Quirky, Poignant and
Fun: Kapoor
and Sons’ Unique Approach to
Family Feuds
A row between husband
and wife that starts with a leaking pipe and ends with their financial troubles
– the parents’ subtle partiality towards the elder son and the consequent
resentment of the younger one – a genuine bonding between the two brothers, in
spite of their brewing tensions – a quirky grandfather who cracks bawdy jokes
with his grandkids, frequently fakes death to gain attention, but also brings
the entire family together, under the pretext of a family photograph. What
happens when all these ingredients come together? You get a refreshingly fun,
yet heartwarming family drama called Kapoor
and Sons.
The brilliance of
writers Shakun Batra and Ayesha Devitre Dhillon lies in portraying utterly familiar
situations in the most natural manner. Realistic dialogues make the banter
between the brothers, the snide exchanges between the Kapoors and the emotional
outbursts; extremely relatable. All the characters are finely layered, each
endowed with their merits and vulnerabilities. The message is simple: we must accept our family with all their
imperfections, for, as Tia (Alia Bhatt) says in the movie – “You should be
happy that you have a family”. But Batra and Dhillon never hammer the message
into the audience.
Batra’s subtle
direction prevents the movie from becoming pedantic. When the brothers come
home after five years, Batra merely shows us their rooms. The older one’s room
has been kept just the way it was, while the younger son’s room has been
occupied by the mother, as is evident from her clothes hanging in the wardrobe.
These two shots are enough to demonstrate the parents’ partiality towards the
older son – an issue that will recur throughout the family fights.
Another smart
directorial move is the sparing use of background score. Even during climactic
showdowns, Batra deliberately refrains from using any background music. As a
result one can concentrate on the nuances of the actors’ performances. And that’s
a treat when there are skilled actors like Rishi Kapoor, Rajat Kapoor, Ratna
Pathak Shah, and Fawad Khan, essaying the roles of grandfather Kapoor, the
father, Mr. Kapoor, the mother, Mrs. Kapoor and the older son, Rahul Kapoor,
respectively.
All these performers unravel
the layers of their characters with perfect élan. Thus, we laugh at their
quirks, get angry at their meanness, cry with them as they reveal their
insecurities and pain. But we never judge them. Though not as competent as the
others, Sidharth Malhotra (Arjun Kapoor), too, brings a charm to the
light-hearted scenes and certain poignancy to Arjun’s pain at being constantly
slighted by his parents. Alia Bhatt shines both as the chirpy girl-next-door and
in the single emotional scene she gets.
But the applause must go to Rishi
Kapoor. It takes an actor of rare talent to make a lewd and frivolous old man absolutely
hilarious without ever sinking into slapstick. At the same time, he makes your
eyes well up when he begs his grandkids to come back home for one last family
photograph.
In fact, Rishi Kapoor’s
character maintains a taut balance between comedy and drama, preventing the
script’s sentimentalism from degenerating into mawkish melodrama. Crisp editing
also plays an important role in this balance. The ugly fights or the emotional
outbursts never drag on. As we cut back and forth between grandpa Kapoor’s antics
and the dramatic interactions, Rishi Kapoor’s character also offers a comically
ironic lens to the entire family drama.
Using the songs, mostly
as background music also keeps the narrative taut and realistic. It’s
heartening to see that Batra does not fall into the usual trap of making the
characters lip-sync to the numbers.
And thank god that the
movie is not a love triangle. It’s a relief to see the brothers fighting over
something other than a girl.
So, take a bow, team Kapoor and Sons. We finally have a
family drama that’s real but not depressing; poignant but never mawkish.
No comments:
Post a Comment