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October-When Fools Dare
October-When Fools Dare
Danish Walia (Varun Dhawan) is the perfect man to deal with death,
near-death, and other unpleasant experiences, precisely because he is so
bad with euphemisms.
At other times, he emits metaphors that one would have neatly sidestepped
while offering solace. Even when he has to suggest that a certain pesky
uncle is 'an animal', all he can compare him to is 'a monkey.'
If you were to tell Dan that his own story, as told in Shoojit Sircar's October,
was a 'tale of selfless, unrequited love', he would have thought it excessive.
And he'd be right; for such descriptions only widen the distance between
Dan and the audience; raise him to the status of an Obsessed Lover/Silent
Martyr and drag us down to the level of Romantic Fools.
Shuili (Banita Sandhu), his co-intern at a 5-Star Hotel, had fallen off a
terrace and down to the ground, and before beginning her final descent, she
had paused to ask: "Where is Dan?"
Both we in the audience and those around Shuili may see it as a toss-away
question, but Dan -- the ignoramus who can't otherwise tell poetry from a
cabbage -- is hooked.
Death, however inadvertent or freakish, can shoot off a person into a state
of heightened awareness at the exact instant that it happens.
A man's final words are usually interpreted as a summation of what his life
had been in pursuit of: An unfulfilled yearning, an element from the past,
or simply his biggest regret.
If Gandhi could have some intimation of how God does it, or if Charles
Foster Kane could get back on his sled, they may have perhaps died
happier.
The irony of Dan's curiosity is that back when they interned together,
Shuili's eyes would often gawk in his direction while he was unconscious to
her presence; and now that he has found the words, she lies comatose on a
hospital bed.
His vanity is that he can dominate any situation, and the hospital and
Shuili's environment become his new testing ground.
Her slow progress doesn't matter to him much; he probably believes in the
words of Beckett: 'Try again. Fail better.'
He turns her disinfected room into her shrine, but doesn't forget to pin up
pictures of himself beside hers.
He tries to reconstruct her fall and in a moment of true sublime, gets into
her car and almost becomes her.
By the end of the film, on some psychosomatic level, he is her, and it
wouldn't be going too far to read October as a story of positive insanity; of
schizophrenia that heals.
But that is just one reading. And there could be as many readings of this
picture as there are people who watch it.
The mystery of October, which begins with indifference and slowly passes
into the realm of occult, is paradoxically set in a whizzing world that has no
patience for the mysterious.
The style of the movie is derived from intercutting life's most disturbing
moments with the small, executive, details of life.
Shuili falls in the middle of a party, but Sircar has the good sense to keep
the music playing.
It's about grand wedding numbers in the time of a Coma; Christmas songs
running over helpless phone voices; scenes of mangled body parts cutting
to livers being dashed off a frying pan; lovers failing to communicate even
as magpies and squirrels go on dates and experience heartbreaks.
Chaturvedi and Sircar aren't interested in beauty alone, but the kind of
beauty that co-exists with harshness, in beauty that isn't washed away by
harshness.
Those flowers in the garden are postcard-like, but what Shoojit Sircar wants
you to really appreciate are the sight of autumn flowers over a dusty car
roof.
There is the emotional thrust of the storyline and within it, at every
milepost, the denseness that life presents; but for its entire running time of
116 minutes, October exploits neither.
It walks between piety and satire while daringly avoiding both -- and this is
what makes it so special.
What the movie gets us up-close with is not a truth of the kitchen sink
variety, but a truth to be felt in our blood; it does so, by turning to blood.
And it definitely mustn't surprise you that of all Indian writers it's Juhi
Chaturvedi who establishes this connection between decreasing blood levels
and accelerating love.
As Chaturvedi sees it, bodily functions, procreation, and blood, all bind us
in much the same way that feelings of love, envy, rage and fear do.
And this worldview is clearly not the product of a bootlegged psychiatrist's
tape but sourced from her own experiences in life.
If it all sounds fatalistic, let me tell you it isn't; for in Sircar's execution, this
act of boxing the compass plays out like a sitar number, with hospital
corridors animated in interplays of light and darkness, and figures darting
between the two extremes like fireflies.
It is magical how Shoojit Sircar uses Banita Sandhu's sharp features -- her
bunny teeth, her round eyes, her thick lips -- which in scenes set inside the
5-star hotel, make her look like a Spanish woman from La Mancha, full of
life and grit (she'd have played well as a matador), it's magical how those
very features look on her shriveled, boyish body later, offering silent proofs
of her exhaustion and of her fast receding beats.
Sandhu's Shuili Iyer is by turns the observer and the observed (the movie
camera records her and we also get constant glimpses of her on CCTV
footage), but it's through knowing her mother Vidya Iyer (played by
Gitanjali Rao) that we get to know Shuili intimately.
Gitanjali Rao's performance as Vidya is perhaps a response to the question:
'When was the last time a Hindi film actress gave us an act of dignity
without it once, or even slightly, tending to saintliness?'
Rao lives through her role as if every moment just happened to her along
the way -- there is nothing preplanned in her approach, no scheme to her
emotions.
When Vidya Iyer walks into a room to resume a conversation with Dan's
mother and her lips stop moving abruptly, we share her surprise at being
confronted with an empty room.
You get her wisdom by the way she faces up to a class of IIT students as if
'Isometric View,' and not her comatose daughter, was the only thing on her
mind. You know her strength from the patterns that form on her chin every
time she suppresses her tears.
Dan: Dan who everybody loves; everybody hates. He's a son to anybody
who may take him in, but a sonofabitch who just won't come home: his raw
arrogance they can all sense, can make fun of (even the youngest character
in the movie kids him around), but they all want to shield him because they
understand that he too loves them as much as he hates them.
As if using his own black-outs with the character as a snorkel, Dhawan pits
Dan in that great movie tradition of the verbally inchoate crusader.
When he walks with that ungainly gait, he seems to be walking for every
crankmeister not blessed with natural poise.
Hopeless with poetry, Dan also naively believes that if you follow the
rulebook to its last page, the desired results are waiting for you: It is within
his nature to wear his bike helmet immediately after he has swiped his card
at an ATM booth.
He draws his idealism from the same pool as Rajkumar Rao's Newton, but
the big difference is that Juhi Chaturvedi and Shoojit Sircar never make
him a spiritual spokesperson for our times (If this was a Raju Hirani film,
we would even have people up on the screen prompting us to cry for Dan).
And if you're one of those murmuring about why Dan's caring for Shuili
wasn't preceded by any character foreshadowing, you're missing the point.
It isn't important to know if Dan pays his dues to every blind beggar on the
street: Only a hack artist would go out of his way to make his character's
goodness so rounded.
Dan and Newton may play in the same championship of idealism, but Dan
being Dan will only get one shot at the title -- and that's what makes his
commitment to that chance seem both plausible and magical.
We watch the doctors faced with the mammoth task of both softening the
unpleasant truths and yet making sure that depression doesn't give way to
grand hope.
And they are all struggling: Shuili's mother; her pesky uncle who isn't
entirely wrong in asking for the plug to be removed; her siblings who have
difficulty with expressing their sentiments in Hindi; and Shuili's colleagues
who are ridden with the twinge that they are not doing enough for her.
At the start of October, when Dan's senior at the hotel is reprimanding him,
the senior throws at our man a question: 'Why do you think Ammonia and
Bleach are never kept together?'
Shuili knows the answer. And as she utters something about toxic
chloramine vapours, the senior jumps at it, likening Dan and Shuili to
Ammonia and Bleach respectively, and why they may never mix well
together.
His true strength, however, is that he doesn't know the answer; that he
knows better.