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Review: Kajol's Tribhanga is 90 minutes of humdrum conversations and flashbacks

Review: Kajol's Tribhanga is 90 minutes of humdrum conversations and flashbacks

The emotion and the sense of conviction the characters in this Netflix movie go though is hardly palpable.
30 Jan, 2021

In Tribhanga — Terrhi, Merrhi, Crazy, Kajol drops a series of f-bombs, amongst other cuss words. The barrage hits everyone — doctors, assistants, the press, and particularly her comatose mother’s assistant (Kunaal Roy Kapur), who is penning her autobiography.

In one instant, she explains that the main f-bomb isn’t really an expletive: rather it is a noun. “Imagine standing in front of the Taj Mahal — now say ‘love’… doesn’t work, does it? Now say (the aforementioned expletive). See, it fits,” she explains.

The guy doesn’t get it — and he’s not supposed to; he’s too strait-laced to indulge in profanities. Kajol’s character, Anuradha ‘Anu’ Apte, an actress and dancer, loathes her mother Nayantra ‘Nayan’ Apte (Tanvi Azmi) — a celebrated novelist — but loves her daughter Masha (Mithila Palkar), and considers the cussing a natural extension. It gives her a sense of normalcy, as she snaps at people who are left aghast of her brief tantrums.

Like her transitory moods, Tribhanga comes with a brief one-line plot. At odds with her birth mother and her real father, Anu becomes an independent young woman who finds solace with Odissi, a form of classical dance.

Tribhanga — Terrhi, Merrhi, Crazy is 90 minutes of humdrum conversations and flashbacks

We don’t see Anu dance — probably because Kajol is not practiced enough; the most we see are a series of still frames where the actress fakes a few poses.

Actress-turned-director Renuka Shahane — you may remember her from the Zee show Antakshari and the film Hum Aapke Hain Kaun — makes a film that fakes through a lot. The emotion and the sense of conviction these characters go though is hardly palpable.

Kajol’s character, in particular, doesn’t feel genuine — or genuinely worried — at the circumstances. Her few expressions of concern are often replaced by a flippant attitude that doesn’t gel with the gravity of the situations at hand. I mean, how much more serious can things get when your mum is probably breathing her last, right?

There are attempts at showcasing these three women with independent personalities. They are fed up with marriage, choosing to stay in live-in relationships, partially because a few men they came across were less than ideal, but mostly because they love to be free of marital shackles.

Kanwaljeet, playing a renowned painter who is Nayantra’s ex, comes across as the only genuine father figure. Like the transitory ambience of the film, he is there in a flashback, and a scene in the hospital, and then poof, he’s out of the story.

Set in a handful of locations, the screenplay, the production design and the cinematography (by Baba Azmi, husband of Tanvi Azmi, brother of Shabana Azmi, shooter of Woh 7 Din, Mr. India, Beta, Ishq) has a telefilm-esque feel.

We don’t really feel any sympathies for Anu or Nayantra, but then again, they wouldn’t want any. As characters, they are happy being what they are. As audiences sitting through 90 minutes of humdrum conversations and flashbacks, some of us may be happy reaching for the fast-forward button.


Streaming on Netflix, Tribhanga — Terrhi, Merrhi, Crazy, is rated 18+ for scenes depicting harsh language, violence and suicide


Originally published in Dawn, ICON


Comments

SATT Jan 30, 2021 05:17pm
Bollywood is banned in Pakistan so how some organisations are flouting the rules.
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Abs Jan 30, 2021 05:34pm
Why we keep reviewing and promoting Indian content here when they want absolutely nothing to do with Pakistan and Pakistani's.
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Aatapi Jan 30, 2021 06:31pm
Why do you watch programs of small hearted people
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Browngirl Jan 30, 2021 06:48pm
The entertainment value Netflix provides Pakistanis at the rate of Rs.950 per month is way beyond what the majority of cable channels come up with. People who have cable should open an account at Netflix for better programming options.
Recommend
Patriot Jan 30, 2021 07:14pm
Bollywood and Pakistan inseparabile
Recommend
Kublai Jan 30, 2021 09:41pm
@SATT This show is on NETFLIX. Do you understand? NOT in movie theatres. Available to be seen WORLDWIDE. Even in Burkina Faso. Do you understand? YOU do NOT have to watch it. CLOSE your eyes. Problem solved.
Recommend
Ramana Jan 30, 2021 09:59pm
Beautiful coverage by dawn.
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Zak Jan 30, 2021 10:45pm
Not interested, not our culture, all foreign.
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Zak Jan 30, 2021 10:46pm
@Patriot 'Bollywood and Pakistan inseparabile'. Bollywood ban in Pakistan is pleasantly irreversible.
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Imran Jan 30, 2021 11:22pm
I don't watch the bollywood stuff and proud of it, boring, same scripts, same stories, trying to be like hollywood but with less taste and selling dreams to the poor as a form of escapism.
Recommend
Mamoon Qureishi Jan 31, 2021 12:35am
@SATT exactly and then a news media outlet is promoting it's review. Honestly there are better things to review than people who think Abhinandan is a hero for getting shot down and then held as a POW and then returned - saluted by Ajay Devgan - Kajol's husband in short.
Recommend
Captain Jan 31, 2021 12:35am
I watched movie initially for 30 min then changed it ..... as not deserving to watch ..... I don’t watch movies either .....
Recommend
syd usa Jan 31, 2021 05:14am
I watched it in USA, bogus audio , X rated language that even makes couple uncomfortable. A sign of poorly written script. Only thing good was concept.
Recommend
Rohit Gupta Jan 31, 2021 06:22am
Genuine review Dawn,
Recommend
S. Sami Jan 31, 2021 07:29am
As much I like to see Indian movies and vouch for indo-pak cultural exchange, ordinary Hindi is no longer spoken in Hindi movies. They are becoming hard to understand without subtitles. I started Tribhanga but turned off after 20 minutes or so for the very reason.
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Aatapi Jan 31, 2021 08:15am
Just goes on to show that the cultural ties are unbreakable howsoever govts try
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Observer Jan 31, 2021 08:46am
Pakistani soaps are extremely popular with Indians watching Netflix so why should Indian content not be liked by Pakistanis? After all we are the same people divided by politicians!
Recommend
NK Jan 31, 2021 11:18am
Our obsession with bollywood it seems will never end inspite of the fact of never ending hostility of the Indian govt, towards us.
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Ahmed Jan 31, 2021 12:55pm
@Abs We Pakistanis watch Bollywood movies on the sly.
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Gthff Feb 01, 2021 04:43pm
@Zak... Your culture is India's culture... Not Arab
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Gthff Feb 01, 2021 04:45pm
The whole world watches Bollywood... From Russia, china to Nigeria not to mention countries having desi population
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