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Review: Not A Love
Story
( Director: Ram Gopal Varma )
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Cast: Mahie Gill, Deepak Dobriyal, Ajay Gehi,
Urmila Matondkar, Zakir Hussain
( Director: Ram Gopal Varma )
Music: Sandeep Chowta
Producer: Sunil Bohra, Shailesh R Singh
Writer: Rohit Banawlikar
Saibal Chatterjee:
A wannabe actress (Mahie
Gill) lives alone in Mumbai. No big deal that. Life is a struggle for her.
No big deal again. She believes that stardom is only one role away. No big
deal either. When the girl eventually lands an assignment that promises to
change her life, disaster strikes. This is a real big deal and Ram Gopal
Varma, a director who has been off the boil for quite a while now, makes a
fair fist of bringing the grim fate of an urban babe in the woods to the
screen.
The protagonist of Not A Love a Story is not a protagonist at all.
She is like the solitary gasping fish in the glass bowl that the restless
camera catches each time to door to the girl’s pad opens. Her fate isn’t in
her own hands.
The fishbowl may not be a terribly original visual metaphor for the sense of
loneliness that assails her, but it isn’t entirely out of place in Not a
Love Story.
The aspiring star is a girl constantly under watch: her possessive boyfriend
(Deepak Dobriyal) keeps track of every move she makes, calling her virtually
every hour of the day. It is clear that the “fishbowl” of her life is about
to crack. When it does, there’s blood on her hands and dead man in on living
room floor.
A dark, disturbing reconstruction of a senseless crime of passion that shook
the nation three years ago, Not A Love Story sees director Ram Gopal
Verma hitting the right buttons for a change.
Obsession, passion, murder, crime, guilt, punishment – these are the key
elements that constitute the crux of Not A Love Story. Varma cloaks
his narrative in a grimy, grainy shell as a means to capturing the tale’s
claustrophobic core.
While the film does underscore the sheer pointlessness of an act of violence
that snuffs out a life and sets off a catastrophic chain of events, it does
not pass any moral judgment. It simply watches askance as the couple sink
deeper and deeper into a moral quagmire of their own making.
The film kicks off with the customary disclaimer disavowing any resemblance
to a real-life incident, but this really doesn’t take anything away from the
impact of what unfolds in the course of the first few reels.
Not A Love Story has an edgy, frisky feel that lends the narrative a
tangible veneer of realism except when the background score (Sandeep Chowta)
tends to go off-kilter in a desperate bid to make its presence felt.
The crucial scene of violence eschews graphic excess. The act of the
murdered man’s body being chopped is played out off-camera, with Varma
employing telling reaction shots of the two actors on the screen.
Read the full
review from NDTV
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