Let
the Audience Have Their Space
Sohini
Mukhopadhaya
In 2008, a
murder of 14 years old girl named Arushi Talwar in Noida shook the whole
country. The family’s 45 years old missing servant Hemraj was the main suspect,
until his dead body was discovered in another part of the building on the
following day. After passing through many stages and modalities of
investigation, the parents Rajesh Talwar and his wife Nupur Talwar were
convicted in 2013 based on circumstantial evidences. They were imprisoned and
their appeal is now pending before the higher court.
Two years have
passed and when the countrymen almost forgot the case, Meghna Gulzar and Vishal
Bharadwaj came up with this much-discussed double murder case of Arushi Talwar
and Hemraj in the light of humanity, or better say, the principle of ‘natural
justice’ which has already provoked a large number of audience to question our
perception about crime, investigation procedure and punishment. I would not say
‘Talvar’ is a completely unbiased movie. Still, its true-to-life way of
representing the flaws of the investigating approach through an amazing story
telling by Vishal Bharadwaj compels us to indulge in the ‘gripping,
genre-defying, non-exploitative cinematic examination.’ The climatic sequence
in which two investigating teams sit face to face across a table to establish
their different viewpoints simply overwhelmed me with all its way of showing
the many faces of truth.
I must say one
thing honestly here that I enjoyed the sequence most and almost forgot that I
was watching a movie and not a real episode. The acting performances outshined
the solid screenplay. It became a real treat to movie-lovers in contrast to the
mainstream Indian movies leaving the audience to choose any of the variant
faces of truth from the film as a mirror of the society. The movie teaches us
to think and question the reality which has been portrayed through its
naturalistic matured texture and also compels us to have a look on how the
media always tends to jump to instant and sweeping conclusions on criminal
instinct and culpability. The movie might disappoint a certain class of
audience who are always in search of cheap thrills, anxiety, dramatic climaxes
and loaded songs. Though several songs have been used to validate the narrative
of 'Talvar', there is no room in the movie for a happy musical ambience. The
movie’s first half is quite faster than the second one. The film starts off with an 'official introduction'
of Inspector Ashwin Kumar (Irfan Khan) in the officers' get together of
CBI. Just as Inspector Ashwin Kumar is about to reach to a conclusion,
situations take a U-turn when his senior officer gets retired and there enters
a 'colour-changing' new chief of the CBI. Then what is the future of justice in
any case where the investigating team like CBI has no integrity among their
officers?
Even though the film has powerhouse of talents, it’s
Irfan Khan who leads the film exactly right from his entry. The movie
criticizes the media which encourages salacity and a collective propensity to
judge even before a court verdict is pronounced. The movie’s beauty is in its
non-judgmental approach and not disturbing the liberty of the audience to think
on their own way. The script is the undisputed hero and the directors have let
their ‘hero’ to do the needful. It’s a film for the thoughtful audience, who
will be thinking while stepping out of the theatre: ‘Do we survive in a society
which deliver justice to us?’
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