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SAATHIYA (M) 2002

 

SYNOPSIS:
May contain spoilers...

Saathiya is the story of Aditya and Suhani, their romance and the changes in their relationship after marriage. 

Aditya (Vivek Oberoi), a young middle class boy, meets Suhani (Rani Mukerji), a medical student and falls head over heels for her. He pursues her relentlessly in the local trains of Mumbai. Suhani, brushes off Aditya's overtures, because she wants to become a successful doctor and do her parents proud. However, Aditya's persistence pays off and she finally accepts. But opposition from her parents forces the couple to part ways...

Director: Shaad Ali 
Starring: Vivek Oberoi, Rani Mukherjee, Tanuja, Sandhya Mridul, Satish Shah, Tinnu Anand and Shah Rukh Khan in a special appearance 
Music: A.R. Rahman 
Lyrics: Gulzar 
In Hindu, with English subtitles
Running time 141 mins, plus  intermission

  

OFFICIAL WEBSITE:
www.yashrajfilms.com
Australian Distributor:
www.mgdistribution.com.au

 

HEROIC-CINEMA REVIEW:
We must have been good kiddies this year because the Santa is heaping us with plenty of presents this Christmas, bestowing us with not one but two Bollywood flicks (this one plus Kaante). The other rather cool fact is that both Bollywood movies opened at the same time as India.

Now, my experience of Bollywood is pretty limited up to the point of this movie, I’m going to be honest here: Lagaan, Heart's Desire and the one that SBS keeps showing where a woman in thrown into a river of ferocious crocodiles by her evil scheming rat of a husband. She comes back after astonishing plastic surgery and wreaks revenge on said rat. Tis rather a tragic number I know but I’m working hard to rectify my meagre Bollywood consumption. My favourite so far is the 4hr cricket epic Lagaan.

I digress, back to Saathiya.

Based on a huge Tamil hit “Alaipayuthey”, Saathiya is the North Indian remake helmed by Shaad Ali who was one of the assistants on the Tamil film.

It opens with a happy looking young man on his bike zipping through the streets of Mumbai, music plugged in his ears, wind in his hair and seemingly not a care in the world. He, Aditya, arrives at the train station to meet his wife, Suhani, but she never shows up.

It then flashes back to 3 years ago at a small village wedding, where the main characters gets introduced by way of, you guessed it, a song and dance number. Crikey, and we’re not even 15 minutes into the film!

This one is about lurrrve.. yes, say it in the most drippy and doe-eyed fashion you can possibly manage and you’re pretty close to what Saathiya is like. The film tracks through the passage of Adi and Suhani’s relationship, from their initial clash of personalities at the wedding, to them falling in love and then to post marriage proceedings - bliss or misery?

There’s certainly nothing new in the essence of Aditya and Suhani’s story, but Shaad Ali tries to lift it up by introducing a few meaty conflicts for the characters to sink their teeth into: family intervention, class conflict, death.

All these give the story a big swift kick in the butt, assisted by well-choreographed and at times raunchy song and dance numbers, of which are all extremely easy on the ear and eyes except I would have loved it if there were subtitles for the lyrics too!

So technically, in the second half when the going gets tough for our two young lovers, the dramatics should really be hitting the proverbial emotional spot but strangely the impact is somewhat dull. Perhaps it was the occasional saccharine histrionics and the overdrawn ending that detracted from the movie. Its vivacious energy starts to puff a little towards the two hour mark despite all the effort.
Mind you if you do get bored, you can gawk at the amazing scenery.

The songs take place from beaches to snow-capped mountains and involved no less than 15 costume changes and a group of back up dancers. If that is the kind of thing that floats your boat.

No doubt everything about Saathiya is well produced and directed. Performances by the two leads Vivek Overoi and Rani Mukherji and the supporting cast, are intrinsically pleasing but like Aditya and Suhani’s relationship, the quality wavers without good solid writing to steady the bumpy bits.

Rating: 7 longing glances out of 10

Reviewed by Ching Yee

 

OTHER REVIEWS:
Review from Hindustan Times
Preview at Planet Bollywood
Wallpapers at SantaBanta

 

H E R O I C * C I N E M A

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