May 9, 2018
Film: "Mahanati"(Telugu with English Subtitles);
Director: Nag Ashwin; Cast: Keerthy Suresh, Dulquer Salmaan, Samantha Akkineni,
Vijay Devarakonda; Rating: ****(4 stars)
Truth, they say, is often
stranger than fiction. Many episodes from the legendary Telugu-Tamil actress
Savitri's life may appear bizarrely improbable.And yet "herein lies the truth"
what we see in this sprawling,flamboyant, swaggering spectacular bio-pic is what
really happened in the legendary actress' life.
Give or take the
flourishes of fantasy that run sharply through this tell-all tale told with
flair and feeling. In a stroke of sheer ingenuity, the scriptwriter has woven a
fantasy-romance between two journalists (Samantha Akkineni and Vijay
Devarakonda) unraveling the story of the iconic actress who gave Tamil and
Telugu cinema their first female superstar.
She had it all, and then she
lost it. Savitri's saga is a familiar riches-to-rags one, here brought to life
with a vividness and vivacity that never fight shy of extravagance.
It's
all here, packed together in a series of deftly-written anecdotal sequences
which jump into one another in an uneasy and furtive embrace of fact and
fiction. Though the film is almost three hours long, our interest-level never
flags. How can it, when the subject is such a mercurial creature of caprice?
Siddharth Sivaswamy's screenplay screams for attention in every frame. And
yet there is nothing aggressively inflated about the narrative. The
larger-than-lifeness of the plot has to do with subject. Savitri, as played with
endearing impunity by Keerthy Suresh, is a childlike creature of whimsy:
demonstrative,emotional, mischievous, self-destructive, all heart and generous
to a fault. These qualities stood Savitri in good stead on camera but betrayed
her in real life.
Bravely the film doesn't gloss over the unpleasant
aspects of Savitri's life. The marriage to the much-married Tamil matinee idol
Gemini Ganesan (played with an endearing vigour by Dulquer Salman) and the
subsequent clash of egos, her lapse into alcoholism and her eventual plunge into
penury are all dealt with a certain beguiling blend of melodrama and poignancy.
The mix can be infuriatingly overblown for the uninitiated but highly satisfying
for those who are familiar with the drama of deceit depression and descent that
governs many success stories of the entertainment world.
Director Nag
Ashwin demonstrates a surprising level of maturity in apportioning flamboyance
to the real-life tale. The film is shot with a dash of adrenaline which
constantly pumps up the drama without distorting the credibility of the
proceedings.
The performances are constantly compelling. Samantha and
Vijay (the latter in a very limited but appealing presence) bring to their
investigative reporters' role from the 1980s a touch of the wispy and wacky
without forfeiting a claim to being genuinely interested in the legendary
actress Savitri's life story.However Samantha's outburst at the finale where she
kind of reads out a homage to Savitri straight to the audience, doesn't work.
Keerthy Suresh's Savitri is an imp, a coquette, a child and a giver. The
actress replicates the original's physicality and sensitivities without allowing
her performance to get excessively imitative. Dulquer's Gemini Ganesan is a
masterly portrayal of the male ego swathed in superficial compassion. Again,
like Keerthy, Dulquer steers the performance away from being imitative.
There are memorable cameos from many including Nag Chaitanya playing his
grandfather Nageshwara Rao. Director Ashwin makes telling use of the references
and props from the 1950s, 60s, 70s and 80s to not only recreate the flavour of
those times but also to reflect on why those times are so distant and faded from
memory. The songs and footage from Savitri's heydays are mercifully moderately
used.
There is an intrinsic hollowness and hypocrisy in the way a
successful woman professional was treated by those whom she trusted. Savitri
never failed. Those around her did. "Mahanati" celebrates a life that finally
failed because of its generosity.