the decisions that they are forced to make are so absolutely destructive. gritty, grimy and bleak, this film had me pulling hairs out of my head; oh the injustice, oh the pain. on the other hand, this film is made from the light of an Indian sun, burning wildly with exoticism and ethnicity. There is also a kind of beauty and tender touch that leaves your heart melted to your chest, in particular the moments of love shown between mother and son, husband and wife, Vishwam and Sushila are all played incredibly well. On a lighter note, I'm declaring that through my endless passion for beautiful women both in cinema and in general, that Shabana Azmi is simply just hot. her performance as Sushila is so natural and her beauty so rare, i find it hard to place a contemporary in Hindi cinema to match.
5 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
The End Of Night...The Horror Begins, 13 July 2008
Author:
Jizdenky from Fraggle Rock
'Nishaant' is perhaps Benegal's most chilling movie to date. With this
movie who also introduces the ever so talented Smita Patil to Hindi
cinema. Through brilliant execution and with superb cinematography,
Shyam Benegal tells us this compelling, brutally honest and haunting
tragic story. The background music brilliantly adds to the mood. While
dealing with various themes such as oppression, corruption, power,
violence, abduction and poverty, he also presents controversial taboo
issues like rape and homosexuality. 'Nishaant' is also quite graphic in
nature. Particularly the scene where Anjaiya and Prasad gang rape
Sushila is disturbing to watch and then there's the shattering ending
which haunts the viewer.
Like in all of Benegal's films, the actors do nothing short of a
fantastic job. Amrish Puri gives a restrained performance and his
silence makes his character much more frightening than any of the
over-the-top villain roles he was more known for. Shabana Azmi is
sublime. Smita Patil is very effective in a small but strong role. With
a brave choice, she already proves that she's here to stay and if it
weren't for her untimely death one would have witnessed more of India's
best actress on screen. Naseeruddin Shah is excellent. Mohan Agashe and
Anant Nag are scary as the evil brothers. Girish Karnad too is great.
Benegal also deserves mention for portraying unusual relationships
between the characters. When Sushila encounters her husband, she
resents him for not rescuing her and chooses to come back to the
'zameendar's haveli' instead of going back home. Yet, she too is
conflicted as she terribly misses her son but also develops an
attraction towards her kidnappers' brother Vishwam (the only
sympathetic brother in the household). There's Rukmani who was once
proud of her faithful husband Vishwam but she perceives Sushila as a
threat and once her husband begins a physical relationship with her, it
becomes resentment.
'Nishaant' is based on a true story and Benegal portrays the realities
of a village sensibly as he shows a good understanding of life in the
village. Although there have been plenty of films that try to use the
same themes, they lack the gritty rawness of 'Nishaant'. Overall,
'Nishaant' is an excellent compelling drama that needs to be watched.
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