Four years later, KANK director Karan Johar’s latest film, My Name Is Khan (MNIK), suffers from a similar problem. It has everything a director needs to execute a grand vision – an interesting plot (Shibani Kashyap gets story/screenplay credit), good actors, excellent production values (art direction, locations etc), and is technically superior (Ravi K Chandran’s cinematography is a treat). And it’s fairly entertaining too.
But sadly, MNIK ends up somewhere between a film with a larger statement that strikes you with its honesty and a film with the typical trappings you would find in, what is annoyingly referred to as, a ‘Bollywood’ film. MNIK is quite good, but not the great piece of cinema it could have been.
Rizvan ‘Shah Rukh’ Khan suffers from Asperger’s syndrome – a disorder which makes it difficult for people to interact socially – and comes to live with his younger brother (Jimmy Shergill) in the US after their mother dies.
Here, he meets hair stylist Mandira (Kajol), a free-spirited woman who lives with her six-year old son – Sam – from a failed marriage. While Rizvan falls in love with Mandira, she too grows fond of the good-natured Rizvan. An unlikely romance later, Mandira gets married to Rizvan.
The perfect existence of the ‘Khans’ gets disrupted following the 9/11 Twin Tower attacks. Sam gets involved in a tussle with a few college ruffians who beat him up because his second name is Khan. Sam succumbs to his injuries and a shattered Mandira blames Rizvan for his death.
“He died only because his name was Khan,” yells Mandira and asks Rizvan to leave her. Rizvan tries to assure Mandira that things would get better, but she tells him that as long as he remained a ‘Khan’, he would be looked upon as a terrorist, even if he convinced the US president otherwise.
Rizvan sets on a journey that takes him from one US state to the other, following the movements of President George Bush, who he has a message for – “My name is Khan, and I’m not a terrorist.”
The film makes an important point – not all Muslims can be typecast as jihadis – something which is not entirely novel, yet valid. A two hour long, intense drama with well-crafted, emotional sequences (which MNIK has aplenty) would have driven home the point.
Instead, the film combines elements of a love story with a message-oriented theme, and ends up being what can now be referred to as a ‘Johar.’ At 2hrs 45minutes, it’s a bit long, and certain sequences in the first half are welcome only because they give you opportunities for quick toilet breaks.
The love story between Mandira and Rizvan, pre-interval, is likeable at places but makes it that much longer for the film to settle into its groove eventually. Once that happens, though, MNIK is a compelling watch.
The scene showing Sam’s tussle with the bullies, and what follows, grabs your attention and sets you up for a very dramatic second half. Certain sequences tug at your heartstrings and the film leaves you moved and satiated in the end.
What adds to the enjoyment is the performance of the real life Khan. Shah Rukh, as someone suffering from a disorder, gets it just right and is fab with his body language and expressions.
Some may find his way of talking monotonous, but Shah Rukh inculcates that aspect in his character well enough for you to stop minding it after a while.
No Karan Johar-directed film would be complete without a Shah Rukh Khan monologue and be prepared to be bombarded with a few here too. Thankfully, though, he nails it every single time.
Kajol is the perfect foil to Shah Rukh – as she’s always been – but how you wish she wasn’t the bubbly, ‘cute’, loud woman she’s already played in previous Johar films. In scenes requiring her to display emotional and intense histrionics though, she’s at home.
Watching the two actors in their element together after a long time will be cherished by fans of films the duo appeared in through the 90s.
With the two dominating the proceedings, the other actors – Shergill, Sonia Jehan, Arjun Mathur, Parveen Dabbas and others – are left with little to do. Zarina Wahab, in a cameo as Rizvan’s mother, is a welcome addition to the long list of ‘mummies’ in our films, while the child actor playing Sam is quite good.
Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy’s music is strictly functional, ‘Noor-e-Khuda’ being the only song that stays with you after.
For Karan Johar, the film is another step in the direction he’s been charting since KANK and with his recent productions – one of giving audiences their fill of escapism, but finding a way to experiment within the minimum space his entertainers allow him.
He may not be there yet but in MNIK, Johar shows sparks of brilliance he displayed with his first cinematic effort – Kuch Kuch Hota Hai – which still remains a personal favourite from the director’s stable.
Hopefully, he’ll better even that soon. C’mon KJo, let’s have a sappy romantic comedy – melodrama, music, family values et al – next. Others can worry about social issues.
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